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2022 French legislative election

Legislative elections were held in France on 12 and 19 June 2022 to elect the 577 members of the 16th National Assembly of the Fifth Republic. The elections took place following the 2022 French presidential election, which was held in April 2022.[1] They have been described as the most indecisive legislative elections since the establishment of the five-year presidential term in 2000 and subsequent change of the electoral calendar in 2002.[2] The governing Ensemble coalition remained the largest bloc in the National Assembly but substantially lost its ruling majority, resulting in the formation of France's first minority government since 1993.

2022 French legislative election

← 2017 12 June 2022 (first round)
19 June 2022 (second round)
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All 577 seats in the National Assembly
289 seats needed for a majority
Turnout47.51% ( 1.19pp) (first round)
46.23% ( 3.59pp) (second round)
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Ensemble Élisabeth Borne 25.75 245 −105
NUPÉS Jean-Luc Mélenchon 25.66 131 +79
RN Marine Le Pen 18.68 89 +81
UDC Christian Jacob 11.29 64 −66
DVG 3.14 21 +9
DVD 2.33 10 +4
Regionalists 1.28 10 +5
DVC 1.25 4 +4
Sovereignist right Nicolas Dupont-Aignan 1.10 1 −2
DIV 0.85 1 −2
PRG Guillaume Lacroix 0.56 1 −2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Élisabeth Borne
LREM
Élisabeth Borne
LREM

For the first time since 1997, the incumbent president of France does not have an absolute majority in Parliament. As no alliance won a majority, it resulted in a hung parliament for the first time since 1988.[3]

The legislative elections were contested between four principal blocs: the centrist presidential majority Ensemble coalition, including Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance, the Democratic Movement, Horizons, as well as their allies; the left-wing New Ecological and Social People's Union (NUPES), encompassing La France Insoumise, the Socialist Party, Ecologist Pole and the French Communist Party; the centre-right Union of the Right and Centre (UDC), including The Republicans, the Union of Democrats and Independents, as well as their allies; and the far-right National Rally (RN). The NUPES alliance was formed in the two months following the presidential election, in which the left-wing vote had been fragmented; it consisted of the first French Left alliance since the Plural Left in 1997.[4]

In the first round, there was some controversy among the Ministry of the Interior and news media about which bloc finished first, as both the NUPES and Ensemble obtained about 26% of the vote.[5] They were followed by the RN on about 19% and UDC with about 11%.[6] Turnout for the first round was a record-low 47.5%.[7] In the second round, when turnout was higher than that of 2017, Macron's Ensemble coalition secured the most seats (245) but fell 44 seats short of an absolute majority.[8][9][a] The NUPES was projected to win 131 (Ministry of the Interior) or 142 seats (Le Monde), while RN became the largest parliamentary opposition as a party (89). The UDC received enough seats (64 or 71) to be a kingmaker in the next government but suffered losses.[8]

The results were perceived by political commentators as a dramatic blow for Macron,[9][11] who, all at once, lost his majority in Parliament, three government ministers (Amélie de Montchalin for Ecological Transition, Brigitte Bourguignon for Health and Justine Bénin for the Sea) and three close parliamentary allies (incumbent president of the National Assembly Richard Ferrand, Macron's own former Interior minister and head of the LREM parliamentary group Christophe Castaner and MoDem parliamentary group leader Patrick Mignola), all defeated in their constituencies. The 2022 UEFA Champions League final chaos at the Stade de France on 28 May,[12] rape accusations against newly-appointed minister Damien Abad or the unusually long period between Macron's reelection as President and the formation of the new Borne government (26 days) have been cited as major factors in Macron's majority wipeout.[13]

Macron's government, which enjoyed a 115-seat majority before the election, now fell at least 38 short of an overall majority, the largest margin for any French Cabinet since 1958. This near-unprecedented situation created potential for political instability and gridlock.[3] Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne offered her resignation on 21 June 2022, but Macron refused to accept it. Talks among the various parties to form a stable majority government began later on 21 June but rapidly failed. On 6 July, Prime Minister Borne presented her minority government policy plan to the Parliament.

