2017 French legislative election

Legislative elections were held in France on 11 and 18 June 2017 (with different dates for voters overseas) to elect the 577 members of the 15th National Assembly of the Fifth Republic. They followed the two-round presidential election won by Emmanuel Macron. The centrist party he founded in 2016, La République En Marche! (LREM), led an alliance with the centrist Democratic Movement (MoDem); together, the two parties won 350 of the 577 seats—a substantial majority—in the National Assembly, including an outright majority of 308 seats for LREM. The Socialist Party (PS) was reduced to 30 seats and the Republicans (LR) reduced to 112 seats, and both parties' allies also suffered from a marked drop in support; these were the lowest-ever scores for the centre-left and centre-right in the legislative elections. The movement founded by Jean-Luc Mélenchon, la France Insoumise (FI), secured 17 seats, enough for a group in the National Assembly. Among other major parties, the French Communist Party (PCF) secured ten and the National Front (FN) obtained eight seats. Both rounds of the legislative election were marked by record low turnout.[1]

2017 French legislative election

← 2012 11 June 2017 (first round)
18 June 2017 (second round)
2022 →

All 577 seats in the National Assembly
289 seats needed for a majority
Turnout48.7% (Decrease8.5 pp) (1st round)
42.6% (Decrease6.1 pp) (2nd round)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Edouard Philippe 2 (cropped).JPG
François Baroin (47547796261) (cropped).jpg
Bernard Cazeneuve, (42399145362) (cropped).jpg
Leader Édouard Philippe François Baroin Bernard Cazeneuve
Party LREM LR PS
Alliance Presidential majority
Parties
UDC Parliamentary left
Parties
Leader's seat Did not stand[a] Did not stand Did not stand
Last election New 229 seats 331 seats
Seats won 350 seats 136 seats 45 seats
Seat change Increase350 Decrease93 Decrease286
1st round
%
7,323,496
32.3% Increase32.3%
4,885,997
21.6% Decrease13.1%
2,154,269
9.5% Decrease30.4%
2nd round
%
8,926,901
49.1% Increase49.1%
4,898,061
27.0% Decrease11.0%
1,361,190
7.5% Decrease32.4%

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
Meeting Mélenchon Toulouse - 2017-04-16 - Jean-Luc Mélenchon - 41 (cropped 2).jpg
Marine Le Pen (2017-03-24) 01 cropped.jpg
Leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon Marine Le Pen
Party LFI FN
Leader's seat Bouches-du-Rhône's 4th
(won seat)
Pas-de-Calais's 11th
(won seat)
Last election Did not exist 2 seats
Seats won 17 seats 8 seats
Seat change Increase17 Increase6
1st round
%
2,497,622
11.0% Increase11.0%
2,990,454
13.2% Decrease0.4%
2nd round
%
883,573
4.9% Increase4.9%
1,590,869
8.8% Increase5.1%


Prime Minister before election

Édouard Philippe
LR

Elected Prime Minister

Édouard Philippe
DVD

In total, 206 MPs lost reelection,[2] and 424 (75%) elected MPs were new members. There was a record number of women elected. The average age of parliamentarians decreased from 54 to 48. Ludovic Pajot from the National Rally became the new Baby of the House, being elected at the age of 23.[3] Édouard Philippe, appointed as Prime Minister by Macron following his victory in the presidential election, was reappointed following the second round of the legislative elections and presented his second government by 21 June. The 15th legislature of the French Fifth Republic commenced on 27 June.

Background

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First-place candidate in the first round of the presidential election by constituency
  Emmanuel Macron
  Marine Le Pen
  François Fillon
  Jean-Luc Mélenchon

In France, legislative elections take place about a month after the second round of the presidential election, held on 7 May. Prior to 2002, the presidential and legislative elections were not always held in the same year; following the victory of the UMP in the 2002 legislative elections, the two were synchronized to minimize the risk of cohabitation.[4]

In the first round of the presidential election, on 23 April, Emmanuel Macron of En Marche! and Marine Le Pen of the National Front (FN) advanced to the runoff after placing first and second, respectively, and were followed closely by François Fillon of the Republicans (LR) and Jean-Luc Mélenchon of la France Insoumise (FI).[5] In the first round, Macron led in 240 constituencies, against 216 for Le Pen, 67 for Mélenchon, and 54 for Fillon.[6]

Macron won the second round on 7 May against Le Pen, securing 66.1% of valid votes.[7]

Upon the close of nominations for the legislative election, the Ministry of the Interior published a final list on 23 May containing a total of 7,882 candidates, with an average of 14 candidates within each constituency.[8]

The 2017 legislative election was the first held after the legal abolition of the dual mandate in France in 2014; deputies will no longer be allowed to concurrently serve in local government, frequently as mayors, upon election to the National Assembly.[9]

Electoral system

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The 577 members of the National Assembly are elected using a two-round system with single-member constituencies. Candidates for the legislative elections had five days, from Monday 15 May to 18:00 on Friday 19 May, to declare and register their candidacy.[10][4] The official campaign ran from 22 May to 10 June at midnight, while the campaign for the second round runs from 12 June at midnight to 17 June at midnight, with eligible candidates required to declare their presence by 18:00 CEST on 13 June.[11] To be elected in the first round, a candidate was required to secure an absolute majority of votes cast, and also to secure votes equal to at least 25% of eligible voters in their constituency. Should none of the candidates satisfy these conditions, a second round of voting ensues. Only first-round candidates with the support of at least 12.5% of eligible voters are allowed to participate, but if only 1 candidate meets that standard the two candidates with the highest number of votes in the first round may continue to the second round. In the 2017 election, four deputies were elected in the first round. In the second round, the candidate with a plurality is elected. Of the 577 constituencies, 539 are in metropolitan France, 27 are in overseas departments and territories and 11 are for French citizens living abroad.[4]

Voting in the first round took place from 08:00 to 18:00 (local time) on Saturday 3 June in French Polynesia and at French diplomatic missions in the Americas, and on Sunday 4 June at French diplomatic missions outside the Americas. Voting in the French overseas departments and territories in the Americas (i.e. French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin, and Saint Pierre and Miquelon) took place from 08:00 to 18:00 (local time) on Saturday 10 June. Voting in metropolitan France (as well as the French overseas departments and territories of Mayotte, New Caledonia, Réunion and Wallis and Futuna) took place from 08:00 to 18:00 or 20:00 (local time) on Sunday 11 June.[12][13]

Voting in the second round took place on Saturday 17 June from 08:00 to 18:00 (local time) in the French overseas departments and territories situated east of the International Date Line and west of metropolitan France (i.e. French Guiana, French Polynesia, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin and Saint Pierre and Miquelon), as well as at French diplomatic missions in the Americas. Voting in metropolitan France (as well as the French overseas departments and territories of Mayotte, New Caledonia, Réunion and Wallis and Futuna, and French diplomatic missions outside the Americas) takes place from 08:00 to 18:00 or 20:00 (local time) on Sunday 18 June.[12][13]

The 15th National Assembly convened on 27 June at 15:00 CEST.[11]

Major parties

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Party Party leader Ideology Political position
French Communist Party PCF Pierre Laurent Communism Left-wing to far-left
La France Insoumise FI Jean-Luc Mélenchon Democratic socialism Left-wing to far-left
Socialist Party PS Jean-Christophe Cambadélis Social democracy Centre-left
Radical Party of the Left PRG Sylvia Pinel Social liberalism Centre-left
Europe Ecology – The Greens EELV David Cormand Green politics Centre-left
La République En Marche! LREM Richard Ferrand Social liberalism Centre
Democratic Movement MoDem François Bayrou Social liberalism Centre to centre-right
Union of Democrats and Independents UDI Jean-Christophe Lagarde Liberalism Centre to centre-right
The Republicans LR Bernard Accoyer Liberal conservatism Centre-right
Debout la France DLF Nicolas Dupont-Aignan Souverainism Right-wing to far-right
National Front FN Marine Le Pen National conservatism far-right

Campaign

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La République En Marche! and MoDem

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Emmanuel Macron in 2017

En Marche!, the movement founded by Emmanuel Macron, who won the presidential election under its banner, planned to run candidates in all 577 constituencies under the banner of "La République En Marche!", of which at least half were planned to be from civil society – the other half having previously held political office – and half women. No "double investiture" was permitted, though the original requirement of prospective candidates to leave their previous political party was waived by Macron on 5 May.[14] In addition to those parameters, he specified in his initial press conference on 19 January that he would require that candidates demonstrate "probity" (disqualifying any prospective candidates with a criminal record), "political plurality" (representing the threads of the movement), and "efficacy". Those wishing to seek the investiture of En Marche! were required to sign up online,[15] and the movement received nearly 15,000 applications by late April. For nominations sought by those in the political world, the popularity, establishment, and ability to appear in the media of applicants are also considered, with the most difficult cases adjudicated by Macron himself. To represent themselves under the label of La République En Marche!, however, outgoing deputies must decide to leave the Socialist Party (PS) or the Republicans (LR).[16]

After his victory in the presidential election, Macron resigned his post as president of En Marche!, with Catherine Barbaroux appointed as interim president. The movement, renamed, presented candidates under the label of "La République En Marche!"; though the full list of 577 investitures was to be published on 11 May,[14] Jean-Paul Delevoye, president of the investiture commission, later indicated that the total published that day would be "about 450".[17] The delay was attributed to an influx of applications following Macron's victory in the presidential election – more than a thousand, bringing the total to over 16,000 – with additional complexity arising from the interest of former Prime Minister Manuel Valls in standing as a La République En Marche! candidate without either submitting an application or leaving the Socialist Party. Since the announcement that "La République En Marche!" would be transformed into a formal political party, however, the conditions of securing an investiture tightened considerably, with candidates expected to be "administratively" attached to the party to prevent public funding (distributed on the basis of electoral results) from being received by the PS or the Republicans.[18]

The initial list of 428 investitures was revealed on 11 May, with exact gender parity (214 men and 214 women), with 94% of candidates not outgoing deputies; 93% employed, 2% looking for work, 4% retired, 1% students;[19] 52% from civil society;[20] an average age of 46 (the youngest being 24 and oldest being 62), compared to 60 for outgoing deputies; and 24 current deputies, mostly Socialists, invested under the label of La République En Marche! The total number of remaining investitures to be concluded is 148.[19] No candidate was invested against Valls.[21] Numerous candidates were invested in error, including Mourad Boudjellal, François Pupponi, and Augustin Augier, who did not apply; Stéphane Saint-André [fr], an outgoing PRG deputy who renounced his investiture and raised concerns about the potential appointment of Édouard Philippe as prime minister; and Thierry Robert, an outgoing deputy who contravened the requirement of not having a criminal history.[22]

