Édouard Goubert | |
Native Name Lang: | fr |
Birth Date: | 1894 7, df=yes |
Death Place: | Bangalore, Karnataka, India |
Mawards: | is not set --> |
Office: | 1sth Chief Minister of Pondicherry |
Predecessor: | Office Established |
Constituency: | Mannadipet |
Office2: | Member of the 1955 Pondicherry Representative Assembly |
Term Start2: | 18 July 1955 |
Term End2: | 28 October 1958 |
Constituency2: | Bahour |
Predecessor2: | Office Established |
Successor2: | K. Subrahmania Padayachi |
Office3: | Member of the 1955 Pondicherry Representative Assembly |
Term Start3: | 11 August 1959 |
Term End3: | 30 June 1963 |
Constituency3: | Mannadipet |
Predecessor3: | Thandapani Kounder |
Office4: | Member of 1st Puducherry Assembly |
Term Start4: | 1 July 1963 |
Term End4: | 24 August 1964 |
Constituency4: | Mannadipet |
Predecessor4: | Himself |
Successor4: | Manickavasaga Reddiar |
Office5: | Member of 2nd Puducherry Assembly |
Term Start5: | 29 August 1964 |
Term End5: | 19 September 1968 |
Predecessor5: | A. S. Gangeyan |
Successor5: | D. Kantharaj, |
Office6: | Mayor of Pondicherry |
Term Start6: | 1961 |
Term End6: | 1963 |
Édouard Goubert (29 July 1894 – 14 August 1979) was mayor and first chief minister of Pondicherry between 1 July 1963 and 11 September 1964. Initially a strongly pro-French leader, he later shifted towards the pro-merger Indian National Congress, which ultimately became the death knell for the sovereignty of France's comptoirs (trading posts) in India.[1] [2] [3] He and Lambert Saravane founded the French India Socialist Party in July 1947.[4]
Goubert was popularly known as Pappa Goubert.
Goubert was born in Pondicherry on 29 July 1894 to a French father and Franco-Indian mother.[5] [6] He received his education in French Indochina and studied Law in France.[6] He began his career in the colonial administration and worked as a clerk at the Pondicherry Court. In 1951, he ran as a candidate of the Democratic and Socialist Union of the Resistance for the seat of French India in the French National Assembly (Assemblée Nationale). Goubert won the election with an overwhelming majority of 99.3% of the vote.[7] A referendum on the future of French India was held in Chandernagore, the territory right outside of Calcutta, on 19 June 1949. Out of 12,184 registered voters (drawn from a population of 44,500), 7,473 voted for merger with India while only 114 votes were cast in favor of inclusion in the French Union. While a similar referendum was supposed to be held in the remaining four territories, those referendums never took place.[8]
Initially, Goubert attempted to negotiate a special status for French India that would make it autonomous from both France and India. However, neither the French nor Indian governments agreed to the demand.[6] By 1954, Goubert shifted his loyalty towards the pro-India faction and supported the annexation of French possessions to the Indian Union. In March 1954, he traveled to Pondicherry and took part in an agitation demanding the merger of French India with the Indian Union. On 29 June 1954, his parliamentary immunity was abolished. On 1 November 1954, France signed treaties transferring sovereignty of French possessions to India, ending Goubert's tenure in the French National Assembly.[7]
Edouard Goubert died in Bangalore, Karnataka on 14 August 1979.[7]