Henri Albert François Joseph Raphaël Alibert (; 17 February 1887 â 5 June 1963) was a French jurist and politician associated with Vichy France. A royalist and traditionalist long close to Action Française, he helped draft the constitutional acts by which Philippe Pétain assumed state powers in July 1940 and, as Minister of Justice, sponsored early Vichy laws including the review of naturalisations and the first .
Alibert was a Catholic monarchist and an ardent reader of Charles Maurras. He taught at the ÃÂcole libre des sciences politiques and worked in business and public law circles during the late Third Republic. He ran unsuccessfully for the Chamber of Deputies in 1928 and, although close to Action Française, he did not formally join the movement after its papal condemnation in 1926.
On 16 June 1940, in the cabinet formed by Pétain, Alibert became Undersecretary of State to the Presidency of the Council. He opposed proposals to transfer the government to North Africa and drafted the for the Révolution nationale. On 10 July the National Assembly voted constitutional powers to Pétain; the following days Pétain signed actsâÂÂprepared in AlibertâÂÂs ministryâÂÂthat concentrated executive and legislative authority in the Head of State and adjourned the Parliament .
Appointed Keeper of the Seals (Minister of Justice) on 12 July 1940, Alibert oversaw measures that marked the early Vichy legal order:
Late in 1940 Alibert joined other ministers lobbying Pétain to dismiss Pierre Laval, which occurred on 13 December. On 27 January 1941, amid renewed German pressure, Alibert left the government and was succeeded by Joseph Barthélemy.
At the Liberation, Alibert fled to Belgium. On 7 March 1947 he was condemned to death in absentia by the High Court of Justice and to indignité nationale and confiscation of property. He received amnesty in March 1959. He died in Paris on 5 June 1963.