François Rebsamen
This article needs to be updated. The reason given is: According to the article Ensemble Citoyens, he leads the Progressive Federation founded in 2020. (June 2022) |
François Rebsamen | |
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Mayor of Dijon | |
Assumed office 10 August 2015 | |
Preceded by | Alain Millot |
In office 25 March 2001 – 5 April 2014 | |
Preceded by | Robert Poujade |
Succeeded by | Alain Millot |
Minister of Labour | |
In office 2 April 2014 – 2 September 2015 | |
Prime Minister | Manuel Valls |
Preceded by | Michel Sapin |
Succeeded by | Myriam El Khomri |
Personal details | |
Born | Dijon, France | 25 June 1951
Political party |
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François Rebsamen (born 25 June 1951) is a French politician who was the Minister of Social Affairs from 2014 to 2015. He was a member of the Socialist Party.
Early life and education
[edit]Rebsamen is the son of Eric Gottfried Rebsamen, a Protestant who was born in Stuttgart on 9 January 1917, and worked at Renault in Dijon for several months in 1939–40. In that same city, after the war, the senior Rebsamen married Denise Agron, daughter of Édouard Agron, a surgeon and radical socialist, originally from Briennon in the Loire, who was a member of Dijon's municipal council under the Popular Front. The senior Rebsamen died in Dijon on 19 February 1974.[1][2][3]
Rebsamen earned a master's degree in public law, a DESS in economics and a degree in political science.[4]
Early career
[edit]Rebsamen began his professional and political career by serving as chief of staff for the Regional Council of Burgundy from 1979 to 1983, where he worked alongside Pierre Joxe (1979-1982) and André Billardon (1982-1983). He followed Pierre Joxe to various other posts, serving as his chief of staff from 1984 to 1986 and again from 1988 to 1991. He then worked under Laurent Fabius while the latter was First Secretary of the Socialist Party (1992-1993), then as technical advisor to Jean-Jack Queyranne.
Political career
[edit]Early beginnings
[edit]In the early 1970s, Rebsamen was an active member of the Ligue communiste révolutionnaire, a militant group. He left in 1974.
Following the 1989 French municipal elections, Rebsamen was elected president of the socialist caucus in the Dijon city council.
In 1994, Rebsamen was elected to the Regional Council of Burgundy. In 1997 he ran in the legislative elections in the first district of Côte-d'Or, but was defeated by Robert Poujade, the mayor of Dijon. In the same year, he was named National Secretary of the Socialist Party at the Brest Congress, and became the party's deputy head, under his friend François Hollande.[5]
Rebsamen was elected in March 1998 as the general councilor of the canton of Dijon-5, winning 51.5% of the votes and defeating the incumbent, Pierre Barbier (RPR).
Mayor of Dijon
[edit]In the 2001 municipal elections, Rebsamen became the first leftist to be elected mayor of Dijon since 1935, winning 52.14% of the vote and defeating Jean-François Bazin (RPR). He ran again for the legislature in 2002, but lost to Bernard Depierre (UMP), who succeeded Poujade. He was re-elected general councilor in March 2004, this time winning 62.5% of the votes.
Rebsamen directed the Socialist Party's campaign for the March 2004 regional and cantonal elections, and in 2005 ran the campaign for a "yes" vote in the French referendum on the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe. In June, then in August 2006, he asked Jack Lang and Dominique Strauss-Kahn to withdraw their candidacy for president of France, and explicitly supported Ségolène Royal, becoming co-director of her campaign, along with Jean-Louis Bianco.
Rebsamen was re-elected mayor of Dijon in the 2008 municipal elections, winning 56.22% of the votes to François-Xavier Dugourd's 36.44%. His plan to build a tramway in Dijon was unanimously approved by the Greater Dijon Community Council on 15 May 2008.[6]
From 2007 to 2008, Rebsamen was a director of Dexia-Crédit Local de France, resigning a few days before it went bankrupt.
