Eugène Frot

Eugène Frot
Frot in 1929
Minister of Merchant Marine
In office
31 January 1933 – 24 October 1933
Preceded byLéon Meyer
Succeeded byJacques Stern
Minister of Labor and Social Assurance
In office
26 October 1933 – 23 November 1933
Preceded byFrançois Albert
Succeeded byLucien Lamoureux
Minister of Merchant Marine
In office
26 November 1933 – 9 January 1934
Preceded byJacques Stern
Succeeded byWilliam Bertrand
Minister of Labor and Social Assurance
In office
9 January 1934 – 27 January 1934
Preceded byLucien Lamoureux
Succeeded byJean Valadier
Minister of the Interior
In office
30 January 1934 – 7 February 1934
Preceded byCamille Chautemps
Succeeded byAlbert Sarraut
Personal details
Born(1893-10-02)2 October 1893
Montargis, Loiret, France
Died10 April 1983(1983-04-10) (aged 99)
Château-Landon, Seine-et-Marne, France
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Eugène Frot (2 October 1893 – 10 April 1983) was a French politician who was Minister of Merchant Marine (twice), Minister of Labor and Social Assurance (twice) and Minister of the Interior in various short-lived cabinets between December 1932 and February 1934. While he was Minister of Interior, right-wing groups organized street demonstrations in Paris on 6 February 1934 in which the police shot dead fourteen people. In the aftermath the cabinet was forced to resign. Frot supported Republican institutions, but by the late 1930s was a committed pacifist. In July 1940 he voted for the constitutional change that established the collaborationist Vichy government. As a result, he was barred from politics after the war.