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Constitutional law of 2 November 1945

The French constitutional Law of 2 November 1945 was an interim, transitional constitutional law that set a legal basis for government in France under the Provisional Government of the French Republic (GPRF) for one year until a new constitution was approved.

Constitutional law of 2 November 1945
Overview
Original titleLoi constitutionnelle portant organisation provisoire des pouvoirs publics
JurisdictionFrance
Presented21 October 1945
Date effectiveNovember 3, 1945 (1945-11-03)
SystemUnitary parliamentary republic
Government structure
Branchestwo (legislative and executive)
Chambersone, the National Assembly
Executivehead of the Provisional Government of the French Republic
[[s:fr:Loi constitutionnelle du 2 novembre 1945|Loi constitutionnelle portant organisation provisoire des pouvoirs publics]] at French Wikisource

The law was adopted by popular referendum as part of the 1945 French legislative election on 21 October 1945. Results were promulgated on 3 November 1945. The law provided a provisional constitutional structure for republican government in France [fr] which had been re-established in Metropolitan France in June 1944 under the aegis of the Provisional Government of the French Republic (GPRF) led by General Charles de Gaulle. It lasted for a year, until the Assembly drafted a new constitution which became the foundation for the new, Fourth Republic in October 1946.

Background edit

Third Republic edit

In the latter part of the nineteenth century and first part of the twentieth, France was a republic that was governed by the constitutional Laws of 1875 that established the Third Republic. It consisted of a Chamber of Deputies and a Senate as the legislative branch of government, and a president to serve as head of state. This republican governmental structure lasted through the first half of 1940, until the German invasion of France in World War II precipitated the downfall of the Third Republic in July 1940.

World War II and Vichy edit

 
France under German occupation, with the Vichy regime in the south.

During World War II, France was invaded by Nazi Germany in 1940.[1] Defeat was imminent, and France's military situation was dire. Paul Reynaud resigned as prime minister, rather than sign an armistice with Germany, and was replaced by Marshal Philippe Pétain, a hero of World War I. Shortly thereafter, Pétain signed the Armistice of 22 June 1940. Under terms of the armistice, France was carved up into two sectors, the north and west under direct German military occupation, and the south and east under the control of the nominally independent but repressive rump state under Marshall Philippe Pétain known as the Vichy regime.[1]

On 10 July 1940 the National Assembly, comprising both the Senate and Chamber of Deputies, met in joint session in the spa town of Vichy and voted by 569 to 80 to grant full and extraordinary powers to Marshal Pétain.[2] By the same vote, they also granted Pétain the power to write a new constitution.[3][a] By Act No. 2 on the following day, Pétain defined his own powers and abrogated any Third Republic laws that were in conflict with them.[5][b] By these acts, the National Assembly dissolved itself, the Third Republic was over, and in its place was the Vichy regime,[c] a repressive, German client state under the autocratic control of Marshal Pétain.

Liberation and Provisional Government edit

The Allies invaded France in June 1944[d] and within a year had liberated the country with the support of the Free French Forces which were based in London under General Charles de Gaulle.[8] Looking ahead to victory and the future reconstitution of France as a constitutional republic after the war, de Gaulle formed the Provisional Government of the French Republic (GPRF) on 3 June 1944[9][10] in order to help organize the continuing Free French armed opposition to Germany, and to provide some sort of legal structure for governing France during and after the final phase of the war.[e]

 
General Charles de Gaulle and the ministers of the Provisional Government, 2 November 1945

Establishment of the Provisional Government marked the official restoration and re-establishment of a provisional French Republic, assuring continuity with the defunct French Third Republic. It succeeded the French Committee of National Liberation (CFLN), which had been the provisional government of France headquartered in the overseas territories and metropolitan parts of the country (Algeria and Corsica) that had been liberated by the Free French. As the provisional wartime government of France in 1944–1945, the main purposes of the GPRF were to handle the aftermath of the occupation of France and continue to wage war against Germany as one of the Allies. Its other chief objective was to prepare the ground for a new constitutional order that resulted in the Fourth Republic. It also made several important reforms and political decisions, such as granting women the right to vote.[11]

By May 1945, France was liberated, Germany was defeated, Vichy leaders were in jail or on the run, and the war in Europe was over. The GPRF was now in charge of the territory of Metropolitan France, and turned to the task of organizing elections which would decide the future path of the country.

