Henri Rochereau
Henri Rochereau | |
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European Commissioner for Overseas Development | |
In office 9 January 1962 – 30 June 1970 | |
President | Walter Hallstein Jean Rey |
Preceded by | Robert Lemaignen |
Succeeded by | Jean-François Deniau (External Relations and Development Aid) |
Minister of Agriculture | |
In office 27 May 1959 – 24 August 1961 | |
Prime Minister | Michel Debré |
Preceded by | Roger Houdet |
Succeeded by | Edgard Pisani |
Personal details | |
Born | Chantonnay, France | 25 March 1908
Died | 25 January 1999 90) Vendée, France | (aged
Henri Rochereau (25 March 1908 in Chantonnay, Vendée – 25 January 1999 Paris) was a French politician and European Commissioner.
Henri was the son of Victor Rochereau, a National Assembly of France député (deputy) for the Vendée department (1914–1942). Henri worked as a solicitors clerk and later in an exporting business.
In the French presidential election, 1988, he supported the right-wing National Front candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen.
Offices
- From 1949 to 1959 he was a member of the Senate of France for the Vendée department and a council leader for the canton of Les Essarts
- From May 1959 to August 1961 Minister for Agriculture in the government of Michel Debré
- From 1962 to 1970 he was Overseas Development Commissioner in the second Hallstein Commission, and from 1967, in the Rey Commission
- From 1970 to 1986 he was President of the association of Large French Ports[1]
Notes
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Roger Houdet |
Minister of Agriculture 1969–1961 |
Succeeded by Edgard Pisani |
Preceded by Robert Marjolin |
French European Commissioner 1962–1970 Served alongside: Robert Marjolin, Raymond Barre |
Succeeded by Raymond Barre |
Preceded by Robert Lemaignen |
Succeeded by Jean-François Deniau as European Commissioner for External Relations and Development Aid | |
European Commissioner for Overseas Development 1962–1970 |
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