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National Council (Vichy Government)

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This article is about the Vichy-era consultative assembly. For other uses of "National Council", seeNational Council.
National Council

Conseil national
History
Founded22 January 1941
Disbanded30 November 1943
Constitution
Vichy France

TheNational Council was a consultative assembly created on 22 January 1941 by theVichy regime duringWorld War II under the direction ofPierre-Étienne Flandin. It aimed to replace representative democracy with a structure intended to provide policy advice to the regime. The Council ceased operations in November 1943.

History

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Background and creation

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Under theNational Revolution, theVichy regime abolished parliamentary democracy, prompting the establishment of the National Council as a new advisory body. Announced in January 1941,[1] the Council sought to serve as a forum for discussions and recommendations on administrative and constitutional reforms in a context of national reconstruction. Unlike many other Vichy institutions it represented both the Vichy zone and theoccupied zone.[2]

Operations

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The council was a purely advisory body with no legislative powers, which had been kept with Petain.[3] It convened commissions on specific topics, such as administrative reorganization, economic reform, and constitutional development. Sessions were held from May 1941 to early 1942 at theVilla Strauss in Vichy.

Composition

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Structure

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The National Council comprised 213 members[4] appointed directly by the Head of State. These included former parliamentarians, union representatives, professional leaders, and prominent figures from the social, cultural, and economic elites.

Represented groups

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Legacy

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The National Council symbolized the Vichy regime's attempts to legitimize its governance while rejecting democratic institutions. Critics have characterized it as a tool of authoritarian consolidation. It was officially dissolved in November 1943 as part of broader institutional changes.

References

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  1. ^Vaucher, Paul (Mar 1942)."The "National Revolution" in France".Political Science Quarterly.57 (1):7–27.doi:10.2307/2143506.JSTOR 2143506.
  2. ^Cointet, Michèle (1987).Vichy et le fascisme : les hommes, les structures et les pouvoirs. Bruxelles: Editions Complexe. p. 53.ISBN 9782870272121.OCLC 18177445.
  3. ^Kammerer, Gladys M. (November 1943)."The Political Theory of Vichy".The Journal of Politics.5 (4):407–434.doi:10.2307/2125296.JSTOR 2125296.
  4. ^Cointet, Michèle (1989).Le Conseil national de Vichy : vie politique et réforme de l'Etat en régime autoritaire, 1940-1944. Paris: Aux Amateurs de livres. p. 77.ISBN 9782878410006.OCLC 25095218.

External links

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