Election and referendum edit

Legislative elections were organized by the GPRF and set for 21 October 1945 with two goals: to elect a parliament, and to hold a referendum to decide on a constitutional order for the country. The referendum asked voters about whether France should return to the constitution of 1875 (which would have restored the Third Republic), to give the new Assembly unlimited constituent power to draw up a new constitution, or to give limited and temporary constituent power to the Assembly and charge it with drawing up a new constitution in a limited timeframe. The voters, including women for the first time ever in parliamentary elections,[f] chose the third option.[12]

The voters overwhelmingly chose to empower the newly elected Assembly as a constituent assembly tasked with writing a new constitution, and in the meantime to adopt the constitutional law listed on the back of the ballot as the organizing law of the land until a new constitution could be drafted. Because of laws passed earlier by the CFLN and the Provisional Government, this election was the second election in France in which women were able to vote, the first being the municipal elections of 1945.[f]

Scope edit

The constitutional law of 1945 remained in effect for a year, until the assembly drafted and passed the new Constitution of 27 October 1946, establishing the Fourth Republic.

See also edit

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Given full constituent powers in the law of 10 July 1940, Pétain never promulgated a new constitution. A draft was written in 1941 and signed by Pétain in 1944 but it was never submitted or ratified.[4]
  2. ^ The French Constitutional Law of 1940 would later be annulled in August 1944.[13]
  3. ^ The official title of the Vichy regime was "the French State" (État français).
  4. ^ The battle to liberate France began with the D-day landings on 6 June 1944 in the Battle of Normandy in the north,[6] and continued in August with Operation Dragoon in the south.[7]
  5. ^ Earlier bodies formed by de Gaulle during the war to provide some level of governing or coordinating control and political direction to the Free French forces and to rally support included the Empire Defense Council, the French National Committee, the French Committee of National Liberation, and the Provisional Consultative Assembly.
  6. ^ a b Women's suffrage was introduced by the French Committee of National Liberation in the Ordinance of 21 April 1944 [fr], and reconfirmed by the GPRF on 5 October 1944.[11]
Citations
  1. ^ a b Umbreit 1991, p. 311.
  2. ^ Knapp 2007, p. 2.
  3. ^ Maury 2004.
  4. ^ Beigbeder 2006, p. 140.
  5. ^ JORF 1940, 168.
  6. ^ Badsey 1990.
  7. ^ Clark 2008, p. 3.
  8. ^ Muracciole 2009, p. 36.
  9. ^ Wieviorka 2008, p. 300.
  10. ^ Kershaw 2018, p. 42.
  11. ^ a b Singh 2022, p. 47.
  12. ^ Caramani 2017, p. 303.
  13. ^ Legifrance 1944.

Works cited edit

  • Badsey, Stephen (1990). Normandy 1944: Allied Landings and Breakout. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-0-85045-921-0.
  • Beigbeder, Yves (29 August 2006). Judging War Crimes and Torture: French Justice and International Criminal Tribunals and Commissions (1940-2005). Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff/Brill. p. 140. ISBN 978-90-474-1070-6. OCLC 1058436580.
  • Caramani, Daniele (13 February 2017). Elections in Western Europe 1815-1996. Springer. ISBN 978-1-349-65508-3. OCLC 1085235961.
  • Clark, Lloyd (2008). Crossing the Rhine: Breaking into Nazi Germany, 1944 and 1945 – The Greatest Airborne Battles in History. New York, NY: Atlantic Monthly Press. ISBN 978-0-87113-989-4. OCLC 223915610.
  • "Constitutional act no. 2, defining the authority of the chief of the French state". Journal Officiel de la République française. 11 July 1940. from the original on 8 December 2015.
  • Knapp, Andre (27 June 2007). "Introduction". In Knapp, Andrew (ed.). The Uncertain Foundation: France at the Liberation 1944-47. Springer. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-230-22290-8. OCLC 1047640323.
  • [Law of 9 August 1944 Concerning the reestablishment of the legally constituted Republic on the mainland – consolidated version of 10 August 1944]. gouv.fr. Legifrance. 9 August 1944. Archived from the original on 16 July 2009.
  • Maury, Jean-Pierre (2004). "Loi constitutionnelle du 10 Juillet 1940" [Constitutional law of 10 July 1940]. Mjp.univ-perp.fr. from the original on 23 July 2001.
  • Muracciole, Jean-François (2009). Les Français libres [The Free French]. Histoires D'aujourd'hui (in French). Paris: Tallandier. ISBN 978-2-84-734596-4. OCLC 7350216963.
  • Kershaw, Angela (20 July 2018). Translating War: Literature and Memory in France and Britain from the 1940s to the 1960s. Springer. pp. 42–. ISBN 978-3-319-92087-0. OCLC 1045629669. On 3 June 1944 the CFLN became the Gouvernement provisoire de la République française (GPRF), the Provisional Government of the French Republic, and was recalled to Paris at the end of August 1944.
  • Singh, Ram Ayodhya (22 January 2022). Women and other Marginalized Section in the Politics of Developing Countries. New Delhi: K.K. Publications. ISBN 978-8-178-44195-5. OCLC 897793530.
  • Umbreit, Hans (1991) [1st pub. Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt:1979 'Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg, Bd. 2']. "The Battle for Hegemony in Western Europe". In P. S. Falla (ed.). Germany and the Second World War. Vol. 2: Germany's Initial Conquests in Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 227–326. ISBN 978-0-19-822885-1. OCLC 464127303.
  • Wieviorka, Olivier (2008). Normandy: The Landings to the Liberation of Paris. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02838-8. OCLC 1166488535.

