Paul Reynaud
- Born:
- Oct. 15, 1878, Barcelonnette, France
- Died:
- Sept. 21, 1966, Paris
- Title / Office:
- prime minister (1940-1940), France
Paul Reynaud (born Oct. 15, 1878, Barcelonnette, France—died Sept. 21, 1966, Paris) was a French politician and statesman who, as premier in June 1940, unsuccessfully attempted to save France from German occupation in World War II.
Reynaud was a lawyer and served in the army during World War I. Afterward he represented his home district (1919–24) and then a Paris constituency (from 1928) in the Chamber of Deputies and was minister of finance, of colonies, and of justice between 1930 and 1932. Out of office until 1938, he was almost alone in calling on France to resist Nazi Germany and to prepare for combined tank-air warfare, as recommended by Colonel Charles de Gaulle. Appointed minister of justice (April 1938) Reynaud protested the appeasement of Germany by Great Britain and France and resigned from his parliamentary bloc when its leader congratulated Adolf Hitler after the Munich Conference (which allowed Germany to occupy large sections of Czechoslovakia). From November 1938 to March 1940 Reynaud was minister of finance, in which post he sponsored austerity measures to put the French economy on a war footing.
In World War II Reynaud became premier on March 21, 1940. He made de Gaulle undersecretary of state for war and, as France was collapsing under the German onslaught that May, he urged French resistance and maintenance of the alliance with Britain. But Marshal Philippe Pétain, a World War I hero whom Reynaud had made vice-premier to strengthen his cabinet, and other ministers preferred armistice with Germany. Unwilling to be party to an armistice, Reynaud resigned on June 16; arrested shortly thereafter, he was kept in captivity for the duration of the war.
After the liberation Reynaud was a member of the Chamber of Deputies (1946–62), held office in two governments (1948, 1950), and twice tried to form cabinets of his own (1952, 1953). He presided over the Consultative Committee on the drafting of the constitution of the Fifth Republic. In 1962, however, he denounced de Gaulle for trying to circumvent that constitution by inaugurating a presidential regime elected by direct vote.
Reynaud’s major publications are La France a sauvé l’Europe (1947; revised as Au coeur de la mêlée, 1930–45, 1951; Eng. trans., In the Thick of the Fight, 1930–45) and Mémoires (2 vol., 1960–63).