The list was further updated on 15 May with an additional 83 candidates, of which half were proposed by the MoDem, bringing the overall total to 511, and leaving 66 constituencies to be decided, of which about 30 are reserved for figures on the right and left who expressed support for Macron's project and most of the rest constituencies for overseas departments;[23] ultimately, 51 constituencies with outgoing deputies on both the left and right considered "Macron-compatible" were not contested;[24] Delevoye stated that some twenty constituencies for overseas France were frozen due to local party financing peculiarities, with other vacated constituencies for other political personalities apparently interested in joining in the presidential majority.[25]

On 15 May, Édouard Philippe, a deputy of the Republicans, was appointed as Prime Minister.[26] After the selection of ministers to the newly formed government on 17 May, the movement announced that it would not invest candidates in 56 constituencies, hoping to protect a number of those on the left and right who had expressed support but not rallied, with the possibility of adjustments before the deadline on 19 May.[27] Appointed ministers contesting the legislative elections were obligated to resign if not elected: namely, Christophe Castaner, Marielle de Sarnez, Richard Ferrand, Annick Girardin, Bruno Le Maire, and Mounir Mahjoubi; all six were eventually elected.[28][29]

MoDem

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François Bayrou in 2006

After François Bayrou endorsed Macron in February, the Democratic Movement (MoDem), which he leads, was reportedly to receive 90 constituencies, of which 50 were considered winnable, for its candidates.[30] However, hours of the publication of the initial list, Bayrou indicated that it did not have the "approval" of the MoDem, unsatisfied with the number of constituencies for MoDem candidates, and appealed to Macron to permit joint investitures and planned to convene the political bureau of his party on 12 May.[31] He was also unhappy with what he called a "recycling operation of the PS"; according to a tally by MoDem officials, among the 428 investitures announced, 153 were granted to PS/ex-PS/PRG, 38 to the MoDem, 25 to LR or miscellaneous right, 15 to UDI/ex-UDI, and 197 to civil society figures.[32] On 12 May, Bayrou announced that he had secured a "solid and balanced" draft agreement, claiming that his party would ultimately obtain a bit more than a hundred investitures.[33] A MoDem candidate replaced Gaspard Gantzer [fr], former communications advisor to Hollande, in Ille-et-Vilaine's 2nd constituency after fierce objections by local activists and his renunciation of the investiture, which he claimed he did not apply for,[34] and mayor of Mont-de-Marsan Geneviève Darrieussecq and Senator Leila Aïchi, both members of the MoDem executive bureau, received investitures.[35]

Bayrou's party hopes to elect at least 15 deputies, necessary for the formation of a parliamentary group in the National Assembly; additionally, to be reimbursed for expenses, the party must receive at least 1% of the vote in at least 50 constituencies where it is present. Public financing is also allocated as a function of the number of elected officials, hence the ambitions of the MoDem.[36]

The Republicans (LR) and UDI

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François Baroin in 2012

On 2 May, François Baroin was appointed by the political bureau of the Republicans (LR) to head the campaign for the legislative elections. A week before, he said that he would be available to serve as Prime Minister in a cohabitation government under Emmanuel Macron and considered it impossible not to run on the same program as its defeated presidential candidate François Fillon, who was eliminated in the first round of the presidential election, in the legislative elections.[37] Baroin has indicated pessimism with regard to the prospects of the Republicans in the legislative elections, saying "At 150 [seats] is good. From 100 to 150 is not bad. Below 100 is a failure."[38] The platform of the Republicans for the legislative election, published on 10 May, breaks with that of its defeated Fillon, who was eliminated in the first round, on several points. Though it preserved the plans to eliminate the 35-hour workweek and reform to the solidarity tax on wealth (ISF) on which he campaigned, it differed on terrorism, immigration, family, and European policy.[39] The party ran in alliance with the Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI), whose executive bureau on 7 March approved an accord with the Republicans reserving them 96 constituencies, including the 28 seats currently held by outgoing deputies, and preparing primaries in 42 constituencies between UDI and LR candidates.[40]

On 15 May, some 173 LR and UDI elected officials and personalities, including Jean-Louis Borloo, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, Christian Estrosi, and Thierry Solère, appealed to their fellows to "respond to the hand extended by the president", after which the Republicans published a counter-appeal, insisting that "France needs more than ever a majority of the right and centre in the National Assembly".[41]

On 20 May, Baroin launched the campaign of the Republicans at the Bois de Vincennes, determined to impose cohabitation upon Macron and provide him with the "majority needed by France", a goal complicated by the inclusion of LR personalities in the formation the cabinet, and principally by the selection of Édouard Philippe as Prime Minister.[42] In his speech, Baroin made his case for a "majority without ambiguity, without pretense. A real majority and not a majority of circumstances, meetings, and personal ambitions", describing the legislative elections before an audience of nearly 2,000 as "the mother of battles". Meanwhile, the appointment of three LR personalities as ministers in the government – Édouard Philippe, Bruno Le Maire, and Gérald Darmanin – in its attempt at a recomposition of politics infringed upon the space occupied by the party. Emphasizing that many mobilized merely against Le Pen and not for Macron, he wielded the party's program, borrowing elements from that of Fillon's.[43]

National Front (FN)

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Marine Le Pen in 2014

The National Front (FN), led by Marine Le Pen, ended its pre-investitures for the legislative elections in December 2016. The average age of the candidates is 47 years, with near-gender parity and almost 80% of candidates already having a local mandate (i.e., within a municipal, departmental, or regional council), compared to a rate of barely 10% in 2012.[44] Some 50 constituencies were planned to be possibly contested by joint candidacies with Debout la France (DLF) following the rallying of Nicolas Dupont-Aignan to Le Pen after the second round of the presidential election,[45] but on 14 May the FN announced the suspension of the agreement, intending to invest candidates in all 577 constituencies as a result, reversing the "principle of accord" on joint investitures that had been agreed upon earlier.[46] The FN ran a candidate against Dupont-Aignan, the sitting deputy for Essonne's 8th constituency.[47] Outgoing deputy Marion Maréchal-Le Pen announced her intention to leave politics on 9 May, and as such did not run in the legislative elections.[48]

Among the list of 553 candidates already invested by the FN include Florian Philippot in Moselle's 6th, Gilbert Collard in Gard's 2nd, Stéphane Ravier in Bouches-du-Rhône's 3rd, Wallerand de Saint-Just in Paris's 13th, and Sophie Montel in Doubs's 4th.[49] Of the 553 candidates in the initial list, 86% are candidates not previously invested in 2012, with nearly 70% holding at least one elected office. The expulsion of Jean-Marie Le Pen from the party in August 2015 was followed by the departure of a number of his companions, who as a result were not invested as candidates. A number of mayors elected in the 2014 municipal elections chose not to stand in order to retain their local mandates, including Julien Sanchez in Beaucaire, Franck Briffaut in Villers-Cotterêts, and David Rachline in Fréjus. The alliance with the small party of Paul-Marie Coûteaux, Sovereignty, Identity and Freedoms (SIEL), was broken in 2016; the party in 2012 provided 34 of the candidates invested by the FN.[50]

Le Pen herself was reluctant to introduce herself as a candidate after her defeat in the presidential election, with initial hopes of 80 to 100 deputies within the FN revised sharply downwards to 15 target constituencies.[51] On 18 May, she confirmed that she would once again run in Pas-de-Calais's 11th constituency (where she lost by a hundred votes to Philippe Kemel in 2012), which includes Hénin-Beaumont (whose mayor is Steeve Briois of the FN) and where she received 58.2% of votes in the second round of the presidential election.[52] Following the announcement, her father Jean-Marie Le Pen decided not to present a candidate under the banner of the "Union of Patriots", an alliance of far-right movements presenting 200 candidates across France, in the constituency.[53]

Following the victory of Macron in the presidential election, Le Pen stated that she did not deem the proposed reform of the labour code as a priority, criticizing the planned usage of ordonnances as a coup de force and believing that amending it to allow greater flexibility was nothing more than a demand of large employers. She also further critiqued the plans as the El Khomri law "times a thousand", but calling not for demonstrations on the streets but a vote for the FN.[54]

La France Insoumise (FI)

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Jean-Luc Mélenchon in 2017

La France Insoumise, the political movement launched by Jean-Luc Mélenchon, former co-president of the Left Party (PG) who ran as a presidential candidate in both 2012 and 2017, intended to run candidates in all 577 constituencies.[55] In a list of 410 investitures published in mid-February, gender parity was maintained, 60% of candidates came from civil society, and the average age was only 43 years, with the youngest at 19 years old. Candidates were selected after the national committee reviewed online applications of prospects.[56]

The constituencies contested by the movement included some held or contested by members of the French Communist Party (PCF). Relations deteriorated between the two, and in early May la France Insoumise proposed that the groupings withdraw competing candidacies in 26 constituencies.[57] However, on 9 May, campaign spokesman Manuel Bompard said that there would be no accord between the two parties in the legislative elections and blamed the PCF for the failure to reach an agreement.[58]

On 11 May, Mélenchon announced that he would stand as a candidate in Bouches-du-Rhône's 4th constituency in a letter addressed to the adherents of his movement in Marseille, where the riding is located; he came first in the city during the first round of the presidential election, with almost 25% of the vote, and in the constituency he received 39.09%, far ahead of both Macron and Le Pen and one of his best scores nationally. The constituency was then held by Socialist deputy Patrick Mennucci, considered a "friend" by Mélenchon himself.[59]

Socialist Party (PS) and allies

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Bernard Cazeneuve

The first wave of 395 Socialist candidates for the legislative elections was invested on 17 December 2016, including a number who supported of the candidacy of Emmanuel Macron in the presidential election, such as Alain Calmette [fr] in Cantal's 1st, Olivier Véran in Isère's 1st, Jean-Louis Touraine in Rhône's 3rd, Corinne Erhel in Côtes-d'Armor's 5th, Richard Ferrand in Finistère's 6th, Jean-Jacques Bridey in Val-de-Marne's 7th, Stéphane Travert in Manche's 3rd, and Christophe Castaner in Alpes-de-Haute-Provence's 2nd constituency.[60] Of the outgoing deputies invested by La République En Marche!, Frédéric Barbier, deputy for Doubs's 4th constituency, was the only one to also remain invested by the PS; Christophe Borgel [fr], national secretary of elections for the Socialist Party, stated that Barbier would retain his investiture as he was the "best to fight the National Front".[61]

The party presented its own candidates in more than 400 constituencies, with the rest reserved for its allies Europe Ecology – The Greens (EELV), the Union of Democrats and Ecologists (UDE), and the Radical Party of the Left (PRG).[62] First Secretary Jean-Christophe Cambadélis also indicated that the PS hoped to open discussions with la France Insoumise and En Marche! for agreements in constituencies where Le Pen obtained more than 60 percent of the vote in the second round of the presidential election, as well as in ridings in which the second round of the legislative elections could foreseeably be fought between the right and the FN.[63]

