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Someone has conflated the two separate legislative acts of 9–10 June 1940. On 9 June, the two houses of the French parliament voted to abolish the constitution of 1875; Chambrun was indeed the only senator to vote against that. (Three deputies voted against it in the lower house vote.) The following day, the members of both houses met as a joint assembly (I think they called themselves the National Assembly) and voted to give dictatorial powers to Petain; the Vichy Eighty, of whom Chambrun was again one, are the eighty members of the assembly who voted no on 10 June. I've corrected the article and provided a source, though since my copy of Americans in Paris is the e-dition, I can't cite a page number. Binabik80 (talk) 16:55, 14 October 2021 (UTC)Reply