- Albert Sarraut
Infobox Prime Minister
name=Albert Sarraut
order=106thPrime Minister of France
term_start =26 October 1933
term_end =26 November 1933
predecessor =Édouard Daladier
successor =Camille Chautemps
order2=113thPrime Minister of France
term_start2 =24 January 1936
term_end2 =4 June 1936
predecessor2 =Pierre Laval
successor2 =Léon Blum
birth_date =28 July 1872
death_date =death date and age|1962|11|26|1872|7|28|df=yes
party=RadicalAlbert-Pierre Sarraut (28 July 1872 - 26 November 1962) was a French Radical politician, twice Prime Minister during the Third Republic.
Sarraut was born in
Bordeaux ,Gironde ,France .He was Governor-General of
French Indochina , from 1912 to 1919.Sarraut retired from politics after Petain dissolved the National Assembly in July 1940. He took control of the family newspaper, "
La Depeche de Toulouse ", after the editor, his brother Maurice, was murdered by theMilice in 1943.Sarraut died in
Paris in 1962.arraut's First Ministry, 26 October - 26 November 1933
*Albert Sarraut - President of the Council and Minister of Marine
*Albert Dalimier - Vice President of the Council and Minister of Justice
*Joseph Paul-Boncour - Minister of Foreign Affairs
*Édouard Daladier - Minister of War
*Camille Chautemps - Minister of the Interior
*Georges Bonnet - Minister of Finance
*Abel Gardey - Minister of Budget
*Eugène Frot - Minister of Labour and Social Security Provisions
*Jacques Stern - Minister of Merchant Marine
*Pierre Cot - Minister of Air
*Anatole de Monzie - Minister of National Education
*Hippolyte Ducos - Minister of Pensions
*Henri Queuille - Minister of Agriculture
*François Piétri - Minister of Colonies
*Joseph Paganon - Minister of Public Works
*Émile Lisbonne - Minister of Public Health
*Jean Mistler - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones
*Laurent Eynac - Minister of Commerce and Industryarraut's Second Ministry, 24 January - 4 June 1936
*Albert Sarraut - President of the Council and Minister of the Interior
*Pierre Étienne Flandin - Minister of Foreign Affairs
*Louis Maurin - Minister of War
*Marcel Régnier - Minister of Finance
*Ludovic-Oscar Frossard - Minister of Labour
*Léon Bérard - Minister of Justice
*François Piétri - Minister of Marine
*Louis de Chappedelaine - Minister of Merchant Marine
*Marcel Déat - Minister of Air
*Henri Guernut - Minister of National Education
*René Besse - Minister of Pensions
*Paul Thellier - Minister of Agriculture
*Jacques Stern - Minister of Colonies
*Camille Chautemps - Minister of Public Works
*Louis Nicolle - Minister of Public Health and Physical Education
*Georges Mandel - Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, and Telephones
*Georges Bonnet - Minister of Commerce and Industry
*Joseph Paul-Boncour - Minister of State and Permanent Delegate to the League of Nations
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