On 9 May, the national bureau of the Socialist Party approved its three-page platform for the legislative elections entitled "a clear contract for France, a constructive and solidary left". It abandoned many of the proposals of its defeated presidential candidate Benoît Hamon and drew a number of red lines with regard to the program of Emmanuel Macron, refusing to allow the reform of the labour code by ordonnance and abolition of the solidarity tax on wealth (ISF) on non-property assets.[63] Former Prime Minister Bernard Cazeneuve led the campaign for the legislative elections.[64]

Hamon himself chose to support candidates running against prominent reformists invested by the Socialist Party, backing Michel Nouaille of the French Communist Party (PCF) against former Prime Minister Manuel Valls, whom he defeated in the presidential primary; the feminist Caroline de Haas [fr] of EELV/PCF against Myriam El Khomri, namesake of her labour law; Philippe Rio of the PCF against Malek Boutih, a Socialist running under the banner of the presidential majority (having been denied an investiture) who violently denounced Hamon as a candidate who would "resonate with a fringe Islamic-leftist";[65][66] and Salah Amokrane of the EELV against Gérard Bapt, who made a controversial trip to Syria with three other parliamentarians in 2015.[65]

In an interview on 22 May, Cambadélis envisaged a potential renaming of the PS, stating that the party should "refound, reformulate, and restructure" to respond to the demand for the "renewal, social justice and ecology", after previously resisting the idea in 2014 when the possibility was mentioned by Valls while Prime Minister.[67]

Europe Ecology – The Greens (EELV)

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In exchange for the withdrawal of ecologist candidate Yannick Jadot in the presidential election in favor of Socialist candidate Benoît Hamon in February, the PS agreed to reserve 42 constituencies for the EELV (including all those of its outgoing deputies), and the accord was formally approved by EELV on 19 April. The agreement also provided that the EELV did not present candidates in 53 constituencies. The investiture of former housing minister Cécile Duflot was maintained despite the opposition of mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo, as was that of Sergio Coronado, who supported Jean-Luc Mélenchon in the presidential election; however, he nevertheless faced a Socialist candidate in the legislative elections. Many of the remaining constituencies are those of Socialist deputies who backed Emmanuel Macron in the presidential election.[68]

On 15 May, the EELV revealed its list of candidates for the legislative elections, investing 459 candidates (228 men and 231 women) and supporting 52 Socialists, 16 Communists, and François Ruffin under the banner of la France Insoumise. From the ranks of the party's leaders, national secretary David Cormand presented himself in Seine-Maritime's 4th, deputy national secretary Sandrine Rousseau in Pas-de-Calais's 9th, and spokesperson Julien Bayou in Paris's 5th.[69]

French Communist Party (PCF)

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Though the French Communist Party (PCF) formally supported the candidacy of Jean-Luc Mélenchon in the presidential election,[70] it still ran its own candidates in the legislative elections.[57] After Mélenchon's defeat in the first round of the presidential election, Pierre Laurent once again called for an alliance with la France Insoumise.[71] Negotiations between the two failed to produce an agreement, and on 9 May la France Insoumise announced that it would continue on in the legislative elections without allying with the PCF.[58] PCF candidates who sponsored the candidacy of Mélenchon in the presidential election did not face any opposing candidate from la France Insoumise.[72] The PCF and FI were face-to-face in almost all constituencies, with the PCF planning to invest 535 candidates and FI almost as many, though the possibility of a withdrawal from 20 or so constituencies remained.[73] On 16 May, the PCF published a list of 484 candidates invested in the legislative elections, refraining from appearing in a number of constituencies in favor of candidates from la France Insoumise, EELV, PS, or Ensemble! (Clémentine Autain). According to the PCF, 40% of its candidates were younger than 50, and 20% younger than 40, with an average age of 51; a quarter were retired, 26% employees, 20% civil servants, and 7% manual workers.[74] PCF candidates campaigned under the label of "PCF–Front de Gauche".[75]

Debout la France (DLF)

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Debout la France (Arise France; abbreviated as DLF), led by former presidential candidate Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, intended to present candidates in all 577 constituencies;[76] despite Dupont-Aignan's support of Le Pen in the second round, he reiterated that DLF candidates would face those of the FN,[45] and the national council of Debout la France stated on 13 May that it would invest candidates in almost all constituencies, negotiations with the FN having failed upon the issue of joint investitures.[77]

Others

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Official campaign posters in the Val-de-Marne's 5th constituency

Lutte Ouvrière (Workers' Struggle; abbreviated as LO) presented candidates in 553 constituencies, with 539 in metropolitan France, six in Réunion, four in Martinique, and four in Guadeloupe;[78] presidential candidate Nathalie Arthaud contested Seine-Saint-Denis's 6th constituency, where she received 3% in the 2012 legislative elections. In terms of financing, the party accumulated some €2 million to cover costs.[79] The New Anticapitalist Party (NPA) was unlikely to present candidates in the legislative elections due to the potentially high cost for the party, as campaign expenses are reimbursed only if a party's candidates attain 1% in at least 50 constituencies.[80] Mouvement 100%, a coalition of 28 parties, including the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI), planned to present candidates in all 577 constituencies.[81][82] The Popular Republican Union (UPR) of François Asselineau planned to present candidates in all 577 constituencies,[83] with 574 ultimately invested.[8]

Alliance Royale (AR) presented candidates in 20 constituencies.[84]

Opinion polls

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Results

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National results

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Party or allianceFirst roundSecond roundTotal
seats
Votes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Presidential
majority
La République En Marche!6,391,26928.2127,826,24543.06306308
Democratic Movement932,2274.1201,100,6566.064242
Total7,323,42632.3328,926,90149.11348350
Parliamentary
right
The Republicans3,573,42715.7704,040,20322.23112112
Union of Democrats and Independents687,2253.031551,7843.041718
Miscellaneous right625,3452.760306,0741.6866
Total4,885,99721.5714,898,06126.95135136
National Front2,990,45413.2001,590,8698.7588
La France Insoumise2,497,62211.030883,5734.861717
Parliamentary
left
Socialist Party1,685,6777.4401,032,8425.683030
Miscellaneous left362,2811.601263,4881.451112
Radical Party of the Left106,3110.47064,8600.3633
Total2,154,2699.5111,361,1907.494445
Ecologists[b]973,5274.30023,1970.1311
French Communist Party615,4872.720217,8331.201010
Miscellaneous500,3092.210100,5740.5533
Debout la France265,4201.17017,3440.1011
Regionalists204,0490.900137,4900.7655
Far-left175,2140.7700
Far-right[c]68,3200.30019,0340.1011
Total22,654,164100.00418,176,066100.00573577
Valid votes22,654,16497.7818,176,06690.14
Invalid votes156,3260.67578,7652.87
Blank votes357,0181.541,409,7846.99
Total votes23,167,508100.0020,164,615100.00
Registered voters/turnout47,570,98848.7047,293,10342.64
Source: Ministry of the Interior
  1. ^ Was the outgoing MP for Seine-Maritime's 7th, but did not seek re-election
  2. ^ Seat won by Europe Ecology – The Greens.
  3. ^ Seat won by League of the South
Popular vote (first round)
LREM
28.21%
LR
15.77%
FN
13.20%
FI
11.03%
PS
7.44%
Ecologists
4.30%
MoDem
4.12%
UDI
3.03%
DVD
2.76%
PCF
2.72%
Miscellaneous
2.21%
DVG
1.60%
DLF
1.17%
Regionalists
0.90%
Far-left
0.77%
PRG
0.47%
Far-right
0.30%
Popular vote of combined forces (first round)
LREM/MoDem
32.33%
LR/UDI/DVD
21.56%
FN
13.20%
FI
11.03%
PS/PRG/DVG
9.51%
Ecologists
4.30%
PCF
2.72%
Miscellaneous
2.21%
DLF
1.17%
Regionalists
0.90%
Far-left
0.77%
Far-right
0.30%
Popular vote of combined forces (second round)
LREM/MoDem
49.12%
LR/UDI/DVD
26.95%
FN
8.75%
PS/PRG/DVG
7.49%
FI
4.86%
PCF
1.20%
Regionalists
0.76%
Miscellaneous
0.55%
Ecologists
0.13%
DLF
0.10%
Far-right
0.10%
Seats won
LREM/MoDem
60.66%
LR/UDI/DVD
23.57%
PS/PRG/DVG
7.80%
FI
2.95%
PCF
1.73%
FN
1.39%
Regionalists
0.87%
Miscellaneous
0.52%
Ecologists
0.17%
DLF
0.17%
Far-right
0.17%

First round

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Four deputies were elected in the first round: Sylvain Maillard (LREM) in Paris's 1st, Paul Molac (LREM) in Morbihan's 4th, Napole Polutele (DVG) in Wallis and Futuna's 1st, and Stéphane Demilly of the UDI in Somme's 5th constituencies.[85]

In the remaining 573 constituencies, it was determined that there would be 572 two-way contests in the second round, and only one three-way contest (triangulaire), in Aube's 1st constituency, involving LREM, LR, and the FN.[86]

In Aveyron's 2nd constituency, the candidate of the Republicans later withdrew and backed that of LREM.[87]

Electorate

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Because the Ministry of the Interior did not report results separately for EELV, the "total vote" percentage listed below is for all ecologist candidates.

