Fourth Republic
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- Élysée - The Constitution of 27 October 1946
- Princeton University - Postwar Stories
- Columbia University in the City of New York - Department of Political Science - Cabinet Instability and the Accumulation of Experience: The French Fourth and Fifth Republics in Comparative Perspective
- GlobalSecurity.org - Fourth Republic 1946-1958
- On the Web:
- Élysée - The Constitution of 27 October 1946 (Apr. 05, 2024)
Fourth Republic, government of the French Republic from 1946 to 1958. The postwar provisional president Charles de Gaulle resigned in 1946, expecting that public support would bring him back to power with a mandate to impose his constitutional ideas. Instead, the constituent assembly chose the socialist Félix Gouin to replace him. The assembly submitted two draft constitutions to a popular vote in 1946, and the revision was narrowly approved. The structure of the Fourth Republic was remarkably like that of the Third Republic. The lower house of parliament, renamed the National Assembly, was the locus of power. Shaky coalition cabinets succeeded one another, and the lack of a clear-cut majority hampered coherent action. Presidents of the Fourth Republic were Vincent Auriol (1947–54) and René Coty (1954–59). Other political leaders included Georges Bidault, Pierre Mendès-France, René Pleven, and Robert Schuman.