Background edit

Following the 2017 French legislative election, the incumbent president Emmanuel Macron's party, La République En Marche! (LREM), and its allies held a majority in the National Assembly (577 seats). The LREM group had 308 deputies, the Democratic Movement and affiliated democrats group had 42 deputies, and Agir ensemble, which was created in November 2017, had 9 deputies.[14] Although a proposal to have part of the French Parliament elected with a proportional representation system was included in Macron's platform in 2017, this election promise was not fulfilled.[15] A similar promise was made by François Hollande during the 2012 presidential election.[16]

Macron, from the centrist LREM, had defeated Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Rally, 66–34% in the 2017 French presidential election.[1][17] The 2022 French presidential election was held on 10 and 24 April. As no candidate won a majority in the first round, a runoff was held, in which Macron defeated Le Pen 58–41% and was reelected as President of France.[18] In the first round, Macron took the lead with 27.9% of votes, while Valérie Pécresse, the candidate for the Republicans, took under 5% of the vote in the first round, the worst result in the history of the party or its Gaullist predecessors. Anne Hidalgo, the mayor of Paris, received 1.75% of the vote, the worst in the history of the Socialist Party (PS).[19] With more than 30% of the vote,[3] it was the best result for French far-right figures since the founding of the Fifth French Republic with the 1958 French presidential election.[20] Jean-Luc Mélenchon of La France Insoumise (LFI) came third in the first round with 21.95% of the vote and 1.2% behind second-placed Le Pen, also coming first in the 18–24 and 25–34 age groups, as well in Île-de-France, the most populous region of France.[21][22]

In the context of the legislative election common participation, as the largest French Left force in the presidential election,[23][24][25] LFI sought to unite the main left-leaning parties around the banner of the New Ecological and Social People's Union,[4][26][27] or NUPES.[28][29] Discussions were held with Europe Ecology – The Greens,[30][31] including the Ecologist Pole,[32][33] as well as the French Communist Party,[34] which joined the coalition on 2–3 May 2022, respectively;[35] the PS reached an agreement to join the coalition on 4 May, which was confirmed by a National Council party vote on 5 May.[36][37] This resulted in the first wide left-wing alliance since the Plural Left in the 1997 French legislative election.[4]

Discussion with the Federation of the Republican Left (FGR), which wanted to join NUPES,[38][39] went unanswered;[40] the FGR then formed alliances with the Radical Party of the Left, which internally rejected integration into NUPES, and the dissident minority in the PS, among the miscellaneous left. Their candidates presented themselves as part of the "secular and republican" left between Macron and Mélenchon.[41] The New Anticapitalist Party announced it would not enter the coalition due to what they called insurmountable ideological differences with the PS,[42][43][44] while Lutte Ouvrière announced that the party would run its own slate separate from NUPES, which they believe to be reformist.[45]

On 5 May 2022, LREM changed its name to Renaissance, introducing its big tent coalition for the legislative election made up of the presidential majority parties called Ensemble Citoyens (Ensemble).[46][47] On 16 May, Macron appointed Élisabeth Borne as Prime Minister, replacing Jean Castex. Borne, a member of Renaissance and formerly of the PS, was serving as Macron's Minister of Labour, Employment and Economic Inclusion prior to her appointment as prime minister. She is only the second woman to hold the office.[48]

Electoral system edit

The 577 members of the National Assembly, known as deputies, are elected for five years by a two-round system in single-member constituencies. A candidate who receives an absolute majority of valid votes and a vote total greater than 25% of the registered electorate is elected in the first round. If no candidate reaches this threshold, a runoff election is held between the top two candidates plus any other candidate who received a vote total greater than 12.5% of registered voters. The candidate who receives the most votes in the second round is elected.[49]

Dates edit

According to the provisions of the Electoral Code, the election must be held within the sixty days which precede the expiry of the powers of the outgoing National Assembly, attached to the third Tuesday of June, five years after its election, except in the event of dissolution of the National Assembly.[50] The end of the mandate of the Assembly elected in 2017 is set for 21 June 2022. The dates for the legislative elections in mainland France were set for 12 and 19 June.[51] Declarations of candidacy must be submitted no later than 20 May for the first round and 14 June for the second round.[52] French nationals who live abroad were able to vote in the days preceding the ballot.[53]

Major parties and alliances contesting edit

Below are the major parties and alliances contesting the elections, listed by their combined results in the previous elections. According to Le Journal du dimanche, the elections are mainly contested between three blocs: a left-wing bloc (NUPES), a presidential bloc on the center-right (Ensemble), and a far-right bloc.[2]