Sociology of the electorate
Demographic EXG PCF FI EELV PS/PRG/DVG LREM/MoDem LR/UDI/DVD DLF FN Others Turnout
Total vote 0.8% 2.7% 11.0% 4.3% 9.5% 32.3% 21.6% 1.2% 13.2% 3.4% 48.7%
First-round vote in the 2017 presidential election
Jean-Luc Mélenchon 0% 11% 55% 4% 9% 14% 2% 0% 1% 4% 47%
Benoît Hamon 2% 5% 7% 13% 49% 17% 3% 0% 0% 4% 57%
Emmanuel Macron 1% 1% 2% 2% 12% 74% 6% 0% 0% 2% 62%
François Fillon 0% 0% 1% 1% 1% 21% 70% 0% 4% 2% 62%
Marine Le Pen 1% 1% 1% 0% 5% 5% 7% 2% 77% 1% 43%
Political party
EXG 32% 13% 34% 3% 0% 4% 2% 0% 3% 9% 55%
FG 0% 22% 55% 1% 7% 9% 2% 1% 1% 2% 54%
EELV 0% 0% 19% 32% 5% 25% 1% 0% 0% 18% 49%
PS 0% 1% 8% 5% 46% 35% 2% 0% 0% 3% 61%
LREM 0% 0% 2% 2% 5% 83% 6% 0% 0% 2% 61%
MoDem 0% 0% 4% 1% 8% 66% 18% 1% 1% 1% 59%
UDI 0% 0% 1% 0% 2% 36% 58% 0% 0% 3% 62%
LR 0% 0% 0% 1% 0% 18% 75% 0% 3% 3% 60%
FN 0% 1% 3% 0% 3% 2% 4% 1% 84% 2% 44%
None 2% 0% 12% 3% 11% 28% 20% 0% 20% 4% 29%
Self-described political position
Very left-wing 13% 23% 49% 4% 1% 6% 0% 0% 1% 3% 54%
Left-wing 1% 10% 33% 5% 26% 20% 1% 0% 1% 3% 60%
Rather left-wing 1% 5% 13% 5% 24% 44% 2% 1% 2% 3% 57%
Centre 0% 0% 3% 2% 4% 64% 18% 1% 4% 4% 56%
Rather right-wing 0% 0% 2% 0% 1% 44% 44% 2% 4% 3% 55%
Right-wing 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 18% 61% 2% 18% 1% 61%
Very right-wing 0% 2% 0% 0% 2% 0% 11% 4% 81% 0% 55%
Neither left nor right 1% 0% 10% 3% 12% 28% 12% 0% 30% 4% 33%
Left subtotal 2% 9% 25% 5% 22% 30% 2% 0% 2% 3% 58%
Right subtotal 0% 0% 1% 0% 1% 26% 46% 2% 22% 2% 57%
Sex
Men 1% 4% 11% 2% 11% 33% 20% 1% 15% 2% 47%
Women 0% 3% 11% 4% 10% 31% 23% 1% 13% 4% 51%
Age
18–24 years old 0% 2% 18% 5% 10% 32% 11% 3% 14% 5% 37%
25–34 years old 1% 1% 21% 6% 10% 33% 9% 2% 13% 4% 35%
35–49 years old 1% 3% 10% 3% 10% 29% 17% 0% 23% 4% 43%
50–59 years old 1% 3% 14% 5% 11% 34% 15% 1% 14% 2% 50%
60–69 years old 1% 5% 7% 2% 8% 33% 28% 1% 10% 5% 63%
70 or older 0% 3% 6% 1% 11% 33% 34% 1% 10% 1% 66%
Socio-occupational classification
Manager/professional 2% 0% 11% 5% 15% 36% 22% 1% 5% 3% 55%
Intermediate occupation 0% 4% 17% 5% 10% 34% 14% 1% 11% 4% 45%
White-collar worker 1% 1% 14% 3% 6% 29% 15% 3% 22% 6% 39%
Blue-collar worker 4% 3% 11% 4% 8% 26% 14% 0% 29% 1% 34%
Retired 0% 4% 7% 1% 10% 34% 30% 1% 10% 3% 64%
Employment status
Employee 1% 3% 13% 4% 10% 32% 16% 1% 16% 4% 43%
Private employee 2% 4% 10% 3% 8% 35% 17% 1% 16% 4% 39%
Public employee 0% 2% 18% 5% 13% 27% 15% 1% 16% 3% 49%
Self-employed 2% 0% 9% 3% 10% 28% 23% 2% 22% 1% 46%
Unemployed 0% 0% 18% 2% 9% 32% 14% 3% 20% 2% 43%
Education
Less than baccalauréat 1% 4% 8% 2% 10% 28% 23% 1% 21% 2% 46%
Baccalauréat 1% 4% 13% 2% 10% 31% 20% 1% 14% 4% 46%
Bac +2 0% 2% 13% 4% 9% 36% 21% 1% 9% 5% 51%
At least bac +3 1% 2% 12% 4% 11% 38% 21% 1% 7% 3% 56%
Monthly household income
Less than €1,250 3% 6% 13% 4% 11% 17% 16% 1% 25% 4% 41%
€1,250 to €2,000 1% 5% 12% 2% 9% 29% 20% 1% 19% 2% 46%
€2,000 to €3,000 0% 3% 11% 2% 13% 31% 20% 1% 15% 4% 50%
More than €3,000 0% 2% 10% 2% 9% 43% 24% 1% 7% 2% 58%
Moment of choice of vote
In the last few weeks 0% 3% 11% 1% 10% 34% 23% 1% 15% 2% 100%
In the last few days 2% 4% 10% 6% 12% 29% 19% 2% 10% 6% 100%
At the last moment 1% 0% 12% 7% 10% 28% 20% 2% 13% 7% 100%
Agglomeration
Rural 0% 4% 14% 3% 10% 26% 21% 1% 18% 3% 50%
Fewer than 20,000 inhabitants 0% 1% 8% 3% 8% 41% 21% 1% 15% 2% 49%
20,000 to 100,000 inhabitants 1% 3% 10% 3% 12% 36% 19% 0% 14% 2% 48%
More than 100,000 inhabitants 1% 4% 10% 3% 12% 32% 21% 1% 12% 4% 49%
Paris agglomeration 2% 2% 11% 4% 9% 30% 27% 1% 9% 5% 48%
Religion
Catholic 1% 2% 6% 2% 9% 32% 29% 1% 15% 3% 53%
Regular practitioner 0% 1% 2% 1% 0% 40% 37% 2% 14% 3% 67%
Occasional practitioner 0% 1% 3% 3% 10% 29% 38% 1% 13% 2% 57%
Non-practitioner 1% 3% 7% 2% 10% 32% 25% 1% 16% 3% 50%
Others 6% 3% 15% 2% 12% 28% 17% 0% 8% 9% 47%
None 0% 4% 19% 4% 13% 32% 9% 1% 15% 3% 45%
Demographic Turnout
EXG PCF FI EELV PS/PRG/DVG LREM/MoDem LR/UDI/DVD DLF FN Others
Sociology of the electorate
Source: Ipsos France[88]

Maps

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Second round

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Results divided by alliances

Electorate

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LREM/MoDem – LR/UDI/DVD duels (264 constituencies)
1st round vote LREM/MoDem LR/UDI/DVD No vote
FI/PCF 24% 10% 66%
PS/PRG/DVG 45% 15% 40%
EELV 45% 25% 30%
LREM/MoDem 92% 5% 3%
LR/UDI/DVD 4% 93% 3%
FN 11% 41% 48%
Source: Ipsos France[89]
Turnout by demographic group
Demographic Turnout
Total vote 48.7%
First-round vote in the 2017 presidential election
Jean-Luc Mélenchon 39%
Benoît Hamon 53%
Emmanuel Macron 58%
François Fillon 59%
Marine Le Pen 34%
First-round legislative election vote
FI 45%
PS/PRG/DVG 58%
LREM/MoDem 70%
LR/UDI/DVD 64%
FN 44%
Political party
EXG 20%
PCF/FI 40%
EELV 43%
PS 54%
LREM 59%
MoDem 57%
UDI 59%
LR 55%
FN 32%
None 28%
Self-described political position
Very left-wing 36%
Left-wing 50%
Rather left-wing 53%
Centre 57%
Rather right-wing 54%
Right-wing 55%
Very right-wing 43%
Neither left nor right 29%
Left subtotal 50%
Right subtotal 52%
Sex
Men 42%
Women 45%
Age
18–24 years old 26%
25–34 years old 30%
35–49 years old 38%
50–59 years old 45%
60–69 years old 57%
70 or older 61%
Socio-occupational classification
Manager/professional 50%
Intermediate occupation 37%
White-collar worker 35%
Blue-collar worker 31%
Retired 60%
Employment status
Employee 38%
Private employee 37%
Public employee 38%
Self-employed 38%
Unemployed 34%
Education
Less than baccalauréat 44%
Baccalauréat 37%
Bac +2 43%
At least bac +3 50%
Monthly household income
Less than €1,250 32%
€1,250 to €2,000 40%
€2,000 to €3,000 48%
More than €3,000 50%
Agglomeration
Rural 44%
Fewer than 20,000 inhabitants 43%
20,000 to 100,000 inhabitants 46%
More than 100,000 inhabitants 41%
Paris agglomeration 46%
Religion
Catholic 48%
Regular practitioner 55%
Occasional practitioner 55%
Non-practitioner 45%
Others 35%
None 38%
Demographic Turnout
Sociology of the electorate
Source: Ipsos France[89]