Further reading edit

  • Cartier, Emmanuel (2004). La transition constitutionnelle en France (1940-1945): la reconstruction révolutionnaire d'un ordre juridique républicain [The constitutional transition in France (1940-1945): the revolutionary reconstruction of a republican legal order] (doctoral thesis). Bibliothèque constitutionnelle et de science politique, 126. LGDJ. ISBN 2275026746. OCLC 63222190.
  • Cartier, Emmanuel (27 June 2007). "The Liberation and the Institutional Question in France". In Knapp, Andrew (ed.). The Uncertain Foundation: France at the Liberation 1944-47. Springer. pp. 27–. ISBN 978-0-230-22290-8. OCLC 1047640323.

External links edit

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French July 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Loi constitutionnelle du 2 novembre 1945 see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated fr Loi constitutionnelle du 2 novembre 1945 to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The French constitutional Law of 2 November 1945 was an interim transitional constitutional law that set a legal basis for government in France under the Provisional Government of the French Republic GPRF for one year until a new constitution was approved Constitutional law of 2 November 1945OverviewOriginal titleLoi constitutionnelle portant organisation provisoire des pouvoirs publicsJurisdictionFrancePresented21 October 1945Date effectiveNovember 3 1945 1945 11 03 SystemUnitary parliamentary republicGovernment structureBranchestwo legislative and executive Chambersone the National AssemblyExecutivehead of the Provisional Government of the French Republic s fr Loi constitutionnelle du 2 novembre 1945 Loi constitutionnelle portant organisation provisoire des pouvoirs publics at French Wikisource The law was adopted by popular referendum as part of the 1945 French legislative election on 21 October 1945 Results were promulgated on 3 November 1945 The law provided a provisional constitutional structure for republican government in France fr which had been re established in Metropolitan France in June 1944 under the aegis of the Provisional Government of the French Republic GPRF led by General Charles de Gaulle It lasted for a year until the Assembly drafted a new constitution which became the foundation for the new Fourth Republic in October 1946 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Third Republic 1 2 World War II and Vichy 1 3 Liberation and Provisional Government 2 Election and referendum 3 Scope 4 See also 5 References 6 Works cited 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editThird Republic edit Further information French Third Republic and French Constitutional Laws of 1875 In the latter part of the nineteenth century and first part of the twentieth France was a republic that was governed by the constitutional Laws of 1875 that established the Third Republic It consisted of a Chamber of Deputies and a Senate as the legislative branch of government and a president to serve as head of state This republican governmental structure lasted through the first half of 1940 until the German invasion of France in World War II precipitated the downfall of the Third Republic in July 1940 World War II and Vichy edit Further information Battle of France and Vichy regime nbsp France under German occupation with the Vichy regime in the south During World War II France was invaded by Nazi Germany in 1940 1 Defeat was imminent and France s military situation was dire Paul Reynaud resigned as prime minister rather than sign an armistice with Germany and was replaced by Marshal Philippe Petain a hero of World War I Shortly thereafter Petain signed the Armistice of 22 June 1940 Under terms of the armistice France was carved up into two sectors the north and west under direct German military occupation and the south and east under the control of the nominally independent but repressive rump state under Marshall Philippe Petain known as the Vichy regime 1 On 10 July 1940 the National Assembly comprising both the Senate and Chamber of Deputies met in joint session in the spa town of Vichy and voted by 569 to 80 to grant full and extraordinary powers to Marshal Petain 2 By the same vote they also granted Petain the power to write a new constitution 3 a By Act No 2 on the following day Petain defined his own powers and abrogated any Third Republic laws that were in conflict with them 5 b By these acts the National Assembly dissolved itself the Third Republic was over