Party or alliance Main ideology Position Leader
Ensemble La République En Marche! and allies Liberalism Center Stanislas Guerini
Democratic Movement Liberalism Center to center-right François Bayrou
Horizons Liberal conservatism Center-right Édouard Philippe
UDC The Republicans and allies Liberal conservatism Center-right to right-wing Christian Jacob
Union of Democrats and Independents Liberalism Center to center-right Jean-Christophe Lagarde
NUPES La France Insoumise and allies Democratic socialism Left-wing to far-left Adrien Quatennens
Europe Ecology – The Greens and allies Green politics Center-left to left-wing Julien Bayou
Socialist Party and allies Social democracy Center-left Olivier Faure
French Communist Party Communism Left-wing to far-left Fabien Roussel
National Rally and allies Right-wing nationalism Far-right Jordan Bardella
Radical Party of the Left and allies Social liberalism Center-left Guillaume Lacroix
UPF Debout la France and allies National conservatism Right-wing to far-right Nicolas Dupont-Aignan
Les Patriotes Right-wing nationalism Right-wing to far-right Florian Philippot
Reconquête and allies Right-wing nationalism Far-right Éric Zemmour

Deputies not standing for reelection edit

Opinion polls edit

 
Local regression of polls conducted

Results edit

First round edit

After the first round, the New Ecological and Social People's Union (NUPES) and Ensemble Citoyens (Ensemble) obtained about 26%. Amid significant losses on the right-wing of the political spectrum for the Republicans (LR) and the Union of the Right and Centre (UDC),[3] results for Emmanuel Macron's Ensemble alliance showed it was now the centre-right, having performed strongly among the traditionally centre-right electorate of UDC.[6] The French far-right achieved mixed results; while the National Rally (RN) achieved 18% and was likely to obtain the necessary seats to form a parliamentary group, Éric Zemmour's Reconquête reached 4%, and both he and the party failed to win a seat, and former RN leader Marine Le Pen had to go through the second round for her seat due to low turnout.[6]

In contests between NUPES and RN candidates, officials from Ensemble said they would decide on a "case-by-case basis" on whether or not to support a candidate.[6] Élisabeth Borne, Prime Minister of France, said: "Our position is no vote for RN." At the same time, she expressed support only for NUPES candidates who in her view respect republican values.[54][55] The first round confirmed that La France Insoumise (LFI) within NUPES and among the French Left, while the centre-left dissidents achieved a much lower numbers of votes like the 2022 French presidential election; of the over 70 dissident candidates, only 15 qualified for the second round.[56]

The first round was marked by a record low turnout at 47.5%.[7] Additionally, there was some controversy in the results between the Ministry of the Interior and French news outlets, such as France Info and Le Monde, in particular on whether NUPES or Ensemble finished first;[57] This was due to disagreements on whether left-wing candidates should be considered within the NUPES framework or not;[5] similar discrepancies also existed for UDC and other alliances.[58] NUPES finished either second (per the Ministry of the Interior) or first (per Le Monde), slightly behind or ahead of Ensemble (25.75–25.66% per the Ministry of the Interior and 26.1–25.9% per Le Monde).[59][60][61]

Second round edit

 
Constituency results after the second round by parties

The second round had a higher turnout than that in the 2017 French legislative election but did not match that of the first round a week earlier. The Ensemble alliance slightly underperforming polls and lost their absolute majority in Parliament,[62] while still winning the most seats.[8] NUPES slightly underperformed from polling but still managed to substantially increase their proportion of seats and was to reported to have won 131 seats per the Ministry of the Interior. RN substantially overperformed polls to win an unprecedented 89 seats and become the largest parliamentary opposition group due to each component party of NUPES intending to form their own parliamentary group,[63][64] eclipsing the UDC coalition, which received enough seats to be a kingmaker in the next government but lost seats as expected, and was projected to win 75 seats.[8] It was the best performance for the far right in the era of the French Fifth Republic,[65] and the best overall since the late 19th century.[20] Several news outlets, such as Agence France-Presse, gave a different result as to the final seat count, with Ensemble on 247, NUPES on 142, and UDC on 64, respectively, per Le Monde. This was due to differences as to candidates, particularly in the French overseas constituencies, being classified as members of these alliances or not.[10]

