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Édouard Balladur

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Édouard Balladur
Image:BALLADUR.jpg

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In office
29 March 1993 – 10 May 1995
Preceded by Pierre Bérégovoy
Succeeded by Alain Juppé

Born 2 May 1929
Izmir, Turkey
Political party RPR

Édouard Balladur (born 2 May 1929) in Izmir (Smyrna), Turkey is a French politician. He served as French Prime Minister from 29 March 1993 to 10 May 1995.

Édouard Balladur is an ethnic Armenian whose parents emigrated to Marseille in 1935 along with their 5 children. In 1957, he married Marie-Josèphe Delacour with whom he later had four sons. He is a Roman Catholic. In 2006 he announced that he would not run again for re-election in 2007 as a member of Parliament for the 15th arrondissement of Paris, a conservative stronghold.

He started his career in 1964 as advisor to the then Prime Minister Georges Pompidou. After Pompidou's election as President of France in 1969, Balladur was appointed under secretary general of the presidency then secretary general from 1973 to Georges Pompidou's death in 1974. He returned to politics in the 1980s with Jacques Chirac. As Finance Minister from 1986 to 1988, he sold off a large number of public companies. He took a major part in the adoption of liberal and pro-European policies by the Gaullist party RPR.

Since Jacques Chirac refused to renew cohabitation with President Mitterrand, Edouard Balladur served as Prime Minister after the 1993 legislative election. He became very popular and had the support of influential media (Le Monde, TF1...). Notwithstanding his promise not to campaign against Jacques Chirac, he ran unsuccessfully for president in 1995. Despite Chirac and his declaring that they had been "friends for 30 years", the episode greatly strained their relationship. The Balladuriens, i.e. Balladur's followers, such as Nicolas Sarkozy, were ostracized from the new Chirac administration.

Then he failed in turn to win the elections for the presidency of the Ile de France region in 1998, the mayoralty of Paris in 2001, and the presidency of the National Assembly in 2002. He currently presides its foreign affairs commission.

From 1968 to 1980, he was president of the French company of the Mont Blanc Tunnel, while occupying various other positions in ministerial staff. Following the 1999 deadly accident in the tunnel, he was heard in 2005 by the court judging the case, about the security measures he had or had not taken. Balladur claimed that he always took security seriously, but that it was difficult to agree on anything with the Italian company operating the Italian part of the tunnel. From 1977 to 1986, he was president of Générale de Service Informatique (later merged into IBM Global Services), making him one of the few French politicians with business experience.

Edouard Balladur is often caricatured as aloof, aristocratic and arrogant in media such as the Canard Enchaîné weekly or the Les Guignols de l'info TV show.

[edit] Balladur's Cabinet

(29 March 1993 – 10 May 1995)

[edit] Changes

Preceded by:
Pierre Bérégovoy
Minister of the Economy, Finance, and Privatization
1986–1988
Succeeded by:
Pierre Bérégovoy
Preceded by:
Pierre Bérégovoy
Prime Minister of France
1993–1995
Succeeded by:
Alain Juppé


bn:এদুয়ার বালাদুর

ca:Édouard Balladur da:Édouard Balladur de:Édouard Balladur es:Édouard Balladur fr:Édouard Balladur it:Édouard Balladur no:Édouard Balladur pl:Édouard Balladur pt:Edouard Balladur ru:Балладюр, Эдуар fi:Édouard Balladur uk:Баладюр Едуард

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