Marie-France Garaud

Marie-France Garaud (born 3 March 1934) is a French politician.[1]

Marie-France Garaud
In office
20 July 1999  19 July 2004
Personal details
Born
Marie-France Quintard

(1934-06-06) 6 June 1934
Poitiers, France
Political partyRally for the Republic
ResidenceFrance
OccupationMember of the European Parliament

She was a private advisor for President Pompidou, Jacques Chirac during his first time as Prime Minister and François Mitterrand. In the 1970s, she was considered to be the most influential woman of France. She ran in the 1981 French presidential election and sat at the European parliament from 1999 to 2004, elected on the list of Charles Pasqua and Philippe de Villiers.

She voted "no" in the French Maastricht Treaty referendum and in the 2005 French European Constitution referendum.

Books

  • Garaud, Marie-France; Séguin, Philippe (1992). De l’Europe en général et de la France en particulier. Paris: Pré aux Clercs. ISBN 978-2714428998.
  • Garaud, Marie-France (1992). Maastricht, pourquoi non. Paris: Plon. ISBN 9782259025614. OCLC 28425584.
  • Garaud, Marie-France (2006). La Fête des fous : Qui a tué la Ve République ?. Paris: Plon. ISBN 9782259202596. OCLC 421297239.
  • Garaud, Marie-France (2010). Impostures politiques. Paris: Plon. ISBN 9782259212540. OCLC 706029043.


gollark: I guess shipping stuff there is hard.
gollark: What about that random African place with no government?
gollark: He did ask some weird things at some point, but not that as far as I know? Lots of random sacrifices and murder in general.
gollark: The one thing with a baby's ribs being crushed is obvious evidence that the entire idea is bad but one idiot in Christianity is an isolated case?
gollark: There is LaVeyan or something Satanism, which is basically humanism rebranded to irritate Christians.

References

  1. Ramsay, Raylene L. (2003). French women in politics: writing power, paternal legitimization, and maternal legacies. Berghahn Books. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-57181-082-3.
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