Following the first round of the 2024 French legislative election on 30 June 2024, runoff elections in each constituency where no candidate received a vote share greater than 50 percent were scheduled for 7 July. Candidates permitted to stand in the runoff elections needed to either come in first or second place in the first round or achieve more than 12.5 percent of the votes of the entire electorate (as opposed to 12.5 percent of the vote share due to low turnout).
Results listed below are according to the Ministry of the Interior, with some more specific parties for newly elected deputies listed in accordance with research by Le Monde. Asterisks (*) indicate incumbents not running for re-election (except in the case of substitutes), and shaded rows indicate seats which changed hands between different alliances (i.e. if an incumbent and newly elected deputy are from different parties within the same alliance, then that row is not highlighted).[1][2]
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edit- ^ "Publication des candidatures et des résultats aux élections". Ministère de l'Intérieur. Archived from the original on 30 June 2024. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
- ^ Sanchez, Léa; Derœux, Iris; Pateman, Lili; Parienté, Jonathan; Audureau, William; Imbach, Romain; Tovo, Françoise; Durand, Anne-Aël; Breteau, Pierre; Leloup, Damien; Baruch, Jérémie; Ferrer, Maxime (19 June 2024). "Découvrez la liste des candidats aux élections législatives 2024 dans votre circonscription". Le Monde. Archived from the original on 21 June 2024. Retrieved 21 June 2024. Footnotes using this reference may also make use of JSON data embedded (Archived 21 June 2024 at the Wayback Machine) within this page, which includes codes assigned by the Ministry of the Interior as well as political parties and alliances (New Popular Front and Ensemble) as analysed by Le Monde for all 4,010 candidates.