Maps

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Results by constituency

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Constituency Outgoing deputy Party Elected deputy Party
Ain 1st Xavier Breton LR Xavier Breton LR
2nd Charles de la Verpillière LR Charles de la Verpillière LR
3rd Stéphanie Pernod-Beaudon LR Olga Givernet LREM
4th Michel Voisin* LR Stéphane Trompille LREM
5th Damien Abad LR Damien Abad LR
Aisne 1st René Dosière* DVG Aude Bono-Vandorme LREM
2nd Julien Dive LR Julien Dive LR
3rd Jean-Louis Bricout PS Jean-Louis Bricout PS
4th Marie-Françoise Bechtel RM Marc Delatte LREM
5th Jacques Krabal PRG Jacques Krabal LREM
Allier 1st Guy Chambefort* PS Jean-Paul Dufrègne PCF
2nd Bernard Lesterlin* DVG Laurence Vanceunebrock-Mialon LREM
3rd Gérard Charasse* PRG Bénédicte Peyrol LREM
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence 1st Gilbert Sauvan [fr]* PS Delphine Bagarry LREM
2nd Christophe Castaner PS Christophe Castaner LREM
Hautes-Alpes 1st Karine Berger PS Pascale Boyer LREM
2nd Joël Giraud PRG Joël Giraud LREM
Alpes-Maritimes 1st Éric Ciotti LR Éric Ciotti LR
2nd Charles-Ange Ginésy* LR Loïc Dombreval LREM
3rd Rudy Salles UDI Cédric Roussel LREM
4th Jean-Claude Guibal* LR Alexandra Valetta-Ardisson LREM
5th Marine Brenier LR Marine Brenier LR
6th Lionnel Luca* LR Laurence Trastour-Isnart LR
7th Jean Leonetti* LR Éric Pauget LR
8th Bernard Brochand LR Bernard Brochand LR
9th Michèle Tabarot LR Michèle Tabarot LR
Ardèche 1st vacant Hervé Saulignac PS
2nd Olivier Dussopt PS Olivier Dussopt PS
3rd Sabine Buis PS Fabrice Brun LR
Ardennes 1st Bérengère Poletti LR Bérengère Poletti LR
2nd Christophe Léonard PS Pierre Cordier LR
3rd Jean-Luc Warsmann LR Jean-Luc Warsmann LR
Ariège 1st Frédérique Massat* PS Bénédicte Taurine FI
2nd Alain Fauré PS Michel Larive FI
Aube 1st Nicolas Dhuicq LR Grégory Besson-Moreau LREM
2nd Jean-Claude Mathis* LR Valérie Bazin-Malgras LR
3rd Gérard Menuel LR Gérard Menuel LR
Aude 1st Jean-Claude Perez DVG Danièle Hérin LREM
2nd Marie-Hélène Fabre PS Alain Péréa LREM
3rd Jean-Paul Dupré* PS Mireille Robert LREM
Aveyron 1st Yves Censi LR Stéphane Mazars LREM
2nd Marie-Lou Marcel* PS Anne Blanc LREM
3rd Arnaud Viala LR Arnaud Viala LR
Bouches-du-Rhône 1st Valérie Boyer LR Valérie Boyer LR
2nd Dominique Tian LR Claire Pitollat LREM
3rd vacant Alexandra Louis LREM
4th Patrick Mennucci PS Jean-Luc Mélenchon FI
5th Marie-Arlette Carlotti* PS Cathy Racon-Bouzon LREM
6th Guy Teissier LR Guy Teissier LR
7th Henri Jibrayel PS Saïd Ahamada LREM
8th Jean-Pierre Maggi* PRG Jean-Marc Zulesi LREM
9th Bernard Deflesselles LR Bernard Deflesselles LR
10th François-Michel Lambert UDE François-Michel Lambert LREM
11th Christian Kert LR Mohamed Laqhila MoDem
12th Vincent Burroni* PS Éric Diard LR
13th Gaby Charroux* PCF Pierre Dharréville PCF
14th Jean-David Ciot PS Anne-Laurence Petel LREM
15th Bernard Reynès LR Bernard Reynès LR
16th Michel Vauzelle* PS Monica Michel LREM
Calvados 1st Philippe Duron* PS Fabrice Le Vigoureux LREM
2nd Laurence Dumont PS Laurence Dumont PS
3rd Guy Bailliart** PS Sébastien Leclerc LR
4th Nicole Ameline LR Christophe Blanchet LREM
5th Isabelle Attard DVG Bertrand Bouyx LREM
6th Alain Tourret PRG Alain Tourret LREM
Cantal 1st Alain Calmette* PS Vincent Descœur LR
2nd Alain Marleix* LR Jean-Yves Bony  LR
Charente 1st David Comet** PS Thomas Mesnier LREM
2nd Marie-Line Reynaud* PS Sandra Marsaud LREM
3rd Jérôme Lambert PS Jérôme Lambert PS
Charente-Maritime 1st Olivier Falorni DVG Olivier Falorni DVG
2nd Suzanne Tallard* PS Frédérique Tuffnell LREM
3rd Catherine Quéré* PS Jean-Philippe Ardouin LREM
4th Dominique Bussereau* LR Raphaël Gérard LREM
5th Didier Quentin LR Didier Quentin LR
Cher 1st Yves Fromion* LR François Cormier-Bouligeon LREM
2nd Nicolas Sansu PCF Nadia Essayan MoDem
3rd Yann Galut PS Loïc Kervran LREM
Corrèze 1st Alain Ballay* PS Christophe Jerretie LREM
2nd Philippe Nauche PS Frédérique Meunier LR
Corse-du-Sud 1st Laurent Marcangeli* LR Jean-Jacques Ferrara LR
2nd Camille de Rocca Serra LR Paul-André Colombani PC
Haute-Corse 1st Sauveur Gandolfi-Scheit LR Michel Castellani PC
2nd Paul Giacobbi* DVG Jean-Félix Acquaviva PC
Côte-d'Or 1st Laurent Grandguillaume* PS Didier Martin LREM
2nd Rémi Delatte LR Rémi Delatte LR
3rd Kheira Bouziane-Laroussi*** PS Fadila Khattabi LREM
4th vacant Yolaine de Courson LREM
5th Alain Suguenot* LR Didier Paris LREM
Côtes-d'Armor 1st Michel Lesage PS Bruno Joncour MoDem
2nd Viviane Le Dissez PS Hervé Berville LREM
3rd Marc Le Fur LR Marc Le Fur LR
4th Annie Le Houérou PS Yannick Kerlogot LREM
5th Éric Bothorel* PS Éric Bothorel LREM
Creuse 1st Michel Vergnier PS Jean-Baptiste Moreau LREM
Dordogne 1st Pascal Deguilhem* PS Philippe Chassaing LREM
2nd Brigitte Allain EELV Michel Delpon LREM
3rd Colette Langlade PS Jean-Pierre Cubertafon MoDem
4th Germinal Peiro* PS Jacqueline Dubois LREM
Doubs 1st Barbara Romagnan PS Fannette Charvier LREM
2nd Éric Alauzet EELV Éric Alauzet EELV
3rd Marcel Bonnot* LR Denis Sommer LREM
4th Frédéric Barbier PS Frédéric Barbier LREM
5th Annie Genevard LR Annie Genevard LR
Drôme 1st Patrick Labaune* LR Mireille Clapot LREM
2nd Franck Reynier UDI Alice Thourot LREM
3rd Hervé Mariton* LR Célia de Lavergne LREM
4th Nathalie Nieson* PS Emmanuelle Anthoine LR
Eure 1st Bruno Le Maire LR Bruno Le Maire LREM
2nd Jean-Louis Destans* PS Fabien Gouttefarde LREM
3rd vacant Marie Tamarelle-Verhaeghe MoDem
4th François Loncle* PS Bruno Questel LREM
5th Franck Gilard* LR Claire O'Petit LREM
Eure-et-Loir 1st Jean-Pierre Gorges* LR Guillaume Kasbarian LREM
2nd Olivier Marleix LR Olivier Marleix LR
3rd Laure de La Raudière LR Laure de La Raudière LR
4th Philippe Vigier UDI Philippe Vigier UDI
Finistère 1st Marie-Thérèse Le Roy** PS Annaïg Le Meur LREM
2nd Patricia Adam PS Jean-Charles Larsonneur LREM
3rd Jean-Luc Bleunven DVG Didier Le Gac LREM
4th Marylise Lebranchu* PS Sandrine Le Feur LREM
5th Chantal Guittet PS Graziella Melchior LREM
6th Richard Ferrand PS Richard Ferrand LREM
7th Annick Le Loch* PS Liliane Tanguy LREM
8th Gilbert Le Bris* PS Erwan Balanant LREM
Gard 1st Françoise Dumas PS Françoise Dumas LREM
2nd Gilbert Collard RBM Gilbert Collard FN
3rd Patrice Prat* DVG Anthony Cellier LREM
4th Fabrice Verdier PS Annie Chapelier LREM
5th William Dumas* PS Olivier Gaillard LREM
6th Christophe Cavard PE Philippe Berta LREM
Haute-Garonne 1st Catherine Lemorton PS Pierre Cabaré LREM
2nd Gérard Bapt PS Jean-Luc Lagleize MoDem
3rd Laurence Arribagé LR Corinne Vignon LREM
4th Martine Martinel PS Mickaël Nogal LREM
5th Françoise Imbert* PS Jean-François Portarrieu LREM
6th Monique Iborra PS Monique Iborra LREM
7th Patrick Lemasle* PS Élisabeth Toutut-Picard LREM
8th Carole Delga* PS Joël Aviragnet PS
9th Christophe Borgel PS Sandrine Mörch LREM
10th Kader Arif PS Sébastien Nadot LREM
Gers 1st Philippe Martin* PS Jean-René Cazeneuve LREM
2nd Gisèle Biémouret PS Gisèle Biémouret PS
Gironde 1st Sandrine Doucet* PS Dominique David LREM
2nd Michèle Delaunay PS Catherine Fabre LREM
3rd Noël Mamère* DVE Loïc Prud'homme FI
4th Conchita Lacuey* PS Alain David PS
5th Pascale Got PS Benoît Simian LREM
6th Marie Récalde PS Eric Poulliant LREM
7th Alain Rousset* PS Bérangère Couillard LREM
8th Yves Foulon LR Sophie Panonacle LREM
9th Gilles Savary PS Sophie Mette MoDem
10th Florent Boudié PS Florent Boudié LREM
11th Philippe Plisson* PS Véronique Hammerer LREM
12th Martine Faure* PS Christelle Dubos LREM
Hérault 1st Jean-Louis Roumégas EELV Patricia Mirallès LREM
2nd Anne-Yvonne Le Dain*** PS Muriel Ressiguier FI
3rd Fanny Dombre-Coste PS Coralie Dubost LREM
4th Frédéric Roig PS Jean-François Eliaou LREM
5th Kléber Mesquida* PS Philippe Huppé LREM
6th Élie Aboud LR Emmanuelle Ménard FN
7th Sébastien Denaja PS Christophe Euzet LREM
8th Christian Assaf PS Nicolas Démoulin LREM
9th Patrick Vignal PS Patrick Vignal LREM
Ille-et-Vilaine 1st Marie-Anne Chapdelaine PS Mostapha Laabid LREM
2nd Nathalie Appéré* PS Laurence Maillart-Méhaignerie MoDem
3rd François André PS François André PS
4th Jean-René Marsac* PS Gaël Le Bohec LREM
5th Isabelle Le Callennec LR Christine Cloarec LREM
6th Thierry Benoit UDI Thierry Benoit UDI
7th Gilles Lurton LR Gilles Lurton LR
8th Marcel Rogemont* PS Florian Bachelier LREM
Indre 1st Jean-Paul Chanteguet PS François Jolivet LREM
2nd Isabelle Bruneau PS Nicolas Forissier LR
Indre-et-Loire 1st Jean-Patrick Gille PS Philippe Chalumeau LREM
2nd Claude Greff LR Daniel Labaronne LREM
3rd Jean-Marie Beffara** PS Sophie Auconie UDI
4th Laurent Baumel PS Fabienne Colboc LREM
5th Philippe Briand* LR Sabine Thillaye LREM
Isère 1st Geneviève Fioraso* PS Olivier Véran LREM
2nd Michel Issindou* PS Jean-Charles Colas-Roy LREM
3rd Michel Destot PS Émilie Chalas LREM
4th Marie-Noëlle Battistel PS Marie-Noëlle Battistel PS
5th Pierre Ribeaud* PS Catherine Kamowski LREM
6th Alain Moyne-Bressand LR Cendra Motin LREM
7th Jean-Pierre Barbier* LR Monique Limon LREM
8th Erwann Binet PS Caroline Abadie LREM
9th Michèle Bonneton* EELV Élodie Jacquier-Laforge MoDem
10th Joëlle Huillier PS Marjolaine Meynier-Millefert LREM
Jura 1st Jacques Pélissard* LR Danielle Brulebois LREM
2nd Marie-Christine Dalloz LR Marie-Christine Dalloz LR