The elections resulted in a hung parliament, as Ensemble had only a relative majority (a plurality).[9] It was the first hung parliament since the establishment of the five-year presidential term after the 2000 French constitutional referendum,[11] as well as the first relative majority only since the 1988 French legislative election.[3] The overall results were seen as a disavowal and major blow for Macron, with a risk of political instability and gridlock.[11] Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire called the outcome a "democratic shock", and said that if the other blocs did not cooperate, "this would block our capacity to reform and protect the French".[9] Prime Minister Borne commented: "The result is a risk for our country in view of the challenges we have to face."[9] LR, the leading party of UDC, was thought to be the kingmaker and potentially play a role for Macron to keep his presidential majority;[6] however, Christian Jacob, the president of LR and the leader of UDC, stated that his party would remain in opposition, meaning Macron's party would not remain in control of the legislature.[66][67] Mélenchon called the results "disappointing" and said that NUPES and the French Left should form a united, single parliamentary group to avoid RN from becoming the largest opposition group in Parliament,[68][69] which was refused by leaders of Europe Ecology – The Greens (EELV), French Communist Party (PCF), and Socialist Party (PS).[70]

National results edit

 
PartyFirst roundSecond roundTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Ensemble5,857,36425.7518,002,41938.57244245–105
New Ecological and Social People's Union5,836,07925.6646,556,19831.60127131+79
National Rally4,248,53718.6803,589,46517.308989+81
Union of the Right and Centre2,568,50211.2901,512,2817.296464–66
Reconquête964,7754.2400New
Miscellaneous left[b]713,5743.140408,7061.972121+9
Ecologists608,3142.6700–1
Miscellaneous right530,7822.330231,0711.111010+4
Regionalists291,3841.280264,7791.281010+5
Miscellaneous centre283,6121.25099,1450.4844+4
Miscellaneous far-left[c]266,4121.17011,2290.05000
Sovereignist right[d]249,6031.10019,3060.09110
Miscellaneous192,6240.85018,2950.0911–2
Radical Party of the Left126,6890.56034,5760.1711–2
Miscellaneous far-right6,4570.0300–1
Total22,744,708100.00520,747,470100.005725770
Valid votes22,744,70897.8020,747,47092.36
Invalid votes149,3060.64480,9622.14
Blank votes362,1931.561,235,8445.50
Total votes23,256,207100.0022,464,276100.00
Registered voters/turnout48,953,74847.5148,589,36046.23
Source: Ministry of the Interior
Popular vote (first round)
Ensemble
25.75%
NUPES
25.66%
RN
18.68%
UDC
11.29%
REC
4.24%
DVG
3.14%
ECO
2.67%
DVD
2.33%
REG
1.28%
DVC
1.25%
DXG
1.17%
DSV
1.10%
DIV
0.85%
PRG
0.56%
DXD
0.03%
Popular vote (second round)
Ensemble
38.57%
NUPES
31.60%
RN
17.3%
UDC
7.29%
DVG
1.97%
REG
1.28%
DVD
1.11%
DVC
0.48%
PRG
0.17%
DSV
0.09%
DIV
0.09%
DXG
0.05%
REC
0.00%
ECO
0.00%
DXD
0.00%
Popular vote (seats)
Ensemble
42.50%
NUPES
22.70%
RN
15.40%
UDC
11.09%
DVG
0.03%
DVD
0.02%
REG
0.02%
DVC
0.01%
PRG
0.00%
DSV
0.00%
DIV
0.00%

