OKH orders Army Group B to send “all the men they can spare” to the Sedan corridor, in order to open it up again and rescue the trapped section of Army Group A. General von Bock detaches the entirety of 18th Army towards Sedan, although as little of it is motorised then he does not believe it can arrive in any strength before the 27th – and his troops will be tired when they do. He is assigned the majority of the OKH reserve in return. In the meantime, 16th Army (Army Group A, which is currently approaching down the roads from Sedan) is ordered to launch an attack as soon as possible down the corridor, and 4th Army is turned around from its approach to Paris and ordered to attack eastwards. 12th Army took the brunt of the Anglo-French attack, and will not be battle-worthy for a few days as it is reorganised.
After lunch, a new French government is announced:
- Paul Reynaud – President of the Council
- André Marie - Vice President of the Council
- Édouard Daladier - Minister of Foreign Affairs
- Charles de Gaulle – Minister of National Defence and War
- César Campinchi – Minister of Military Marine (junior)
- Guy La Chambre – Minister of Air (junior)
- Paul Marchandeau - Minister of the Army (junior)
- Auguste Champetier de Ribes – Minister of Veterans and Pensioners (junior)
- Raoul Dautry – Minister of Armaments
- Henri Roy – Minister of the Interior
- Léon Blum – Minister of Finance
- Alexandre Bachelet – Minister of Labour
- Albert Sérol – Minister of Justice
- Alphonse Rio – Minister of Merchant Marine
- Albert Sarraut – Minister of National Education
- Georges Monnet– Minister of Agriculture
- Henri Queuille – Minister of Supply
- Georges Mandel – Minister of Colonies
- Pierre-Étienne Flandin – Minister of Public Works
- Marcel Héraud – Minister of Public Health
- Alfred Jules-Julien – Minister of Posts, Telegraphs, Telephones, and Transmissions
- Ludovic-Oscar Frossard – Minister of Information
- Louis Rollin – Minister of Commerce and Industry
- Paul Thellier – Minister of Blockade