3rd Jean-Marie Sermier LR Jean-Marie Sermier LR
Landes 1st Florence Delaunay* PS Geneviève Darrieussecq MoDem
2nd Jean-Pierre Dufau* PS Lionel Causse LREM
3rd vacant Boris Vallaud PS
Loir-et-Cher 1st Denys Robiliard PS Marc Fesneau MoDem
2nd Patrice Martin-Lalande* LR Guillaume Peltier LR
3rd Maurice Leroy UDI Maurice Leroy UDI
Loire 1st Régis Juanico PS Régis Juanico PS
2nd Jean-Louis Gagnaire* PS Jean-Michel Mis LREM
3rd François Rochebloine UDI Valéria Faure-Muntian LREM
4th Dino Cinieri LR Dino Cinieri LR
5th Yves Nicolin* LR Nathalie Sarles MoDem
6th Paul Salen LR Julien Borowczyk LREM
Haute-Loire 1st Laurent Wauquiez* LR Isabelle Valentin LR
2nd Jean-Pierre Vigier LR Jean-Pierre Vigier LR
Loire-Atlantique 1st François de Rugy PE François de Rugy LREM
2nd Marie-Françoise Clergeau* PS Valérie Oppelt LREM
3rd Karine Daniel PS Anne-France Brunet LREM
4th Dominique Raimbourg PS Aude Amadou LREM
5th Michel Ménard PS Sarah El Haïry MoDem
6th Yves Daniel PS Yves Daniel LREM
7th Christophe Priou* LR Sandrine Josso LREM
8th Marie-Odile Bouillé* PS Audrey Dufeu-Schubert LREM
9th Monique Rabin PS Yannick Haury MoDem
10th Sophie Errante PS Sophie Errante LREM
Loiret 1st Olivier Carré* LR Stéphanie Rist LREM
2nd Serge Grouard LR Caroline Janvier LREM
3rd Claude de Ganay LR Claude de Ganay LR
4th Jean-Pierre Door LR Jean-Pierre Door LR
5th Marianne Dubois LR Marianne Dubois LR
6th Valérie Corre PS Richard Ramos MoDem
Lot 1st Dominique Orliac PRG Aurélien Pradié LR
2nd Jean Launay* PS Huguette Tiegna LREM
Lot-et-Garonne 1st Lucette Lousteau PS Michel Lauzzana LREM
2nd Régine Povéda** PS Alexandre Freschi LREM
3rd Jean-Louis Costes LR Olivier Damaisin LREM
Lozère 1st Pierre Morel-À-L'Huissier LR Pierre Morel-À-L'Huissier LR
Maine-et-Loire 1st Luc Belot PS Matthieu Orphelin LREM
2nd Marc Goua* PS Stella Dupont LREM
3rd Jean-Charles Taugourdeau LR Jean-Charles Taugourdeau LR
4th Michel Piron* UDI Laetitia Saint-Paul LREM
5th Gilles Bourdouleix* CNIP Denis Masséglia LREM
6th Serge Bardy PS Nicole Dubré-Chirat LREM
7th Marc Laffineur* LR Philippe Bolo MoDem
Manche 1st Philippe Gosselin LR Philippe Gosselin LR
2nd Guénhaël Huet LR Bertrand Sorre LREM
3rd Stéphane Travert PS Stéphane Travert LREM
4th Geneviève Gosselin-Fleury* PS Sonia Krimi DIV
Marne 1st Arnaud Robinet* LR Valérie Beauvais LR
2nd Catherine Vautrin LR Aina Kuric LREM
3rd Philippe Martin* LR Éric Girardin LREM
4th Benoist Apparu* LR Lise Magnier LR
5th Charles de Courson UDI Charles de Courson UDI
Haute-Marne 1st Luc Chatel* LR Bérangère Abba LREM
2nd François Cornut-Gentille LR François Cornut-Gentille LR
Mayenne 1st Guillaume Garot PS Guillaume Garot PS
2nd Guillaume Chevrollier LR Géraldine Bannier MoDem
3rd Yannick Favennec UDI Yannick Favennec UDI
Meurthe-et-Moselle 1st Chaynesse Khirouni PS Carole Grandjean LREM
2nd Hervé Féron PS Laurent Garcia MoDem
3rd Jean-Marc Fournel** PS Xavier Paluszkiewicz LREM
4th Jacques Lamblin* LR Thibault Bazin LR
5th Dominique Potier PS Dominique Potier PS
6th Jean-Yves Le Déaut* PS Caroline Fiat FI
Meuse 1st Bertrand Pancher UDI Bertrand Pancher UDI
2nd Jean-Louis Dumont PS Émilie Cariou LREM
Morbihan 1st Hervé Pellois DVG Hervé Pellois LREM
2nd Philippe Le Ray LR Jimmy Pahun DIV
3rd Jean-Pierre Le Roch* PS Nicole Le Peih LREM
4th Paul Molac DVG Paul Molac LREM
5th Gwendal Rouillard PS Gwendal Rouillard LREM
6th Philippe Noguès DVG Jean-Michel Jacques LREM
Moselle 1st Aurélie Filippetti PS Belkhir Belhaddad LREM
2nd Denis Jacquat* LR Ludovic Mendes LREM
3rd Marie-Jo Zimmermann LR Richard Lioger LREM
4th Alain Marty* LR Fabien Di Filippo LR
5th Céleste Lett LR Nicole Gries-Trisse LREM
6th Laurent Kalinowski* PS Christophe Arend LREM
7th Paola Zanetti PS Hélène Zannier LREM
8th Michel Liebgott* PS Brahim Hammouche MoDem
9th Patrick Weiten* UDI Isabelle Rauch LREM
Nièvre 1st Martine Carrillon-Couvreur* PS Perrine Goulet LREM
2nd Christian Paul PS Patrice Perrot LREM
Nord 1st vacant Adrien Quatennens FI
2nd Audrey Linkenheld PS Ugo Bernalicis FI
3rd Rémi Pauvros PS Christophe Di Pompeo LREM
4th Marc-Philippe Daubresse* LR Brigitte Liso LREM
5th Sébastien Huyghe LR Sébastien Huyghe LR
6th Thierry Lazaro LR Charlotte Lecocq LREM
7th Francis Vercamer UDI Francis Vercamer UDI
8th Dominique Baert* PS Catherine Osson LREM
9th Bernard Gérard LR Valérie Petit LREM
10th Vincent Ledoux LR Vincent Ledoux LR
11th Yves Durand* PS Laurent Pietraszewski LREM
12th Christian Bataille PS Anne-Laure Cattelot LREM
13th Christian Hutin* MRC Christian Hutin MRC
14th Jean-Pierre Decool* LR Paul Christophe LR
15th Jean-Pierre Allossery* PS Jennifer de Temmerman LREM
16th Jean-Jacques Candelier* PCF Alain Bruneel PCF
17th Marc Dolez* FG Dimitri Houbron LREM
18th François-Xavier Villain* UDI Guy Bricout UDI
19th Anne-Lise Dufour-Tonini PS Sébastien Chenu FN
20th Alain Bocquet* PCF Fabien Roussel PCF
21st Laurent Degallaix* UDI Béatrice Descamps UDI
Oise 1st Olivier Dassault LR Olivier Dassault LR
2nd Jean-François Mancel* LR Agnès Thill LREM
3rd Michel Françaix PS Pascal Bois LREM
4th Éric Woerth LR Éric Woerth LR
5th Lucien Degauchy* LR Pierre Vatin LR
6th Patrice Carvalho PCF Carole Bureau-Bonnard LREM
7th Édouard Courtial* LR Maxime Minot LR
Orne 1st Joaquim Pueyo PS Joaquim Pueyo PS
2nd Véronique Louwagie LR Véronique Louwagie LR
3rd Yves Goasdoué* DVG Jérôme Nury LR
Pas-de-Calais 1st Jean-Jacques Cottel PS Bruno Duvergé MoDem
2nd Jacqueline Maquet PS Jacqueline Maquet LREM
3rd Guy Delcourt* PS José Évrard FN
4th Daniel Fasquelle LR Daniel Fasquelle LR
5th Frédéric Cuvillier* PS Jean-Pierre Pont LREM
6th Brigitte Bourguignon PS Brigitte Bourguignon LREM
7th Yann Capet PS Pierre-Henri Dumont LR
8th Michel Lefait* PS Benoît Potterie LREM
9th Stéphane Saint-André PRG Marguerite Deprez-Audebert MoDem
10th Serge Janquin* PS Ludovic Pajot FN
11th Philippe Kemel PS Marine Le Pen FN
12th Nicolas Bays* PS Bruno Bilde FN
Puy-de-Dôme 1st Odile Saugues* PS Valérie Thomas LREM
2nd Christine Pirès-Beaune PS Christine Pirès-Beaune PS
3rd Danielle Auroi* EELV Laurence Vichnievsky MoDem
4th Jean-Paul Bacquet* PS Michel Fanget MoDem
5th André Chassaigne PCF André Chassaigne PCF
Pyrénées-Atlantiques 1st Martine Lignières-Cassou* PS Josy Poueyto MoDem
2nd Nathalie Chabanne PS Jean-Paul Mattei MoDem
3rd David Habib PS David Habib PS
4th Jean Lassalle R Jean Lassalle R
5th Colette Capdevielle PS Florence Lasserre-David MoDem
6th Sylviane Alaux PS Vincent Bru MoDem
Hautes-Pyrénées 1st Jean Glavany PS Jean-Bernard Sempastous LREM
2nd Jeanine Dubié PRG Jeanine Dubié PRG
Pyrénées-Orientales 1st Jacques Cresta* PS Romain Grau LREM
2nd Fernand Siré LR Louis Aliot FN
3rd Robert Olive** PS Laurence Gayte LREM
4th Pierre Aylagas* PS Sébastien Cazenove LREM
Bas-Rhin 1st Éric Elkouby PS Thierry Michels LREM
2nd Philippe Bies PS Sylvain Waserman LREM
3rd André Schneider* LR Bruno Studer LREM
4th Sophie Rohfritsch LR Martine Wonner LREM
5th Antoine Herth LR Antoine Herth LR
6th Laurent Furst LR Laurent Furst LR
7th Patrick Hetzel LR Patrick Hetzel LR
8th Frédéric Reiss LR Frédéric Reiss LR
9th Claude Sturni* DVD Vincent Thiébaut LREM
Haut-Rhin 1st Éric Straumann LR Éric Straumann LR
2nd Jean-Louis Christ* LR Jacques Cattin LR
3rd Jean-Luc Reitzer LR Jean-Luc Reitzer LR
4th Michel Sordi* LR Raphaël Schellenberger LR
5th Arlette Grosskost* LR Olivier Becht DVD
6th Francis Hillmeyer UDI Bruno Fuchs LREM
Rhône 1st Gilda Hobert* PRG Thomas Rudigoz LREM
2nd Pierre-Alain Muet* PS Hubert Julien-Laferrière LREM
3rd Jean-Louis Touraine PS Jean-Louis Touraine LREM
4th Dominique Nachury LR Anne Brugnera LREM
5th Philippe Cochet LR Blandine Brocard LREM
6th Pascale Crozon* PS Bruno Bonnell LREM
7th Renaud Gauquelin PS Anissa Khedher LREM
8th Patrice Verchère LR Patrice Verchère LR
9th Bernard Perrut LR Bernard Perrut LR
10th Christophe Guilloteau* LR Thomas Gassilloud LREM
11th Georges Fenech LR Jean-Luc Fugit LREM
12th Michel Terrot* LR Cyrille Isaac-Sibille MoDem
13th Philippe Meunier LR Danièle Cazarian LREM
14th Yves Blein PS Yves Blein LREM
Haute-Saône 1st Alain Chrétien* LR Barbara Bessot Ballot LREM
2nd Jean-Michel Villaumé* PS Christophe Lejeune LREM
Saône-et-Loire 1st Thomas Thévenoud* DVG Benjamin Dirx LREM
2nd Édith Gueugneau* DVG Josiane Corneloup LR
3rd Philippe Baumel PS Rémy Rebeyrotte LREM
4th Cécile Untermaier PS Cécile Untermaier PS
5th vacant Raphaël Gauvain LREM
Sarthe 1st Françoise Dubois PS Damien Pichereau LREM
2nd Marietta Karamanli PS Marietta Karamanli PS
3rd Guy-Michel Chauveau* DVG Pascale Fontenel-Personne LREM
4th Sylvie Tolmont** PS Stéphane Le Foll PS
5th Dominique Le Mèner* LR Jean-Carles Grelier LR
Savoie 1st Dominique Dord LR Typhanie Degois LREM
2nd Hervé Gaymard* LR Vincent Rolland LR
3rd Béatrice Santais* PS Émilie Bonnivard LR
4th Bernadette Laclais PS Patrick Mignola MoDem
Haute-Savoie 1st Bernard Accoyer* LR Véronique Riotton LREM
2nd Lionel Tardy LR Frédérique Lardet LREM
3rd Martial Saddier LR Martial Saddier LR
4th Virginie Duby-Muller LR Virginie Duby-Muller LR
5th Marc Francina* LR Marion Lenne LREM
6th Sophie Dion LR Xavier Roseren LREM
Paris 1st Pierre Lellouche* LR Sylvain Maillard LREM
2nd François Fillon* LR Gilles Le Gendre LREM
