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  2. First Bayeux speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Bayeux_Speech

    The enthusiastic reception from the population confirmed his popularity in France, [1] which discouraged the United States from placing France under their administration. . The Provisional Government of the French Republic, officially formed on June 3, 1944 in Algiers, the capital of French Algeria, under De Gaulle’s leadership as the successor to the French Committee of National Liberation ...

  3. Appeal of 18 June - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_of_18_June

    The 70th anniversary of the speech was marked in 2010 by the issuing of a postage stamp (designed by Georges Mathieu) [16] and a €2 commemorative coin. [17] In 2023, Le Monde commissioned a recreation of the speech using artificial intelligence to replicate de Gaulle's voice, using a German-language transcription of the speech in Swiss ...

  4. Georges Pompidou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georges_Pompidou

    Nevertheless, in part due to his actions during the May 1968 crisis, he appeared as the natural successor to de Gaulle. Pompidou announced his candidature for the Presidency in January 1969. In social policy, Pompidou's tenure as prime minister witnessed the establishment of the National Employment Fund in 1963 to counter the negative effects ...

  5. President of France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/President_of_France

    Alain Poher is the only person to have served in this temporary position, and has done so twice: the first time in 1969 after Charles de Gaulle's resignation and a second time in 1974 after Georges Pompidou's death while in office. In this situation, the president of the Senate does not have to resign from their position while acting as president.

  6. ‘De Gaulle’ Review: Tedious and Cliché-Ridden Historical ...

    www.aol.com/gaulle-review-tedious-clich-ridden...

    France’s heroic leader Charles de Gaulle might have lent his name to airports and famed metropolitan intersections as one of the previous century’s most pivotal political figures. But save for ...

  7. Union of Democrats for the Republic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_of_Democrats_for_the...

    The UDR was the successor to Charles de Gaulle's earlier party, the Rally of the French People, and was organised in 1958, along with the founding of the Fifth Republic as the Union for the New Republic (UNR), and in 1962 merged with the Democratic Union of Labour, a left-wing Gaullist group. In 1967 it was joined by some Christian Democrats to ...

  8. 1960s in France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1960s_in_France

    He and de Gaulle both shared the same non-Wilsonian approach to world affairs, believing in nations and their relative strengths, rather than in ideologies, international organizations, or multilateral agreements. De Gaulle is famously known for calling the United Nations le Machin ("the thing")

  9. Trump’s ‘Golden Age’ vs. the ‘Gilded Age’: An examination

    www.aol.com/trump-golden-age-vs-gilded-150101048...

    President Donald Trump, with his usual bombast, has declared that his second term will be a new “golden age” for the country.