The Eighty (Les Quatre-Vingts) were a group of elected French parliamentarians who, on 10 July 1940, voted against the constitutional change that effectively dissolved the Third Republic and established the authoritarian regime of then-Prime Minister Philippe Pétain. Their efforts failed, and Pétain consolidated his regime into the client state of Nazi Germany now known as Vichy France.
Some of the Vichy 80, like Léon Blum, would go on to be imprisoned by regime, while others managed to join the French Resistance, through groups like the Francs-Tireurs et Partisans and the Brutus network. Several of the Eighty, including Vincent Auriol and Paul Ramadier, would play key roles in the establishment of the French Fourth Republic after the end of World War II.
Background
Nazi Germany invaded France on 10 May 1940, and Paris fell a month later. Prime Minister Paul Reynaud was opposed to asking for armistice terms, and upon losing the cabinet vote, resigned. President Albert Lebrun appointed Marshal Philippe Pétain as his replacement. France capitulated on 22 June 1940. Under the terms of the armistice, the northern and Atlantic coast region of France was to be militarily occupied by Germany. The remainder would remain unoccupied, with the French Government remaining at Vichy, remaining responsible for all civil government in France, occupied and unoccupied.
Pétain began a revision of the constitution of the discredited Third Republic. This process was completed with a vote of the combined houses of the parliament on 10 July 1940.
Vote
27 deputies and senators did not take part in the vote. They had fled Metropolitan France on 21 June, from Bordeaux to Algiers, on board the liner SS Massilia, and they are referred to as the Massilia absentees. They were considered traitors by the collaborationist government,[1] although they were seen as heroes after the war.[2]
The result of the vote was a constitutional amendment that created the new French government. The eighty deputies and senators who opposed the change are referred to as the Vichy 80 (French: "les quatre-vingts"), and they are now famous for their decision to oppose the vote.[3]
Most of the eighty votes against the change were lodged by Socialists or Radical-Socialists.[4] Sixty-one communist parliamentarians had previously had their rights to serve as deputies and senators denied to them in January 1940, as the Soviet Union was a co-belligerent of Nazi Germany at the time.[5] Using data collected from the biographies of parliamentarians, Jean Lacroix, Pierre-Guillaume Méon, and Kim Oosterlinck observe that members of a democratic dynasty, defined as a dynasty whose founder was a defender of democratic ideals, were 9.6 to 15.1 percentage points more likely to oppose the act than other parliamentarians.[6]
The historian Richard Vinen has observed that "the implications of supporting Pétain in July 1940 were not clear. This was not, for all its subsequent mythology, a vote that divided Pétaininsts and/or collaborators from resisters." He highlights the cases of Joseph Laniel who voted in favour of Pétain's inauguration but was subsequently a leading member of the French resistance and the Conseil national de la Résistance.Isidore Thrivier, by contrast, who was among the 80 to vote against, subsequently embraced the Vichy regime and became a member of Vichy's National Council.[7]
Vote tally
Deputies | Senators | Total | |
---|---|---|---|
Total | 544 | 302 | 846 |
Voting | 414 | 235 | 649 |
For | 357 | 212 | 569 |
Against | 57 | 23 | 80 |
Voluntary abstaining | 12 | 8 | 20 |
Massilia absentees | 26 | 1 | 27 |
Other abstaining | 92 | 57 | 149 |
Not voting | 1 | 1 |
List of the 80
Name | House | Département | Parliamentary group |
---|---|---|---|
Marcel Astier | Senate | Ardèche | Radical-Socialist |
Jean-Fernand Audeguil | Chamber of Deputies | Gironde | SFIO |
Vincent Auriol | Chamber of Deputies | Haute-Garonne | SFIO |
Alexandre Bachelet | Senate | Seine | SFIO |
Vincent Badie | Chamber of Deputies | Hérault | Radical-Socialist |
Camille Bedin | Chamber of Deputies | Dordogne | SFIO |
Émile Bender | Senate | Rhône | Radical-Socialist |
Jean Biondi | Chamber of Deputies | Oise | SFIO |
Léon Blum | Chamber of Deputies | Aude | SFIO |
Laurent Bonnevay | Chamber of Deputies | Rhône | AD |
Paul Boulet | Chamber of Deputies | Hérault | LJR |
Georges Bruguier | Senate | Gard | SFIO |
Séraphin Buisset | Chamber of Deputies | Isère | SFIO |
Gaston Cabannes | Chamber of Deputies | Gironde | SFIO |
François Camel | Chamber of Deputies | Ariège | SFIO |
Pierre de Chambrun | Senate | Lozère | Independent |
Auguste Champetier de Ribes | Senate | Basses-Pyrénées | Independent |
Pierre Chaumié | Senate | Lot-et-Garonne | Radical-Socialist |
Arthur Chaussy | Chamber of Deputies | Seine-et-Marne | SFIO |
Joseph Collomp | Chamber of Deputies | Var | SFIO |
Octave Crutel | Chamber of Deputies | Seine-Inférieure | Radical-Socialist |