and in its place was the Vichy regime c a repressive German client state under the autocratic control of Marshal Petain Liberation and Provisional Government edit Further information Liberation of France Free French Forces and GPRF The Allies invaded France in June 1944 d and within a year had liberated the country with the support of the Free French Forces which were based in London under General Charles de Gaulle 8 Looking ahead to victory and the future reconstitution of France as a constitutional republic after the war de Gaulle formed the Provisional Government of the French Republic GPRF on 3 June 1944 9 10 in order to help organize the continuing Free French armed opposition to Germany and to provide some sort of legal structure for governing France during and after the final phase of the war e nbsp General Charles de Gaulle and the ministers of the Provisional Government 2 November 1945 Establishment of the Provisional Government marked the official restoration and re establishment of a provisional French Republic assuring continuity with the defunct French Third Republic It succeeded the French Committee of National Liberation CFLN which had been the provisional government of France headquartered in the overseas territories and metropolitan parts of the country Algeria and Corsica that had been liberated by the Free French As the provisional wartime government of France in 1944 1945 the main purposes of the GPRF were to handle the aftermath of the occupation of France and continue to wage war against Germany as one of the Allies Its other chief objective was to prepare the ground for a new constitutional order that resulted in the Fourth Republic It also made several important reforms and political decisions such as granting women the right to vote 11 By May 1945 France was liberated Germany was defeated Vichy leaders were in jail or on the run and the war in Europe was over The GPRF was now in charge of the territory of Metropolitan France and turned to the task of organizing elections which would decide the future path of the country Election and referendum editFurther information 1945 French legislative election and 1945 French constitutional referendum Legislative elections were organized by the GPRF and set for 21 October 1945 with two goals to elect a parliament and to hold a referendum to decide on a constitutional order for the country The referendum asked voters about whether France should return to the constitution of 1875 which would have restored the Third Republic to give the new Assembly unlimited constituent power to draw up a new constitution or to give limited and temporary constituent power to the Assembly and charge it with drawing up a new constitution in a limited timeframe The voters including women for the first time ever in parliamentary elections f chose the third option 12 The voters overwhelmingly chose to empower the newly elected Assembly as a constituent assembly tasked with writing a new constitution and in the meantime to adopt the constitutional law listed on the back of the ballot as the organizing law of the land until a new constitution could be drafted Because of laws passed earlier by the CFLN and the Provisional Government this election was the second election in France in which women were able to vote the first being the municipal elections of 1945 f Scope editThe constitutional law of 1945 remained in effect for a year until the assembly drafted and passed the new Constitution of 27 October 1946 establishing the Fourth Republic See also editThe Bayeux speeches Constitutionalism Constitution of France Constitutions of France Fifth Republic France French Committee of National Liberation French Community French Constitutional Council French Fourth Republic French law French Union Government of France Politics of FranceReferences editNotes Given full constituent powers in the law of 10 July 1940 Petain never promulgated a new constitution A draft was written in 1941 and signed by Petain in 1944 but it was never submitted or ratified 4 The French Constitutional Law of 1940 would later be annulled in August 1944 13 The official title of the Vichy regime was the French State Etat francais The battle to liberate France began with the D day landings on 6 June 1944 in the Battle of Normandy in the north 6 and continued in August with Operation Dragoon in the south 7 Earlier bodies formed by de Gaulle during the war to provide some level of governing or coordinating control and political direction to the