3rd Annick Lepetit PS Stanislas Guerini LREM
4th Bernard Debré* LR Brigitte Kuster LR
5th Seybah Dagoma PS Benjamin Griveaux LREM
6th Cécile Duflot EELV Pierre Person LREM
7th Patrick Bloche PS Pacôme Rupin LREM
8th Sandrine Mazetier PS Laetitia Avia LREM
9th Anne-Christine Lang* PS Buon Tan LREM
10th Denis Baupin* DVG Anne-Christine Lang LREM
11th Pascal Cherki PS Marielle de Sarnez MoDem
12th Philippe Goujon LR Olivia Grégoire LREM
13th Jean-François Lamour LR Hugues Renson LREM
14th Claude Goasguen LR Claude Goasguen LR
15th George Pau-Langevin PS George Pau-Langevin PS
16th Jean-Christophe Cambadélis PS Mounir Mahjoubi LREM
17th Daniel Vaillant* PS Danièle Obono FI
18th vacant Pierre-Yves Bournazel LR
Seine-Maritime 1st Valérie Fourneyron PS Damien Adam LREM
2nd Françoise Guégot LR Annie Vidal LREM
3rd Luce Pane PS Hubert Wulfranc PCF
4th Guillaume Bachelay PS Sira Sylla LREM
5th Christophe Bouillon PS Christophe Bouillon PS
6th Marie Le Vern PS Sébastien Jumel PCF
7th Édouard Philippe* LR Agnès Firmin Le Bodo LR
8th Catherine Troallic PS Jean-Paul Lecoq PCF
9th Jacques Dellerie** PS Stéphanie Kerbarh LREM
10th Dominique Chauvel DVG Xavier Batut LREM
Seine-et-Marne 1st Jean-Claude Mignon* LR Aude Luquet MoDem
2nd Valérie Lacroute LR Valérie Lacroute LR
3rd Yves Jégo UDI Yves Jégo UDI
4th Christian Jacob LR Christian Jacob LR
5th Franck Riester LR Franck Riester LR
6th Jean-François Copé* LR Jean-François Parigi LR
7th Yves Albarello LR Rodrigue Kokouendo LREM
8th Eduardo Rihan Cypel PS Jean-Michel Fauvergue LREM
9th Guy Geoffroy LR Michèle Peyron LREM
10th Émeric Bréhier* PS Stéphanie Do LREM
11th Olivier Faure PS Olivier Faure PS
Yvelines 1st François de Mazières* DVD Didier Baichère LREM
2nd Pascal Thévenot LR Jean-Noël Barrot LREM
3rd Henri Guaino* LR Béatrice Piron LREM
4th Pierre Lequiller* LR Marie Lebec LREM
5th Jacques Myard LR Yaël Braun-Pivet LREM
6th Pierre Morange LR Natalia Pouzyreff LREM
7th Arnaud Richard UDI Michèle de Vaucouleurs MoDem
8th Françoise Descamps-Crosnier PS Michel Vialay LR
9th Jean-Marie Tétart LR Bruno Millienne MoDem
10th Jean-Frédéric Poisson PCD Aurore Bergé LREM
11th Benoît Hamon PS Nadia Hai LREM
12th David Douillet LR Florence Granjus LREM
Deux-Sèvres 1st Geneviève Gaillard* PS Guillaume Chiche LREM
2nd Delphine Batho PS Delphine Batho PS
3rd Jean Grellier* PS Jean-Marie Fiévet LREM
Somme 1st Pascal Demarthe** PS François Ruffin FI
2nd Romain Joron** PS Barbara Pompili LREM
3rd Jean-Claude Buisine PS Emmanuel Maquet LR
4th Alain Gest* LR Jean-Claude Leclabart LREM
5th Stéphane Demilly UDI Stéphane Demilly UDI
Tarn 1st Philippe Folliot AC Philippe Folliot AC
2nd Jacques Valax* PS Marie-Christine Verdier-Jouclas LREM
3rd Linda Gourjade PS Jean Terlier LREM
Tarn-et-Garonne 1st Valérie Rabault PS Valérie Rabault PS
2nd Sylvia Pinel PRG Sylvia Pinel PRG
Var 1st Geneviève Levy LR Geneviève Levy LR
2nd Philippe Vitel LR Cécile Muschotti LREM
3rd Jean-Pierre Giran* LR Jean-Louis Masson LR
4th Jean-Michel Couve* LR Sereine Mauborgne LREM
5th Georges Ginesta* LR Philippe Michel-Kleisbauer MoDem
6th Josette Pons* LR Valérie Gomez-Bassac LREM
7th Jean-Sébastien Vialatte LR Émilie Guerel LREM
8th Olivier Audibert-Troin LR Fabien Matras LREM
Vaucluse 1st Michèle Fournier-Armand* PS Jean-François Cesarini LREM
2nd Jean-Claude Bouchet LR Jean-Claude Bouchet LR
3rd Marion Maréchal-Le Pen* FN Brune Poirson LREM
4th Jacques Bompard LS Jacques Bompard LS
5th Julien Aubert LR Julien Aubert LR
Vendée 1st Alain Lebœuf LR Philippe Latombe MoDem
2nd Sylviane Bulteau PS Patricia Gallerneau MoDem
3rd Yannick Moreau* LR Stéphane Buchou LREM
4th Véronique Besse* MPF Martine Leguille-Balloy LREM
5th Hugues Fourage PS Pierre Henriet LREM
Vienne 1st Alain Claeys* PS Jacques Savatier LREM
2nd Catherine Coutelle* PS Sacha Houlié LREM
3rd Jean-Michel Clément PS Jean-Michel Clément LREM
4th Véronique Massonneau PE Nicolas Turquois MoDem
Haute-Vienne 1st Alain Rodet* PS Sophie Beaudouin-Hubière LREM
2nd Daniel Boisserie* PS Jean-Baptiste Djebbari-Bonnet LREM
3rd Catherine Beaubatie PS Marie-Ange Magne LREM
Vosges 1st Michel Heinrich* LR Stéphane Viry LR
2nd Gérard Cherpion LR Gérard Cherpion LR
3rd François Vannson* LR Christophe Naegelen DVD
4th Christian Franqueville PS Jean-Jacques Gaultier LR
Yonne 1st Guillaume Larrivé LR Guillaume Larrivé LR
2nd Jean-Yves Caullet PS André Villiers UDI
3rd Marie-Louise Fort* LR Michèle Crouzet LREM
Territoire de Belfort 1st Damien Meslot* LR Ian Boucard LR
2nd Michel Zumkeller UDI Michel Zumkeller UDI
Essonne 1st Manuel Valls PS Manuel Valls DVG
2nd Franck Marlin LR Franck Marlin LR
3rd Michel Pouzol PS Laëtitia Romeiro Dias LREM
4th Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet* LR Marie-Pierre Rixain LREM
5th Maud Olivier PS Cédric Villani LREM
6th François Lamy* PS Amélie de Montchalin LREM
7th Éva Sas EELV Robin Reda LR
8th Nicolas Dupont-Aignan DLF Nicolas Dupont-Aignan DLF
9th Romain Colas PS Marie Guévenoux LREM
10th Malek Boutih PS Pierre-Alain Raphan LREM
Hauts-de-Seine 1st Alexis Bachelay PS Elsa Faucillon PCF
2nd Sébastien Pietrasanta* PS Adrien Taquet LREM
3rd Jacques Kossowski* LR Christine Hennion LREM
4th Jacqueline Fraysse* FG (E) Isabelle Florennes LREM
5th Patrick Balkany* LR Céline Calvez LREM
6th Jean-Christophe Fromantin* DVD Constance Le Grip LR
7th Patrick Ollier* LR Jacques Marilossian LREM
8th Jean-Jacques Guillet* LR Jacques Maire LREM
9th Thierry Solère LR Thierry Solère LR
10th André Santini* UDI Gabriel Attal LREM
11th Julie Sommaruga PS Laurianne Rossi LREM
12th Jean-Marc Germain PS Jean-Louis Bourlanges MoDem
13th Patrick Devedjian* LR Frédérique Dumas LREM
Seine-Saint-Denis 1st Bruno Le Roux* PS Éric Coquerel FI
2nd Mathieu Hanotin PS Stéphane Peu FI
3rd Michel Pajon* PS Patrice Anato LREM
4th Marie-George Buffet PCF Marie-George Buffet PCF
5th Jean-Christophe Lagarde UDI Jean-Christophe Lagarde UDI
6th Élisabeth Guigou PS Bastien Lachaud FI
7th Razzy Hammadi PS Alexis Corbière FI
8th Élisabeth Pochon PS Sylvie Charrière LREM
9th Claude Bartolone* PS Sabine Rubin FI
10th Daniel Goldberg PS Alain Ramadier LR
11th François Asensi* FG (E) Clémentine Autain FI (E)
12th Pascal Popelin* PS Stéphane Testé LREM
Val-de-Marne 1st Sylvain Berrios* LR Frédéric Descrozaille LREM
2nd Laurent Cathala* PS Jean François Mbaye LREM
3rd Roger-Gérard Schwartzenberg* PRG Laurent Saint-Martin LREM
4th Jacques-Alain Bénisti* LR Maud Petit MoDem
5th Gilles Carrez LR Gilles Carrez LR
6th Laurence Abeille EELV Guillaume Gouffier-Cha LREM
7th Jean-Jacques Bridey PS Jean-Jacques Bridey LREM
8th Michel Herbillon LR Michel Herbillon LR
9th René Rouquet* PS Luc Carvounas PS
10th Jean-Luc Laurent MRC Mathilde Panot FI
11th Jean-Yves Le Bouillonnec* PS Albane Gaillot LREM
Val-d'Oise 1st Philippe Houillon* LR Isabelle Muller-Quoy LREM
2nd Axel Poniatowski LR Guillaume Vuilletet LREM
3rd Jean-Noël Carpentier* MDP Cécile Rilhac LREM
4th Gérard Sebaoun* PS Naïma Moutchou LREM
5th Philippe Doucet PS Fiona Lazaar LREM
6th François Scellier* LR Nathalie Élimas MoDem
7th Jérôme Chartier LR Dominique Da Silva LREM
8th François Pupponi PS François Pupponi PS
9th Jean-Pierre Blazy* PS Zivka Park LREM
10th Dominique Lefebvre PS Aurélien Taché LREM
Guadeloupe 1st Éric Jalton* DVG Olivier Serva LREM
2nd Gabrielle Louis-Carabin* DVG Justine Bénin DVG
3rd Ary Chalus* GUSR Max Mathiasin DVG
4th Victorin Lurel* PS Hélène Vainqueur-Christophe PS
Martinique 1st Alfred Marie-Jeanne* MIM Josette Manin DVG
2nd Bruno Nestor Azerot DVG Bruno Nestor Azerot DVG
3rd Serge Letchimy PPM Serge Letchimy PPM
4th Jean-Philippe Nilor MIM Jean-Philippe Nilor MIM
French Guiana 1st Gabriel Serville PSG Gabriel Serville PSG
2nd Chantal Berthelot PRG Lénaïck Adam LREM
Réunion 1st Philippe Naillet** PS Ericka Bareigts PS
2nd Huguette Bello PLR Huguette Bello PLR
3rd Jean-Jacques Vlody PS Nathalie Bassire LR
4th Patrick Lebreton* PS David Lorion LR
5th Jean-Claude Fruteau* PS Jean-Hugues Ratenon DVG
6th Monique Orphé PS Nadia Ramassamy LR
7th Thierry Robert MoDem Thierry Robert MoDem
Mayotte 1st Boinali Saïd DVG Ramlati Ali PS
2nd Ibrahim Aboubacar PS Mansour Kamardine LR
New Caledonia 1st Sonia Lagarde* CE Philippe Dunoyer CE
2nd Philippe Gomès CE Philippe Gomès CE
French Polynesia 1st Maina Sage Tapura Maina Sage Tapura
2nd Jonas Tahuaitu* Tahoeraa Nicole Sanquer Tapura
3rd Jean-Paul Tuaiva Tapura Moetai Brotherson Tavini
Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon 1st Stéphane Claireaux** PRG Annick Girardin PRG
Wallis and Futuna 1st Napole Polutele DVG Napole Polutele DVG
Saint-Martin/Saint-Barthélemy 1st Daniel Gibbs* LR Claire Javois LR
French residents overseas 1st Frédéric Lefebvre LR Roland Lescure LREM
2nd Sergio Coronado EELV Paula Forteza LREM
3rd Axelle Lemaire PS Alexandre Holroyd LREM
4th Philip Cordery PS Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade LREM
5th Arnaud Leroy* PS Samantha Cazebonne LREM
6th Claudine Schmid LR Joachim Son-Forget LREM
7th Pierre-Yves Le Borgn' PS Frédéric Petit MoDem
8th Meyer Habib UDI Meyer Habib UDI
9th Pouria Amirshahi* DVG M'jid El Guerrab DIV
10th Alain Marsaud LR Amal Amélia Lakrafi LREM
11th Thierry Mariani LR Anne Genetet LREM

