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Viviani was an antisemite, arguing that "antisemitism is the best form of social struggle". [ 1 ] In the spring of 1914 an exceptionally radical chamber was elected , and for a while it seemed that they would be unable to agree upon any one for Premier, but finally, he was appointed prime minister on 13 June 1914, by President Poincaré .
The Square René Viviani is named for the French political figure René Viviani (1863–1925) who, notably, was France's first Minister of Labour. After several old buildings standing on the site were cleared away in 1928, including an annex of the public hospital across the river, the empty space was arranged to be a public park.
The Second Viviani Government was a government of the French Third Republic, formed on the 26th of August 1914 as a result of the formation of the new Sacred Union coalition due to the breakout of the First World War.
PRS member René Viviani was the first French Minister of Labour (Ministre du Travail et de la Prévoyance sociale) from October 1906 until July 1909). [ 1 ] The PRS was weakened by an ideological contradiction between socialism and reformism in an era where the political divide was very sharp.
The proposed laws were introduced by Freemasons Gaston Doumergue and René Viviani. [C 13] In a somewhat eclectic manner, several initiatives were presented to legislators to propose economic and social reforms. In 1910, proposals were put forth to regulate apprenticeships, reduce rural depopulation, and reform the Code of Criminal Procedure .
The conference was held on 6 July 1915 and was the first face-to-face meeting between the British prime minister H. H. Asquith and his French equivalent René Viviani. [1] The parties had called the conference as both acknowledged that war strategy could not be effectively planned through the slow pre-war diplomatic channels.
This is a list of justice ministers of France, working for the French Ministry of Justice. 1790 to the Consulate 21 November 1790 – 23 March 1792: Marguerite-Louis-François Duport-Dutertre [fr] 23 March 1792 – 12 April 1792: Jean Marie Roland de la Platière 13 April 1792 – 4 July 1792: Antoine Duranton 4 July 1792 – 10 August 1792: Étienne de Joly 10 August 1792 – 6 October 1792 ...
In 1905-06 he held the portfolio of Public Instruction in the Rouvier cabinet; he was Minister of Justice in the Doumergue cabinet in 1913–14, and in the first cabinet organized by René Viviani in June, 1914; and when the War in Europe broke out in 1914, he became Minister of Labor in the second Viviani cabinet, formed on 26 August that year.