Georges Bidault (born Oct. 5, 1899, Moulins, France—died Jan. 27, 1983, Cambo-les-Bains, near Bayonne) was a French Resistance leader during World War II, twice prime minister, and three times minister of foreign affairs, who late in his career vigorously opposed General Charles de Gaulle’s Algerian policy and was forced into exile.
Bidault attended an Italian Jesuit school, served briefly with the French Army of Occupation in the Ruhr in 1919, and returned to the Sorbonne, receiving a degree in history and geography in 1925. In 1932 he founded the leftist Roman Catholic daily L’Aube (“The Dawn”), for which he wrote a foreign affairs column until 1939. Imprisoned in Germany (1940), he returned to France in 1941 and began working with the National Council of Resistance, which he headed in 1943. He was discovered by the Gestapo in 1944 but managed to avoid arrest, meanwhile founding the Mouvement Républicain Populaire, a Christian-Democratic Party. Bidault supported de Gaulle’s wartime government.
As foreign minister in de Gaulle’s provisional government in 1944, Bidault signed the Franco-Soviet alliance in December and in the following year supported the Yalta plan, concluded economic agreements with the Benelux countries, and signed the United Nations Charter. After heading the provisional government in 1946, he again became foreign minister in 1947–48. His policy consistently favoured containment of Germany and European union, including Communist participation in the U.S. Marshall Plan for European redevelopment. After the 1948 Communist takeover in Czechoslovakia, however, he began negotiations for a strong western European customs union and an Atlantic defense alliance, which ultimately became the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). He served a second term as prime minister in 1949–50.
As defense minister (1951–52) and foreign minister (1953–54), Bidault, fearful of Arab nationalism and Communism, supported French dominance in Indochina and Algeria. With the collapse of the Fourth Republic and the return of de Gaulle to power (1958), Bidault broke with his wartime friend over the issue of Algerian independence. Bidault founded (1958) a new, right-wing Christian-Democratic Party. When de Gaulle put down a coup and negotiated Algerian independence in 1961, Bidault, still a member of the National Assembly, created a national council of resistance that advocated terrorism in France and Algeria to prevent Algerian independence, and went underground, claiming the illegality of de Gaulle’s government. Charged with conspiracy and stripped of his parliamentary immunity from arrest, Bidault fled France in 1962, living in neighbouring countries and Brazil (1963–67). He returned in 1968 to live in Paris after the warrant for his arrest was suspended. In that year he founded the right-wing Mouvement pour le justice et la liberté, but he was thereafter never actively effective in politics, becoming honorary president of the Christian-Democratic Party in 1977.