Source: Ministry of the Interior

* Outgoing deputy not seeking re-election
** Outgoing substitute, attached deputy seeking re-election
*** Outgoing PS deputies who failed to secure their party's investiture and running for re-election without label

Aftermath

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Composition of groups in the National Assembly

In the aftermath of the legislative elections, the split between Macron-compatible "constructives" within the Republicans (LR) and the rest of the party re-emerged. On 21 June, Thierry Solère announced the creation of a new common group in the National Assembly with the Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) likely to contain the 18 UDI deputies and about 15 LR. The formation of two parliamentary groups on the right represented a symbolic divorce to the two threads on the right (the moderates and the hardliners) and the end of the old Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) which had been created in 2002 to unite the right and centre.[90] The French Communist Party (PCF), la France Insoumise (FI), Socialist Party (PS), La République En Marche! (LREM), and Democratic Movement (MoDem) also sought to form separate parliamentary groups.[91]

The legislative elections were followed on 19 June by the conclusion of the Philippe I government by courtesy and reappointment of Édouard Philippe as Prime Minister; though usually a formality,[92] the formation of the Philippe II government was complicated by the ongoing affair regarding alleged improprieties in the employment practices of MoDem officials in the European Parliament and elsewhere. The request of Minister of the Armed Forces Sylvie Goulard to leave the government on 20 June was soon followed by the announcement on 21 June that both Minister of Justice François Bayrou and Minister in charge of European Affairs Marielle de Sarnez would depart the government, the two being the remaining MoDem officials within the government. In the reshuffle, Richard Ferrand, implicated in allegations of nepotism regarding a property sale, was transferred from his post in government as Minister of Territorial Cohesion as planned president of the LREM group in the National Assembly, and likewise for de Sarnez with the newly created MoDem group. Despite these changes, the MoDem remained within the government, with the announcement of the Philippe II government on 21 June.[91] The Socialist group was ultimately refounded as the "New Left" (NG), and Marc Fesneau was elected president of the MoDem group.[93]

Composition of the National Assembly as of 25 July 2017[94]
Parliamentary group Members Related Total President
LREM La République En Marche 310 4 314 Richard Ferrand
LR The Republicans 95 5 100 Christian Jacob
MoDem Democratic Movement 43 4 47 Marc Fesneau
LC The Constructives: Republicans, UDI, and Independents 34 1 35 Franck Riester, Stéphane Demilly
NG New Left 28 3 31 Olivier Faure
FI La France Insoumise 17 0 17 Jean-Luc Mélenchon
GDR Democratic and Republican Left 16 0 16 André Chassaigne
NI Non-inscrits 17

Vote of confidence

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In the vote of confidence in the new government on 4 July 2017, 370 voted in favor, 67 opposed, and 129 abstained,[95] representing a record level of abstention and the lowest level of opposition since 1959.[96]

Vote of confidence on 4 July 2017[95]
For Against Abstentions Non-voting
370 67 129 11

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Résultats des législatives 2017 : revivez la soirée électorale". Le Monde. 18 June 2017. Retrieved 20 June 2017.
  2. ^ Curtis, John; Dempsey, Noel (17 January 2021). "The 2017 French parliamentary elections".
  3. ^ Burrows-Taylor, Evie (19 June 2017). "A look inside France's new, younger and less male dominated parliament". The Local. Archived from the original on 19 June 2017. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Eléa Pommiers (26 April 2017). "Comment se déroulent les élections législatives". Le Monde. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  5. ^ "Annonce par M. Laurent Fabius, Président du Conseil constitutionnel, des résultats officiels du premier tour de l'élection présidentielle". Conseil constitutionnel. 26 April 2017. Archived from the original on 1 May 2017. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  6. ^ "DIRECT. Présidentielle : Marine Le Pen lance un appel aux électeurs de Jean-Luc Mélenchon pour "faire barrage" à Emmanuel Macron". franceinfo. 28 April 2017. Retrieved 28 April 2017.
  7. ^ "Annonce des résultats officiels du second tour de l'élection présidentielle et proclamation de l'élection du Président de la République". Conseil constitutionnel. 10 May 2017. Archived from the original on 15 June 2017. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  8. ^ a b Maxime Vaudano; Samuel Laurent; Mathilde Damgé; Anne-Aël Durand (24 May 2017). "Qui sont les 7 882 candidats aux législatives 2017 ?". Le Monde. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  9. ^ Baptiste Bouthier (31 March 2017). "Cumul des mandats : c'est la fin du député-maire". Libération. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  10. ^ "Élections législatives de 2017 : Mémento à l'usage des candidats de métropole et d'outre-mer" (PDF). Ministry of the Interior. 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  11. ^ a b Vincent Michelon (21 May 2017). "La campagne officielle des législatives commence lundi : tout savoir sur son déroulement". LCI. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  12. ^ a b "Décret no 2017-616" (PDF). Assemblée nationale. 24 April 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  13. ^ a b "Circulaire no JUSC1709622C" (PDF). Ministère de la Justice. 24 March 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  14. ^ a b "Législatives: les candidats de "La République en marche" investis d'ici à jeudi". L'Express. 8 May 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  15. ^ Nathalie Raulin (19 January 2017). "Macron lance un appel à ses "marcheurs" pour les investitures aux législatives". Libération. Archived from the original on 1 March 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  16. ^ William Galibert (26 April 2017). "Élections législatives : un comité d'investiture déjà à l'oeuvre dans le camp d'En Marche!". Europe 1. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  17. ^ "Législatives : "environ 450" candidats La République en marche finalement dévoilés jeudi". Europe 1. Agence France-Presse. 10 May 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  18. ^ François-Xavier Bourmaud (10 May 2017). "Législatives: Macron lance ses marcheurs à l'assaut de l'Assemblée". Le Figaro. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  19. ^ a b "Parité, âge, société civile: le portrait robot des 428 députés du parti de Macron". L'Express. 11 May 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  20. ^ "Législatives: En marche! dévoile ses 428 premiers candidats, dont 52% issus de la société civile". Le Figaro. 11 May 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  21. ^ "Législatives: Bayrou ne donne pas son "assentiment" à la liste d'En Marche". Libération. 11 May 2017. Archived from the original on 13 May 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  22. ^ Yohan Blavignat (11 May 2017). "Législatives: les couacs des investitures de La République en marche". Le Figaro. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  23. ^ "Législatives : La République en marche publie une nouvelle liste avec plus de candidats issus du MoDem". franceinfo. 15 May 2017. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  24. ^ Quentin Laurent (20 May 2017). "Législatives : En Marche ! sans candidat dans 51 circonscriptions". Le Parisien. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  25. ^ Manon Rescan; Enora Ollivier (19 May 2017). "Législatives : 51 circonscriptions sans candidat LRM". Le Monde. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
  26. ^ "Le premier ministre Philippe prépare " un gouvernement rassembleur de compétences "". Le Monde. 15 May 2017. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  27. ^ "Législatives : dans 56 circonscriptions, La République en marche n'oppose pas de candidats aux ténors de droite et de gauche". franceinfo. 17 May 2017. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
  28. ^ "L'Elysée demande aux ministres de démissionner des postes locaux qu'ils dirigent". Le Monde. Agence France-Presse. 17 May 2017. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
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