Achille Daroux | Chamber of Deputies | Vendée | Radical-Socialist |
Maurice Delom-Sorbé | Chamber of Deputies | Basses-Pyrénées | Independent Left |
Joseph Depierre | Senate | Rhône | SFIO |
Marx Dormoy | Senate | Allier | SFIO |
Alfred Elmiger | Chamber of Deputies | Rhône | Independent Left |
Paul Fleurot | Senate | Seine | Radical-Socialist |
Émile Fouchard | Chamber of Deputies | Seine-et-Marne | UPF |
Édouard Froment | Chamber of Deputies | Ardèche | SFIO |
Paul Giaccobi | Senate | Corse | Radical-Socialist |
Justin Godart | Senate | Rhône | Radical-Socialist |
Félix Gouin | Chamber of Deputies | Bouches-du-Rhône | SFIO |
Henri Gout | Chamber of Deputies | Aude | Radical-Socialist |
Louis Gros | Senate | Vaucluse | SFIO |
Amédée Guy | Chamber of Deputies | Haute-Savoie | SFIO |
Jean Hennessy | Chamber of Deputies | Alpes-Maritimes | Independent Left |
Lucien Hussel | Chamber of Deputies | Isère | SFIO |
André Isoré | Chamber of Deputies | Pas-de-Calais | Radical-Socialist |
Eugène Jardon | Chamber of Deputies | Allier | UPF |
Jean-Alexis Jaubert | Chamber of Deputies | Corrèze | Radical-Socialist |
Claude Jordery | Chamber of Deputies | Rhône | SFIO |
François Labrousse | Senate | Corrèze | Radical-Socialist |
Albert Le Bail | Chamber of Deputies | Finistère | Radical-Socialist |
Joseph Lecacheux | Chamber of Deputies | Manche | AD |
Victor Le Gorgeu | Senate | Finistère | Radical-Socialist |
Justin Luquot | Chamber of Deputies | Gironde | SFIO |
Augustin Malroux | Chamber of Deputies | Tarn | SFIO |
Gaston Manent | Chamber of Deputies | Hautes-Pyrénées | Radical-Socialist |
Alfred Margaine | Chamber of Deputies | Marne | Radical-Socialist |
Léon Martin | Chamber of Deputies | Isère | SFIO |
Robert Mauger | Chamber of Deputies | Loir-et-Cher | SFIO |
Jean Mendiondou | Chamber of Deputies | Basses-Pyrénées | Radical-Socialist |
Jules Moch | Chamber of Deputies | Hérault | SFIO |
Maurice Montel | Chamber of Deputies | Cantal | Independent Left |
Léonel de Moustier | Chamber of Deputies | Doubs | Républicain indépendant |
Marius Moutet | Chamber of Deputies | Drôme | SFIO |
René Nicod | Chamber of Deputies | Ain | UPF |
Louis Noguères | Chamber of Deputies | Pyrénées-Orientales | SFIO |
Jean Odin | Senate | Gironde | Radical-Socialist |
Joseph Paul-Boncour | Senate | Loir-et-Cher | Socialist Republican Union (USR) |
Jean Perrot | Chamber of Deputies | Finistère | Radical-Socialist |
Georges Pézières | Senate | Pyrénées-Orientales | SFIO |
André Philip | Chamber of Deputies | Rhône | SFIO |
Marcel Plaisant | Senate | Cher | Radical-Socialist |
François Tanguy-Prigent | Chamber of Deputies | Finistère | SFIO |
Paul Ramadier | Chamber of Deputies | Aveyron | Independent |
Joseph-Paul Rambaud | Senate | Ariège | Radical-Socialist |
René Renout | Senate | Var | Radical-Socialist |
Léon Roche | Chamber of Deputies | Haute-Vienne | SFIO |
Camille Rolland | Senate | Rhône | Radical-Socialist |
Jean-Louis Rolland | Chamber of Deputies | Finistère | SFIO |
Joseph Rous | Chamber of Deputies | Pyrénées-Orientales | SFIO |
Jean-Emmanuel Roy | Chamber of Deputies | Gironde | Radical-Socialist |
Henry Sénès | Senate | Var | SFIO |
Philippe Serre | Chamber of Deputies | Meurthe-et-Moselle | Independent Left |
Paul Simon | Chamber of Deputies | Finistère | Popular Democrat |
Gaston Thiébaut | Chamber of Deputies | Meuse | Radical-Socialist |
Isidore Thivrier | Chamber of Deputies | Allier | SFIO |
Pierre Trémintin | Chamber of Deputies | Finistère | Popular Democrat |
Michel Zunino | Chamber of Deputies | Var | SFIO |
References
- ↑ "21 juin 1940 : le "Massilia" quitte la France pour Alger" (in French). memoire.net. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-09-10.
- ↑ For the complete list of Massilia's passengers, see Louis-Georges Planes and Robert Dufourg, Bordeaux, Capitale tragique, mai-juin 1940, Loos: Editions Medicis, 4-page unnumbered inset between pages 188 and 189.
- ↑ "Proposition de Loi n° 729" (in French). Retrieved 2007-09-10.
- ↑ Judt, Tony (1998). The burden of responsibility : Blum, Camus, Aron, and the French twentieth century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226414195.
- ↑ "Les Quatre-vingts qui dirent non, 10 juillet 1940, France, MJP".
- ↑ Lacroix, Jean; Meon, Pierre-Guillaume; Oosterlinck, Kim (2019-07-01). "A Positive Effect of Political Dynasties: The Case of France's 1940 Enabling Act". Rochester, NY. SSRN 3428395.
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(help) - ↑ Vinen, Richard (2006). The unfree French: life under the Occupation. London: Allen Lane. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-713-99496-4.
External links
- List of the MPs
- Original vote
- Le vote du 10 Juillet 1940 (an account in French of the circumstances surrounding the vote)
- An account and statistical analysis of the vote and of the role played by dynastic parliamentarians (in English).