Free French forces and to rally support included the Empire Defense Council the French National Committee the French Committee of National Liberation and the Provisional Consultative Assembly a b Women s suffrage was introduced by the French Committee of National Liberation in the Ordinance of 21 April 1944 fr and reconfirmed by the GPRF on 5 October 1944 11 Citations a b Umbreit 1991 p 311 Knapp 2007 p 2 Maury 2004 Beigbeder 2006 p 140 JORF 1940 168 Badsey 1990 Clark 2008 p 3 Muracciole 2009 p 36 Wieviorka 2008 p 300 Kershaw 2018 p 42 a b Singh 2022 p 47 Caramani 2017 p 303 Legifrance 1944 Works cited editBadsey Stephen 1990 Normandy 1944 Allied Landings and Breakout Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 0 85045 921 0 Beigbeder Yves 29 August 2006 Judging War Crimes and Torture French Justice and International Criminal Tribunals and Commissions 1940 2005 Leiden Martinus Nijhoff Brill p 140 ISBN 978 90 474 1070 6 OCLC 1058436580 Caramani Daniele 13 February 2017 Elections in Western Europe 1815 1996 Springer ISBN 978 1 349 65508 3 OCLC 1085235961 Clark Lloyd 2008 Crossing the Rhine Breaking into Nazi Germany 1944 and 1945 The Greatest Airborne Battles in History New York NY Atlantic Monthly Press ISBN 978 0 87113 989 4 OCLC 223915610 Constitutional act no 2 defining the authority of the chief of the French state Journal Officiel de la Republique francaise 11 July 1940 Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Knapp Andre 27 June 2007 Introduction In Knapp Andrew ed The Uncertain Foundation France at the Liberation 1944 47 Springer p 2 ISBN 978 0 230 22290 8 OCLC 1047640323 Ordonnance du 9 aout 1944 relative au retablissement de la legalite republicaine sur le territoire continental Version consolidee au 10 aout 1944 Law of 9 August 1944 Concerning the reestablishment of the legally constituted Republic on the mainland consolidated version of 10 August 1944 gouv fr Legifrance 9 August 1944 Archived from the original on 16 July 2009 Maury Jean Pierre 2004 Loi constitutionnelle du 10 Juillet 1940 Constitutional law of 10 July 1940 Mjp univ perp fr Archived from the original on 23 July 2001 Muracciole Jean Francois 2009 Les Francais libres The Free French Histoires D aujourd hui in French Paris Tallandier ISBN 978 2 84 734596 4 OCLC 7350216963 Kershaw Angela 20 July 2018 Translating War Literature and Memory in France and Britain from the 1940s to the 1960s Springer pp 42 ISBN 978 3 319 92087 0 OCLC 1045629669 On 3 June 1944 the CFLN became the Gouvernement provisoire de la Republique francaise GPRF the Provisional Government of the French Republic and was recalled to Paris at the end of August 1944 Singh Ram Ayodhya 22 January 2022 Women and other Marginalized Section in the Politics of Developing Countries New Delhi K K Publications ISBN 978 8 178 44195 5 OCLC 897793530 Umbreit Hans 1991 1st pub Deutsche Verlags Anstalt 1979 Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg Bd 2 The Battle for Hegemony in Western Europe In P S Falla ed Germany and the Second World War Vol 2 Germany s Initial Conquests in Europe Oxford Oxford University Press pp 227 326 ISBN 978 0 19 822885 1 OCLC 464127303 Wieviorka Olivier 2008 Normandy The Landings to the Liberation of Paris Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 02838 8 OCLC 1166488535 Further reading editCartier Emmanuel 2004 La transition constitutionnelle en France 1940 1945 la reconstruction revolutionnaire d un ordre juridique republicain The constitutional transition in France 1940 1945 the revolutionary reconstruction of a republican legal order doctoral thesis Bibliotheque constitutionnelle et de science politique 126 LGDJ ISBN 2275026746 OCLC 63222190 Cartier Emmanuel 27 June 2007 The Liberation and the Institutional Question in France In Knapp Andrew ed The Uncertain Foundation France at the Liberation 1944 47 Springer pp 27 ISBN 978 0 230 22290 8 OCLC 1047640323 External links edit nbsp French Wikisource has original text related to this article Constitutional law of 10 July 1940 giving full powers to Marshall Petain in French nbsp French Wikisource has original text related to this article Constitutional acts of the Vichy regime in French nbsp French Wikisource has original text related to this article Constitutional law of 2 November 1945 in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constitutional law of 2 November 1945 amp oldid 1169172568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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