Aristide
Briand was
born at Nantes,
France, on 28th March, 1862. While a law student he developed socialist
ideas and after leaving university wrote for Le
Peuple, La Lanterne
and Petite République.
Briand,
became secretary-general of the French Socialist
Party in 1901 and the following year was elected to Chamber of
Deputies. In 1904 he joined with Jean Jaurés
to establish the left-wing newspaper, L'Humanité in
1904.
In
1906 Briand was expelled from the party for accepting office in the
coalition government headed by Georges
Clemenceau. As minister of public instruction and worship (1906-09)
Briand helped to complete the separation of Church and State in France.
In July 1909 Briand became prime minister and horrified his former
socialist colleagues when he broke up
a railway stoppage by calling up some of the strikers for military
service. Briand further upset the left-wing by supporting the extension
of compulsory military service. He lost power in November 1910 but
returned to office briefly in 1913.
On the outbreak of the First World War Briand
became Justice Minister in the French government headed by Rene
Viviani. A powerful cabinet figure, Briand advocated French intervention
on the Balkan Front and promoted the merits
of the socialist general, Maurice
Sarrail.
In October 1915, the French president, Raymond
Poincare appointed Briand as prime minister. His attempts to establish
political control over the military high command ended in failure
and he was unable to persuade Joseph Joffre,
chief of general staff in the French Army,
to change his tactics on the Western Front.
However, after French losses at Verdun
Briand was able to remove Joffre from power.
Georges
Clemenceau,
editor of L'Homme
Libre,
became highly critical of Briand's decision not to persecute pacifists
and his refusal to sack his interior minister, Louis
Malvy, who favoured a negotiated peace.
Briand backed the Nivelle Offensive
and when this failed, the resignation of Hubert
Lyautey in November 1917, brought the government down. Briand
was now replaced by his long-time rival, Georges
Clemenceau, as prime
minister.
Briand returned to power in 1921 and as well as being prime minister
(1921-22, 1925-26 and 1929) he was also foreign minister between 1925
and 1932. While in this post he became the first politician in the
20th century to put forward the idea of a European
Federal Union.