Member of the French Senate, 2008–2014
[edit]In the 2008 elections, Rebsamen became a Senator, the first Socialist to represent Côte-d'Or in the Senate since 1948, and resigned then from the post of general counselor. In the Senate, he was a member of the National Committee on Finance, Budget Control, and Economic Accounts. After the Senatorial elections of 25 September 2011, and the election of 1 October, Rebsamen was chosen to lead the Socialist caucus in the Senate.
In the Socialist Party's 2011 primaries, Rebsamen endorsed François Hollande as the party's candidate for the 2012 presidential election.[7]
In 2012, Rebsamen opposed a government effort tried to prevent politicians from holding multiple posts, and said that if forced to choose between continuing as Senator or as Mayor of Dijon he would opt for the latter.[8][9]
In the 2014 municipal elections, Rebsamen was elected to his third term as Mayor with 52.84% of the votes, defeating Alain Houpert (UMP).
Minister of Labor, 2014–2015
[edit]On 2 April 2014, Rebsamen was appointed Minister of Labor, Employment and Social Dialogue in the government of Prime Minister Manuel Valls. This appointment led Rebsamen to resign from the post of Mayor of Dijon. While at the Ministry of Labor, he was nicknamed "Minister of Unemployment" owing to the high jobless rate.[10][11][12][13]
Return to local politics
[edit]On 30 July 2015, after the death of Alain Millot, who had succeeded him as Mayor of Dijon, Rebsamen announced that he would run for that post again. On 10 August 2015, he was re-elected Mayor of Dijon, and a few days later he resigned his ministerial post. On 6 December 2016, he was offered the post of Minister of the Interior, which he refused because he preferred to remain Mayor of Dijon.[14]
Ahead of the Socialist Party's 2018 convention in Aubervilliers, Rebsamen publicly endorsed Stéphane Le Foll as candidate for the party's leadership.[15]
After being diagnosed with cancer, Rebsamen announced on 10 April 2018 that he would not be able to serve as Mayor of Dijon and President of the Dijon Metropolis during his treatment, and thus appointed Nathalie Koenders as interim president and Pierre Pribetich as interim president of the metropolis.[16]
References
[edit]- ^ Hassoux, Didder; François Rebsamen. Une trempe d'éléphant; Liberacion; 15 March 2003; [1]
- ^ François Rebsamen: un proche de François Hollande chargé du dialogue social; Le Point; 4 February 2014; [2]
- ^ " Rebs " de A à Z; Le Point; August 9, 2011;
- ^ Dijon : Denise Rebsamen est décédée; Le Bien Public; August 26, 2015;
- ^ François Rebsamen; Le Figaro;
- ^ "Cette concertation préalable est close; Le Grand Dijon a initié;". Archived from the original on 3 December 2014. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
- ^ Estelle Gross (6 July 2011), Primaire : qui soutient qui au PS ? L'Obs.
- ^ Pierron, Maud; Non-cumul des mandats: François Rebsamen rejette l'engagement d'Hollande; 20 Minutes; 28 August 2012; [3]
- ^ Huet, Sophie; Non-cumul: "Je choisirai Dijon" (Rebsamen); Le Figaro; 12 June 2013; [4]
- ^ Dijon : troisième mandat pour François Rebsamen; Le Bien Public; 31 March 2014; [5]
- ^ VIDEOS. Valls au sujet de son gouvernement : "Nous sommes tous Hollandais"; Le Parisian; 2 April 2014; [6]
- ^ Alain Millot prend la mairie de Dijon; Le Bien Public; April 6, 2014;
- ^ Rebsamen quitte le gouvernement affublé du titre de "ministre du chômage"; Le Figaro; 10 August 2015; [7]
- ^ Sportouch, Benjamin; Remaniement : François Rebsamen a refusé le poste de ministre de l'Intérieur; RTL; 12 June 2016; [8]
- ^ Pierre Lepelletier (7 March 2018), Congrès du PS : qui soutient qui ? Le Figaro.
- ^ Le maire de Dijon, François Rebsamen, annonce qu'il est atteint d'un cancer; France Bleu; 10 April 2018; [9]
- (in French) Official website