Results by constituency edit

2022 French legislative election map results by constituency

Electorate edit

Sociology of the electorate
Demographic EXG NUPES DVG ECO ENS DVC UDC/DVD UPF RN REC Others
Total vote 1.2% 25.2% 4.1% 2.6% 25.2% 1.5% 13.7% 1.2% 18.9% 3.9% 2.5%
First-round vote in the 2022 presidential election
Jean-Luc Mélenchon 0% 85% 5% 3% 2% 0% 3% 0% 2% 0% 0%
Yannick Jadot 5% 39% 12% 11% 10% 6% 6% 0% 0% 0% 11%
Emmanuel Macron 0% 5% 3% 1% 71% 4% 12% 0% 0% 1% 3%
Valérie Pécresse 0% 3% 2% 1% 9% 3% 76% 0% 5% 1% 0%
Marine Le Pen 0% 5% 0% 1% 2% 0% 9% 1% 78% 2% 2%
Éric Zemmour 0% 1% 0% 3% 5% 0% 24% 1% 18% 46% 2%
Political party affiliation
LFI 0% 93% 3% 0% 0% 0% 1% 0% 2% 0% 1%
EELV 1% 52% 9% 11% 9% 0% 7% 0% 2% 0% 9%
PS 2% 43% 18% 2% 24% 0% 3% 1% 3% 0% 4%
LREM / MoDem 0% 2% 3% 1% 82% 5% 6% 0% 0% 0% 1%
LR / UDI 0% 2% 2% 2% 13% 0% 70% 0% 8% 2% 1%
RN 0% 3% 0% 1% 2% 0% 3% 0% 87% 1% 3%
REC 0% 0% 0% 0% 7% 0% 8% 1% 8% 76% 0%
None 2% 25% 3% 5% 21% 2% 18% 1% 19% 2% 2%
Sex
Men 1% 23% 4% 3% 25% 1% 14% 1% 21% 5% 2%
Women 2% 27% 4% 3% 25% 2% 14% 2% 17% 2% 2%
Age
18–24 years old 1% 42% 3% 3% 13% 0% 10% 1% 18% 5% 4%
25–34 years old 3% 38% 4% 5% 19% 1% 6% 2% 18% 4% 0%
35–49 years old 1% 31% 2% 3% 18% 2% 11% 1% 26% 2% 3%
50–59 years old 1% 22% 4% 4% 17% 1% 14% 2% 30% 3% 2%
60–69 years old 2% 26% 5% 1% 28% 2% 13% 1% 13% 5% 4%
70 or older 1% 15% 5% 2% 38% 1% 19% 1% 12% 4% 2%
Socio-occupational classification
Manager/professional 1% 28% 7% 3% 22%  7% 14% 0% 11% 4% 3%
Intermediate occupation 1% 35% 3% 4% 22% 0% 10% 1% 20% 2% 2%
White-collar worker 2% 31% 4% 3% 14% 3% 10% 3% 25% 3% 2%
Blue-collar worker 1% 18% 3% 3% 11% 0% 11% 1% 45% 4% 3%
Retired 1% 18% 5% 2% 35% 1% 18% 1% 12% 4% 3%
Employment status
Employee 1% 29% 4% 4% 18% 2% 11% 1% 25% 3% 2%
(Private employee) 1% 27% 2% 3% 19% 3% 12% 1% 25% 4% 3%
(Public employee) 2% 33% 7% 4% 16% 0% 9% 3% 24% 1% 1%
Self-employed 2% 25% 4% 2% 33% 0% 10% 3% 14% 7% 0%
Unemployed 4% 30% 2% 1% 7% 6% 11% 0% 27% 9% 3%
Education
Less than baccalauréat 1% 17% 2% 3% 27% 3% 12% 1% 28% 4% 2%
Baccalauréat 1% 24% 5% 2% 23% 0% 15% 1% 23% 3% 4%
Bac +2 1% 25% 5% 3% 23% 0% 16% 2% 18% 5% 2%
At least bac +3 2% 32% 4% 2% 27% 3% 12% 1% 11% 3% 3%
Monthly household income
Less than €1,250 3% 34% 2% 4% 19% 0% 7% 4% 21% 4% 2%
€1,250 to €2,000 2% 28% 5% 2% 19% 1% 12% 2% 23% 4% 2%
€2,000 to €3,000 1% 26% 5% 2% 27% 0% 11% 1% 21% 4% 2%
More than €3,000 0% 22% 4% 3% 28% 3% 17% 1% 15% 4% 3%
Moment of choice of vote
In the last few weeks 1% 29% 3% 1% 28% 1% 10% 1% 20% 5% 1%
In the last few days 3% 19% 6% 4% 20% 2% 22% 2% 17% 2% 3%
At the last moment 2% 13% 7% 8% 18% 6% 20% 3% 12% 2% 9%
Agglomeration
Fewer than 2,000 inhabitants 1% 27% 4% 2% 21% 0% 12% 2% 22% 4% 5%
2,000 to 10,000 inhabitants 2% 21% 5% 3% 21% 1% 14% 0% 26% 2% 5%
10,000 to 50,000 inhabitants 2% 22% 2% 2% 29% 0% 17% 1% 22% 3% 0%
50,000 to 200,000 inhabitants 2% 22% 6% 2% 23% 3% 13% 1% 22% 5% 1%
More than 200,000 inhabitants 1% 27% 4% 3% 28% 2% 14% 2% 13% 4% 2%
Religion
Roman Catholic 1% 13% 4% 3% 30% 1% 19% 1% 21% 5% 2%
(Regular practitioner) 1% 8% 8% 2% 26% 3% 29% 2% 14% 7% 0%
(Occasional practitioner) 1% 12% 2% 2% 27% 4% 28% 0% 17% 5% 2%
(Non-practitioner) 1% 13% 4% 3% 31% 1% 16% 2% 23% 4% 2%
Other religion 2% 38% 7% 5% 18% 0% 14% 0% 8% 3% 5%
Non religion 2% 39% 4% 2% 20% 2% 7% 1% 17% 3% 3%
Demographic
EXG NUPES DVG ECO ENS DVC UDC/DVD UPF RN REC Others
Sociology of the electorate
Source: Ipsos France[71]

