Jean Luchaire
Jean Luchaire was a French journalist and politician who became the head of the French collaborationist press in Paris during the German military occupation. Luchaire supported the Révolution nationale declared by the French Government after it relocated to the spa town of Vichy in 1940.
Family
Jean Luchaire was born in Siena, Italy, a grand-nephew of historian Achille Luchaire. He was married, with four children.He was the son of Lucien Luchaire, an Italianist and founder of the Institut français in Florence, and an animator from 1916 to 1919 of the Revue des nations latines, and his wife Fernande Dauriac. They would later divorce and in 1916 Dauriac would marry Gaetano Salvemini, an Italian socialist and anti-fascist politician, historian, and writer who collaborated with the Revue des nations latines.
Inter-war years
Before World War II Luchaire frequented the French Chamber of Deputies, where he began a strong association with Aristide Briand, known for the Kellogg–Briand Pact. Luchaire's newspaper supported Briand's policy for a rapprochement with Germany. Manchester Guardian journalist Robert Dell is on record as saying that Luchaire was "most frightfully corrupt", and in 1934 Foreign Minister Louis Barthou related that Luchaire was receiving "quite incredible" subsidies for his newspaper Notre Temps ; some 100,000 francs a month from Joseph Paul-Boncour.Jean Luchaire first met and became friends with German francophile Otto Abetz in 1930, when Abetz was still living in Karlsruhe. Abetz would go on to marry Luchaire's secretary, Suzanne, and became German Ambassador in Paris during World War II. Luchaire was convinced that the appointment of Abetz as Ambassador to Paris was a godsend to France and that, between them, he and Abetz could moderate the rigours of the German military occupation and prepare the ground for a happy Franco-German union. He suggested that, in effect, he was adapting his old Briandism to new conditions.
Vichy years
Pierre Laval, aware of Luchaire's friendly relations with Abetz, sent him to Paris in July 1940 to re-establish contact with him. Luchaire consistently maintained that he represented a certain respectable "rightist" anti-British French political tradition. He founded a further newspaper, the evening daily Les Nouveaux Temps, in 1940, and subsequently became the President of the Association de la presse parisienne in 1941 and presided the Corporation nationale de la presse française. During the occupation, however, it was claimed that Luchaire was disseminating Nazi propaganda, fulminating against England, America, de Gaulle, the Soviet Union, Bolshevism and the Maquis. By the end of 1943 he advocated a "real" collaborationist government, Laval being, in his opinion, "inadequate". During the occupation, as editor of Nouveaux Temps, he drew a salary of 100,000 francs a month, besides 'extras', lived in great luxury, lunched at the Tour d'Argent and according to his daughter Corinne, even started keeping expensive mistresses, which he had not done in the past.In 1944, Luchaire called on the Germans to "exterminate" the French Resistance, and his newspapers wrote violent anti-British and anti-American articles after the Normandy landings. He was appointed Minister of Information in the French government-in-exile, after the Germans forcibly removed it from Vichy to the Sigmaringen enclave, 1944–1945, where, apparently, he continued to be optimistic. He fled to Italy in 1945, but later was arrested and returned to France. He was tried by a tribunal consisting of broad Left appointees, potentially including Communist members of the resistance, and executed.
Luchaire's daughter Corinne had become a film actress in the 1930s. Following her father's "joke trial", she regarded him as a martyr, "who had never wanted to harm anyone, who was sincere, and who never thought unkindly of any man." In 1945, she was sentenced to 10 years of dégradation nationale. She died of tuberculosis in 1950.