French neo-Gaullist politician, foreign minister 199395 and prime minister 199597. In 1976, as a close lieutenant of Jacques Chirac, he helped to found the right-of-centre Rally for the Republic (RPR) party, of which he later became secretary general, then president. He was appointed premier by newly-elected president Chirac in May 1995 but, within months, found his position under threat as a result of a housing scandal. Opposition to his government's economic programme, particularly welfare cuts, provoked a general strike in November 1995.
The son of a Gascony farmer, Juppé was educated at the prestigious Ecole d'Administration and his early career was as a fast-track civil servant. He was first elected to the French National Assembly, for a Paris constituency, in 1983. Nicknamed Amstrad for his lightning intellect, he became a budget minister in the 198688 Chirac administration and was an outstanding foreign minister in the Balladur government of 199395. A pro-European technocrat, he became prime minister when Chirac was elected president in May 1995. Juppé was re-elected mayor of Bordeaux in June 1995, and elected president of the RPR in October 1995. He resigned as prime minister after the right of coalition was defeated by the Socialist Party in the June 1997 National Assembly elections.
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