Aftermath edit

Due to the Ensemble's loss of 100+ seats, they were now 44 seats shy of a majority in the National Assembly, and need to find support among other MPs from the left or the right side of politics to help build a working majority government. President Macron asked Prime Minister Borne, who offered her resignation, to stay in office with the same cabinet in an effort to gain time according to analysts to form a stable government, with or without Borne.[72] LFI requested a vote of no confidence to be held on 5 July.[73][74]

Despite not ruling out any deal with any party, it is speculated that Macron and Ensemble are eyeing a deal with UDC.[72] Despite previously stating otherwise,[6] UDC's Jacob confirmed that he would take part in talks with Macron.[72] RN's Le Pen and the leaders of two NUPES parties, Olivier Faure (PS) and Fabien Roussel (PCF), stated that they would take part in talks with Macron. LFI's Mélenchon confirmed that he would not take part in talks.[72]

Parliamentary groups formation edit

Vote of no confidence edit

Shortly after the election, a vote of no confidence was tabled by the left-wing NUPES coalition. It was rejected as only left-wing parliamentary groups supported the motion.[77]

Prime Minister Borne offered her resignation on 21 June 2022, but President Macron refused to accept it. Talks among the various parties to form a stable majority government began later on 21 June but rapidly failed. On 6 July, Borne presented her minority government policy plan to the Parliament.[72][78]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Several news outlets, such as France Info and Le Monde, give a different result as to the final seat count, with Ensemble on 247 and NUPES on 142, respectively. This is due to differences as to candidates, particularly in the French overseas constituencies, being classified as members of these alliances or not.[10]
  2. ^ Includes the Federation of the Republican Left and dissident candidates from the NUPES member parties. Some independent candidates affiliated with the NUPES were also labelled as Miscellaneous left by the Ministry of Interior. In the second round, the result of the Radical Party of the Left was included in the results for the Miscellaneous left by the Ministry.
  3. ^ Includes Lutte Ouvrière and New Anticapitalist Party.
  4. ^ Includes the Union for France led by Debout la France and The Patriots.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Anderson, Emma (4 January 2022). "European elections to watch in 2022". Politico. from the original on 21 January 2022. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  2. ^ a b Bloch, Michel (9 June 2022). "Législatives : voici les quatre scénarios possibles au soir du second tour". Le Journal du dimanche (in French). from the original on 13 June 2022. Retrieved 13 June 2022. C'est sans aucun doute les élections législatives les plus indécises depuis l'instauration du quinquennat et l'inversion du calendrier électoral en 2002. Le premier tour de la présidentielle a révélé la présence de trois blocs dans le pays (un bloc macroniste de center-droit, un bloc d'extrême-droite et un bloc de gauche).
  3. ^ a b c d e Bernard, Mathias (20 June 2022). "Parliamentary elections shock France's political order to its core". The Conversation. from the original on 20 June 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  4. ^ a b c Thomas-Darbois, Lisa (1 June 2022). "An Institut Montaigne Explainer: Understanding Legislative Elections in France". Institut Montaigne. from the original on 1 June 2022. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  5. ^ a b Holroyd, Matthew; Khatsenkova, Sophia (15 June 2022). "France elections: Why does the left-wing alliance want a first round recount?". Euronews. from the original on 15 June 2022. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Macron coalition, leftwing bloc neck and neck in first round of French elections". France 24. Agence France-Presse. 12 June 2022. from the original on 15 June 2022. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  7. ^ a b Kirby, Paul (13 June 2022). "French election: Left surge threatens Macron majority in France". BBC. from the original on 15 June 2022. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d "Macron's bloc falls short of absolute majority, leftist coalition second, large gains for far right". France 24. Agence France-Presse. 19 June 2022. from the original on 19 June 2022. