Word: pinay
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They also failed to count on the invigorated government of Premier Antoine Pinay. After a cabinet meeting, Pinay threatened immediate suspension and discipline for any government employees who answered the strike call. Said Interior Minister Charles Brune: "There will be no provocations on our part, but if the demonstrators act roughly the countermeasures will be even rougher...
...vigilance," i.e., getting caught. While he remained in jail, the party would probably put up bumbling, hard-boiled Andre Marty of Spanish Civil War notoriety as the front man. The government, which had already jailed scores of Stalinists amid general applause, went on a hunt for big game. Pinay's men said that they raided Communist centers in Brest, Lorient and Bordeaux, and announced that they had broken an espionage case at Toulon...
Successive French Finance Ministers have despaired over the problem of getting at these private gold hoards. But last week Premier Antoine Pinay, a shrewd businessman, thought he had found the way. He announced a new government bond, the value of which would be tied to the price of the gold napoleon. As the free market price of the napoleon goes up, so will the price of Pinay's bond: unlike the napoleon, the bond will also pay 3½% interest. Since every Frenchman knows that the government can bring the market price of napoleons down by minting more...
Launched with all the fanfare of a War Bond drive, Pinay's gold bond issue brought 17 tons of hoarded gold into the Paris treasury coffers in the first four days. At Dijon a man who wouldn't give his name traded in gold ingots worth 75 million francs (approx. $214,000). The bond issue had to pull in 400 to 500 billion francs to be a success. Pinay, who plans to use the money to finance war reconstruction projects, beamed as the returns came in; he was once again proving himself France's most resourceful Premier...
...Pinay's growing reputation as a man of decision emphasized clearly De Gaulle's growing weakness. In March, 27 Gaullist deputies bolted their party to vote Right-Winger Pinay in as Premier. Last week, on the eve of a vital confidence vote in the Assembly, 47 Gaullist deputies (out of 118) told General de Gaulle that they would no longer blindly oppose Pinay, but would vote according to their own political consciences. This decision may spell the end of General de Gaulle's hope of being elected to power in France...