Émile Hugues

Émile Hugues (b. Vence, 7 April 1901 – d. Paris, 10 February 1966) was a French politician and government minister.

With a doctorate in law and by profession a notaire, Hugues was elected in 1946 as a Radical-Socialist député for the Alpes-Maritimes département to the second constituent National Assembly, and subsequently to the Assemblée nationale, in which he sat until 1958.

Hugues left the government following the rejection of the planned European Defence Community in 1954, which he had warmly supported.

He followed Henri Queuille and André Morice into the Radical dissidence in 1956, which led to the creation of the Centre républicain.

The castle in Vences is today the Fondation Émile Hugues, a modern and contemporary art museum.