Louis-Lucien Klotz
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sections should be added to this article, to conform with Wikipedia's Manual of Style. Please discuss this issue on the talk page. |
Louis-Lucien Klotz (11 January 1868 – 15 June 1930) was a French journalist and politician. He was the French Minister of Finance during World War I.
Louis-Lucien Klotz was born in Paris to Alsatian Jewish parents, He was 32 years younger than his oldest brother Victor Klotz (1836-1906), a wealthy silk dealer. After completing his legal education, he enrolled as an advocate at the Cour d'Appel in Paris. In 1888, at the age of twenty, he founded Vie Franco-Russe, an illustrated paper intended to increase popular support for the Franco-Russian Alliance. In 1892 he became editor of Voltaire, and campaigned against the reactionary policy of Jules Ferry. In 1895, he founded Français Quotidien, a patriotic daily paper devoted to national defense, into which Voltaire was later merged.
Klotz was an unsuccessful candidate for the National Assembly from his Paris district in the 1893 election. He ran for office and lost again a few years later. Then in the 1898 election, he ran for the Assembly from Montdidier as a Radical Socialist. This time he was elected by an overwhelming majority. He retained this seat until 1925.
He was noted for his industry as a Deputy and in government posts. He served as President of the Customs Commission, then as Rapporteur General of the budget. He held the following prominent ministerial posts:
- Minister of Finance, 3 November 1910-2 March 1911, in the second government of Aristide Briand.
- Minister of Finance, 27 June 1911-22 March 1913, in Briand's third government.
- Minister of the Interior, 22 March-8 December 1913, in the government of Louis Barthou. At this time there were large protests and demonstrations against the "Three Years Law" for military conscription.
- Minister of Finance, 12 September 1917-20 January 1920, in the second government of Georges Clemenceau. He was responsible for negotiating reparations from Germany. His policy was characterised by his famous formula: "The Boche will pay!"
In 1924, Klotz published his memoirs of this period, De La Guerre à La Paix (From the War to the Peace).
Klotz was a member of several civic and charitable societies, including the Society for the Defense of Children, the Prison Society, and the Central Committee for Labor.[1]
After his retirement, he became involved in dubious and risky financial speculations, and lost all his money. In 1929, he was convicted of passing bad checks and sentenced to two years imprisonment. He died less than a year later, on 15 June 1930. With no further hope of settlement, his creditors seized his residence at 9 Rue de Tilsit, which he had inherited from his brother.
His lack of financial acumen was noted years earlier by Clemenceau, who reportedly commented "My finance minister is the only Jew in Europe who knows nothing about money." [2]
There are claims that under an apple tree in Angers, Klotz seduced his best friend, Leon Gambetta, then 15 years old, and that this homosexual experience was the source of Gambetta's homophobia and anti-semitism.
[edit] References
- ^ Isidore Singer and Victor Rousseau Emanuel. 'Klotz, Louis Lucien', Jewish Encyclopedia (New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1905)
- ^ Horne, Alistair. To Lose a Battle