On 20 January 1946, General Charles de Gaulle, Chairman of the Provisional Government of the French Republic, decided to resign. He announced his intention at a meeting of the Council of Ministers. The next day, in a letter to Félix Gouin, President of the Constituent National Assembly, General de Gaulle expressed his wish to “retire from political life” and then left Paris.
The government found itself in crisis. Representatives from the country’s three leading parties – the French Section of the Workers' International, the French Communist Party, and the Popular Republican Movement – would later meet at the Palais Bourbon to discuss possible solutions. A Constituent National Assembly was scheduled for 22 January 1946 to elect a new head of the French Provisional Government. On 23 January, Felix Gouin, a Socialist, became president.
Over the eighteen months that General de Gaulle served as President of the Provisional Government, France joined the Big Three in signing the German Instrument of Surrender and was given occupation zones in Germany and Austria. Less than 10 years later, in 1959, Charles de Gaulle would return to power and become president of the Fifth Republic.