Tréveneuc law
The Tréveneuc Law was a law passed in the early days of the French Third Republic which established a legal framework by which the country could invoke a state of emergency in order to oppose a power grab by a rogue chief executive who illegitimately dissolved the National Assembly.
The law was passed on 15 February 1872 by the National Assembly of France during the provisional period of the Third Republic.
There were several occasions where serious discussion or attempts to invoke the Tréveneuc law arose, in particular several times during World War II, either by the Vichy regime, or by those opposing it.
In 150 years, the law has never been repealed and is still in force, and since 2000 has been mentioned in political discourse in France under a number of different circumstances.
Name and date
The Tréveneuc law is entitled, "the law of 15 February 1872 relating to the possible role of departmental councils in exceptional circumstances".It is usually dated 15 February 1872 in France, the day of its adoption. But it is also known as the law of 22 February 1872 in France, the day of its promulgation.
It is also known as the Tréveneuc Constitution because it is one of the constitutional laws adopted by the National Assembly elected on 8 February 1871 in France.
Development
On 25 July 1871, Henri, Viscount of Tréveneuc and representative of Côtes-du-Nord in the National Assembly, presented a bill, co-authored by Charles de Janzé and Émile Depasse. On August 11, 1781, its examination in committee began. On February 5, 1872, the discussion began. On February 15, 1872, the National Assembly adopted it by 480 votes to 75. On February 22, 1872, Adolphe Thiers, President of the Republic, promulgated it. The following day, it was published in the Official Journal; then, on March 30, 1872, in the Bulletin des lois.Description
Under the exceptional circumstances envisioned by the law, the power normally held by the national legislature is partially devolved to the departmental councils, who are to meet "immediately" to maintain public order locally, and calls for the establishment of an "Assembly of Delegates" consisting of two delegates elected from each departmental council. The delegates are to rejoin the legal members of the government wherever they happen to be, and to jointly take all necessary measures to maintain order and to ensure the independence and viability of the National Assembly, including calling for national elections. If after a month the National Assembly is still not back, then the emergency framework invests the Assembly of Delegates with further powers, including both legislative and administrative power, and instills its executive decisions with a legal force which are obligatory on all agents of public order, under penalty of "forfeiture".It is sometimes characterized as part of the constitution, or called the "Tréveneuc constitution".
The Tréveneuc law consists of six articles.
It provides for its use in the event that the Parliament is illegally dissolved or prevented from sitting, for any reason whatsoever, in the places assigned to them in Paris or in any other city where the Government has transferred the seat of public powers.
The second article establishes the measures to be implemented if the National Parliament is unable to meet: it is thus up to the general councils to meet and provide "urgently for the maintenance of public tranquility and legal order".
Articles 3 to 6 relate to the assembly of delegates from the departmental councils. Each county council must elect two delegates. The general councils must each send two delegates to the Government - which supposes that the latter has been able to escape the cause which prevents the Parliament from meeting, in order to constitute a provisional deliberative assembly with the possible national deputies who could have followed the Government.
The law assigns itself a double objective: to provide for the measures immediately necessary for the administration of the country, and for the restoration of the constitutional mandate, either of that previously in progress, or of a new one, resulting from general elections, which must be convened after one month of exercise of the "Assembly of Delegates".
The text recognises the events of the war of 1870, and therefore a desire to guard against their repetition, or against a civil war which would prevent Parliament from meeting.
Attempted uses
Giraud in 1943
The law was used to justify the creation of Free France and the Provisional Government of the French Republic.Guadeloupe
On 17 June in Guadeloupe, one of France's colonial possessions in the Caribbean, Paul Valentino announced that he was going to ask the Departmental Council of Guadeloupe to apply the Tréveneuc law, and on 1 July, he repeated his request at an extraordinary session. President Nicolas Sarkozy paid homage to Valentino and others in a 2009 speech, saying of Valentino: "Steeped in the republican spirit, Valentino believed in the law. That's why he was the first to invoke an old law of the Third Republic, the Tréveneuc Law, to declare the new regime, born under the German boot, illegal."Vichy
René Cassin argued that the armistice of 22 June was null and void by virtue of the Tréveneuc law.In order to prevent its implementation, the Vichy Regime passed two laws: the first, of 18 August, prohibited the general councils from meeting spontaneously; the second, of 12 October, suspended the sessions of the general councils and transferred their powers to the prefects. The Tréveneuc law appeared at the top of the page of the constitutional declaration of 16 November, in which Charles de Gaulle supplemented the Brazzaville Manifesto of 27 October.
