collapse of the Fourth Republic an avowed aim of General de Gaulle. In March 1952, however, a group of twenty-seven RPF deputies broke away from the party and voted for the investiture of Antoine Pinay, a former member of Marshall Pétain's Vichy-era cabinet. Pinay, with Gaullist support, promptly formed the most right-wing government since the liberation. Because his presence in power depended on the rebel RPF deputies, he had little intention of pressing forward on the EDC. As long as the RPF remained hostile to the EDC, ratification looked unlikely. 5
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Other parties soon announced their opposition. At the Radical Party congress in Bordeaux in October 1952, veteran leaders Edouard Daladier and Edouard Herriot denounced the treaty in uncompromising terms. Daladier objected to the mechanism by which voting weight in the EDC Council was linked to the size of a nation's financial and military contribution, for France, with overseas commitments, might not be able to maintain as many troops as Germany within the EDC. Similarly, he objected to the requirement that France secure a two-thirds majority vote from the Council before withdrawing troops for overseas use an unacceptable constraint on France's colonial policy. And he condemned the absence of British participation on the grounds that France and the other smaller members could not effectively offset German weight in the Council. Herriot, the president of the National Assembly and a venerable Third Republic Radical, argued that the plan was unconstitutional, as it deprived the legislature of its right to fix the military budget, and he too decried the absence of Great Britain. Alongside the criticisms raised by the powerful and fiercely anti-German Socialists Jules Moch and Vincent Auriol, this opposition legitimized and strengthened the Gaullist hostility to the plan. 6
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The press echoed this party opposition. Journals such as Combat, l'Express, and France-Observateur part of the left-leaning establishment that opposed European rearmament and confrontation with the Soviets kept up a steady drumbeat against the EDC. Le Monde, the very influential center-left paper, though not opposed to European integration, took the position that the EDC would strengthen German strategic influence on the continent and perhaps pull France into a war to "liberate" eastern Germany. For the paper's founder and editor, Hubert Beuve-Méry, as well as for his colleagues André Fontaine and Maurice Duverger, the EDC was "the bitter fruit of the Atlantic Alliance," an "infernal machine," and a ''camouflaged Wehrmacht ." 7
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There remained, of course, strong proponents: cédistes, as they were
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