He entered local politics in the fiefdom of his parliamentarian uncle, Alphonse Chautemps, and followed a political career path typical of many Radical-Socialists: first elected town councillor for Tours (1912), then mayor (1919–25), parliamentary deputy (1919–34) and senator (1934–40). Chautemps was considered one of the chief figures of the 'right' (anti-socialist and pro-liberal) wing of the centre-left
Radical-Socialist Party. Between 1924 and 1926, he served in the centre-left
coalition governments of
Édouard Herriot,
Paul Painlevé and
Aristide Briand.
Twice prime minister Renowned as a skilful negotiator with friends from across the party divide, he was called upon on several occasions to attempt to build support for a coalition of the centre-left. He first became President of the Council for a short-lived government in 1930. After the electoral victory of the left in 1934, he served as
Interior Minister and became head of government once more in November 1933. The revelations of the
Stavisky Affair, a corruption scandal, tarnished two of his ministers, sparking violent protests by the
far-right leagues. He resigned his posts on 27 January 1934, when the opposition press attributed Stavisky's suicide to a government cover-up.
Deputy Prime minister and last premiership In
Léon Blum's
Popular Front government of 1936, Chautemps represented the Radical-Socialist Party as a
Minister of State and succeeded Blum at the head of the government from June 1937 to March 1938. The franc was devalued, but government finances remained in difficulty. Pursuing the program of the Popular Front, he proceeded in the
nationalisation of the railroads to create the
SNCF. However, in January 1938, he formed a new government consisting solely of ministers from the nonsocialist
republican centre- left. His government fell on 10 March.
Runup to World War II Chautemps subsequently served from April 1938 to May 1940 as
Deputy Prime Minister in the governments of
Édouard Daladier and
Paul Reynaud. After the latter resigned, as he was again deputy prime minister, now to Marshal
Philippe Pétain. ==World War II==