After the failure of the
1969 constitutional referendum, de Gaulle resigned and Pompidou was elected president of France. In the
general election of 15 June 1969, he defeated the centrist president of the Senate and acting president
Alain Poher by a wide margin (58% to 42%). Though a Gaullist, Pompidou was more pragmatic than de Gaulle, notably facilitating the accession of the
United Kingdom to the
European Community on 1 January 1973. He embarked on an industrialisation plan and initiated the
Arianespace project, as well as the
TGV project, and furthered the French civilian nuclear programme. He was sceptical about the "New Society" programme of his prime minister,
Jacques Chaban-Delmas. In 1972, he replaced Chaban-Delmas with
Pierre Messmer, a more conservative Gaullist. While the left-wing opposition organised itself and proposed a
Common Programme before the
1973 legislative election, Pompidou widened his presidential majority by including Centrist pro-European parties. In addition, he paid special attention to regional and local needs in order to strengthen his political party, the UDR (Union des Democrates pour la Ve République), which he made a central and lasting force in the Gaullist movement.
Foreign affairs The United States was eager to restore positive relations with France after de Gaulle's departure from office. New US President
Richard Nixon and his top adviser
Henry Kissinger admired Pompidou; the politicians were in agreement on most major policy issues. The United States offered to help the French nuclear programme. Economic difficulties, however, arose following the
Nixon Shock and the
1973–1975 recession, particularly over the role of the American dollar as the medium for world trade. Pompidou sought to maintain good relations with the newly independent former French colonies in Africa, relying on such powerful figures as
Jacques Foccart and
René Journiac who maintained informal networks with African
strongmen. In 1971, he visited
Mauritania, Senegal,
Ivory Coast,
Cameroon, and
Gabon. He brought a message of cooperation and financial assistance, but without the traditional paternalism. More broadly, he made an effort to foster closer relations with North African and Middle Eastern countries in order to develop a hinterland including all nations bordering the Mediterranean.
Modernising Paris Pompidou's time in office was marked by constant efforts to modernise France's capital city. He spearheaded construction of a modern art museum, the Centre Beaubourg (renamed
Centre Pompidou after his death), on the edge of the
Marais area of Paris. Other attempts at modernisation included tearing down the open-air markets at
Les Halles and replacing them with the shopping mall of the same name, building the
Montparnasse Tower, and constructing an expressway on the right bank of the Seine. Nixon-Pompidou.JPG|Pompidou with US president
Richard Nixon in
Reykjavík, 31 May 1973 Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F037099-0021, Köln, Staatsempfang für Präsident Pompidou.jpg|Pompidou with
West German chancellor
Willy Brandt in
Cologne, 3 July 1972 ==Death in office==