See also: Marie
André Marie is a French politician born with Honfleur (Apple-brandy) the December 3rd 1897 and died in Rouen (Seine-Maritime) the June 12th 1974. It was President of the Council in 1948 and several times minister between 1947 and 1954.
Biography
He embraces the career of
lawyer. With nine recoveries, he is elected appointed radical of Seine-Lower (today Seine-Maritime) and sits at the Palate-Bourbon of 1928 to 1962. In 1933, André Marie enters to the government as under-secretary of State near
Albert Sarraut, charged with the
Alsace-Lorraine. He will be several times under-secretary of State, then representing France with the Société of the Nations.
André Marie is off-set with Buchenwald at the end of the Second world war.
In 1947, it becomes Minister of Justice in the Ramadier ministry and to the responsibility for the last lawsuits in High court of the collaborators. The President of the Republic invites it to become chief of the government to replace Robert Schuman, on July 27th, 1948, but it is obliged to resign one month later.
It accepts the vice-presidency of the Queuille cabinet in 1948 and is then named with Justice where it refuses to continue the Communists following the mining strikes of 1948, then with the State education, of August 1951 in June 1954. It made vote the Marie laws and Barangé of assistance to private education.
Mayor of Barentin of 1945 to 1974, it is him which brought in this city all the statues of famous “the museum in the street”.
Governmental functions
- Minister for Justice in the Government Paul Ramadier (1) (from January 22nd to October 22nd, 1947)
- Minister for Justice in the Government Paul Ramadier (2) (from October 22nd to November 24th, 1947)
- Minister for Justice in the Government Robert Schuman (1) (from November 24th, 1947 to July 26th, 1948)
- President of the Council (from July 26th to September 5th, 1948)
- Vice-president of the Council in the Government Robert Schuman (2) (from September 5th to September 11th, 1948)
- Vice-president of the Council, Minister for Justice in the Government Henri Queuille (1) (from September 11th, 1948 to February 13rd, 1949)
- Minister for State education in the Government Rene Pleven (2) (from August 11th, 1951 to January 20th, 1952)
- Minister for State education in the Government Edgar Faure (1) (from January 20th to March 8th, 1952)
- Minister for State education in the Government Antoine Pinay (from March 8th, 1952 to January 8th, 1953)
- Minister for State education in the Government Rene Mayer (from January 8th to June 28th, 1953)
- Minister for State education in the Government Joseph Laniel (1) (from June 28th, 1953 to June 19th, 1954)
Other executive mandates
- Appointed (radical) of Seine-Lower (1928-1942, 1945-1951, 1956-1958) the
- Appointed (independent) of the Seine-Maritime (1958-1962)
See too