Algeria
According to Michèle Cointet-Labrousse, the General Councils of Algeria considered implementing the Tréveneuc Law in 1943.Washington
The attitude of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt in late 1943 and early 1944 towards de Gaulle and FDR's reservations about recognizing the French Committee of National Liberation as far as an entity that would govern post-liberation was based on his view that a government ought to be based on an election by the people, and he took measures to restrict the authority of American authorities' interaction with the CFLN. It was in January 1944 that FDR wrote Alexis Léger, ex-secretary general of the Quai d'Orsay at the time of the armistice and ex-pat in the U.S. to seek advice on how de Gaulle's insistence on being recognized as head of a provisional government post-Liberation might be countered. Léger wrote Roosevelt stating that the Tréveneuc law should be invoked to determine the government of a post-war France, explaining that it would be illegal for Washington or any other foreign government to grant recognition to de Gaulle, based on the requirements of the law to either constitute a new national assembly, or to recreate the previous one—namely, the one at the end of the Third Republic, when the armistice was signed.Post-Vichy and reestablishment of the Republic
The French Committee of National Liberation rejected the Tréveneuc law as a possible basis for the reestablishment of republican rule in France.In discussions of the illegitimacy of Vichy and the continuity of the Republic after the Second World War, legal means were sought to justify this illegitimacy, and to establish a legal and constitutional basis for the abrogation of Vichy laws, and the continuity of the Republic. De Gaulle had no particular zeal for a return to the Third Republic, but the word "republic" had become associated with positive feelings about France beyond the specific meaning of the word, so the provisional government would just be a transitional state between Vichy and some form of Republic, which in theory would mean a return to the constitutional laws of 1875 under the Third Republic. However, a great number of deputies had died during the occupation, and hundreds were banned because of their actions during the war.
It was under these circumstances, that the Tréveneuc law was mentioned as a possible legal basis for the transition. The French Committee of National Liberation rejected this overture, however, preferring a solution that marked a separate course rather than something that represented a return to the Third Republic. The solution that was ultimately found, rested more upon the illegality of Vichy to begin with, based on earlier discussions between de Gaulle and Jules Jeanneney.
Amendments and status
On October 3, 1980 in France, Jean-Louis Masson filed a bill No.1968 to supplement the Tréveneuc law.It is still in force.
There was a debate on whether the law should remain in force. Adhémar Esmein and Maurice Hauriou believed that it had been repealed by the constitutional laws of February 24, 1875. Léon Duguit considered it to be in force. Hauriou argued that the "provisional constitutional laws" adopted by the National Assembly — namely, the Rivet law of August 31, 1871, the Broglie law of March 13, 1873, and the septennat law of November 20, 1873 — were repealed by the Constitution of 1875 in France. But he admitted that "there could be more doubts" regarding the Tréveneuc law.
The Tréveneuc law was neither repealed nor amended by law no. 82-213 of March 2, 1982 relating to the rights and freedoms of municipalities, departments and regions. It was neither repealed nor codified by Law No. 96-142 of February 21, 1996 relating to the legislative part of the General Code of Territorial Communities. It was not repealed by law no. 2011-525 of 17 May 2011 on the simplification and improvement of the quality of law. It was amended by law no. 2013-403 of 17 May 2013 relating to the election of departmental councilors, municipal councilors and community councilors, and modifying the electoral calendar.
Works cited
*Official texts
- Henri de Tréveneuc, Charles de Janzé et Émile Depasse, relative au rôle éventuel des présidents des commissions départementales et des conseils généraux, in vol. 3, no. 232, 21 August 1871, National Assembly, annex no. 420, p. 2237, col. 2-3.
- Henri Fournier, fait au nom de la 6e commission d'initiative parlementaire, sur la proposition de loi de MM. le vicomte de Tréveneuc, de Janzé Depasse, relative au rôle éventuel des présidents des commissions départementales et des conseils généraux, in, vol. 3 no. 233, 22 August 1871, National Assembly, annex no. 485, p. 2865, col. 3.
- Henri Fournier, fait au nom de la commission chargée d'examiner les propositions : 1o de M. le vicomte de Tréveneuc et plusieurs de ses collègues ; 2o de M. Vétillart et plusieurs de ses collègues ; 3o de M. le vicomte d'Aboville et de plusieurs de ses collègues ; 4o de MM. Vente et Depeyre, relatives au rôle éventuel des conseils généraux dans des circonstances exceptionnelles, by Viscount de Tréveneuc and others; by Vétillart and others; by Viscount d'Aboville and others; by Vente and Depeyre, concerning the possible role of general councils in exceptional circumstances ) in vol. 4, no. 18, 19 January 1872 National Assembly, annex no. 782, p. 417, col. 2-3.
- relative au rôle éventuel des conseils généraux dans des circonstances exceptionnelles, in vol. 4, no. 83, 30 March 1872, text no. 928, p. 178-179.
- modifiant l'article 24 de la loi du 10 août 1871, in vol. 72, no. 207, 20 August 1940, Laws, text no. 1, p. 4743, col. 2-3.
- portant suspension des conseils généraux et des conseils d'arrondissement, in vol. 72, no. 261, 13 October 1940, Laws, text no. 1, p. 5274, col. 2-3.
General
- Gabriel Bouffet et Léon Périer, « Département », in Léon Béquet and Édouard Laferrière, Répertoire du droit administratif, vol. 10 : Département – Dette publique, Paris, P. Dupont, 1892, 1st ed., 1 vol., p. 1-515.
- Julien Sausse, La loi de Tréveneuc du 15 février 1872, relative aux rôles éventuels des conseils généraux dans des circonstances exceptionnelles, in Éric Gojosso Faculty of Law and Social Sciences of the University of Poitiers., July 2017, 1st ed., 1 vol., 468, I. Le droit face aux circonstances exceptionnelles, chapt. 2.