Émile François Loubet (French: [emil lub?]; 30 December 1838 – 20 December 1929) was the 45th Prime Minister of France and later President of France.
Trained in law, he became mayor of Montélimar, where he was noted as a forceful orator.
He was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in 1876 and the Senate in 1885.
He was appointed as a Republican minister under Carnot and Ribot.
He was briefly Prime Minister of France in 1892.
As President (1899–1906), he saw the successful Paris Exhibition of 1900, and the forging of the Entente Cordiale with the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, resolving their sharp differences over the Boer War and the Dreyfus Affair.