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d e Hummel, Tassilo; Kar-gupta, Sudip (19 June 2022). "Macron loses absolute majority in parliament in 'democratic shock'". Reuters. from the original on 19 June 2022. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  10. ^ a b c "Carte des résultats des législatives 2022: les députés élus, circonscription par circonscription". Le Monde (in French). 19 June 2022. from the original on 20 June 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  11. ^ a b c Breeden, Aurelien; Méheut, Constant (19 June 2022). "Macron Loses Absolute Majority as Opposition Surges, a Blow for New Term". The New York Times. from the original on 19 June 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  12. ^ "Les incidents au Stade de France ont contribué à mobiliser tous les électorats d'opposition". l'Express (in French). 13 July 2022.
  13. ^ Vigogne, Ludovic. Les sans jours [The off days] (in French). Paris: Bouquins. ISBN 978-2-38292-451-8.
  14. ^ "As it happened: Macron's centrist party wins absolute majority in French legislative elections". France 24. 18 June 2017. from the original on 12 June 2022. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  15. ^ "Élections législatives de 2022 : quand la proportionnelle se réinvite dans le débat". Midi Libre (in French). 22 February 2021. from the original on 26 February 2021. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
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2022, french, legislative, election, legislative, elections, were, held, france, june, 2022, elect, members, 16th, national, assembly, fifth, republic, elections, took, place, following, 2022, french, presidential, election, which, held, april, 2022, they, hav. Legislative elections were held in France on 12 and 19 June 2022 to elect the 577 members of the 16th National Assembly of the Fifth Republic The elections took place following the 2022 French presidential election which was held in April 2022 1 They have been described as the most indecisive legislative elections since the establishment of the five year presidential term in 2000 and subsequent change of the electoral calendar in 2002 2 The governing Ensemble coalition remained the largest bloc in the National Assembly but substantially lost its ruling majority resulting in the formation of France s first minority government since 1993 2022 French legislative election 2017 12 June 2022 first round 19 June 2022 second round Next All 577 seats in the National Assembly289 seats needed for a majorityTurnout47 51 1 19pp first round 46 23 3 59pp second round Party Leader Seats Ensemble Elisabeth Borne 25 75 245 105NUPES Jean Luc Melenchon 25 66 131 79RN Marine Le Pen 18 68 89 81UDC Christian Jacob 11 29 64 66DVG 3 14 21 9DVD 2 33 10 4Regionalists 1 28 10 5DVC 1 25 4 4Sovereignist right Nicolas Dupont Aignan 1 10 1 2DIV 0 85 1 2PRG Guillaume Lacroix 0 56 1 2This lists parties that won seats See the complete results below First round results by constituency and blocSecond round results by constituency and blocResults by constituency holds and flipsPrime Minister before Prime Minister afterElisabeth BorneLREM Elisabeth BorneLREMFor the first time since 1997 the incumbent president of France does not have an absolute majority in Parliament As no alliance won a majority it resulted in a hung parliament for the first time since 1988 3 The legislative elections were contested between four principal blocs the centrist presidential majority Ensemble coalition including Emmanuel Macron s Renaissance the Democratic Movement Horizons as well as their allies the left wing New Ecological and Social People s Union NUPES encompassing La France Insoumise the Socialist Party Ecologist Pole and the French Communist Party the centre right Union of the Right and Centre UDC including The Republicans the Union of Democrats and Independents as well as their allies and the far right National Rally RN The NUPES alliance was formed in the two months following the presidential election in which the left wing vote had been fragmented it consisted of the first French Left alliance since the Plural Left in 1997 4 In the first round there was some controversy among the Ministry of the Interior and news media about which bloc finished first as both the NUPES and Ensemble obtained about 26 of the vote 5 They were followed by the RN on about 19 and UDC with about 11 6 Turnout for the first round was a record low 47 5 7 In the second round when turnout was higher than that of 2017 Macron s Ensemble coalition secured the most seats 245 but fell 44 seats short of an absolute majority 8 9 a The NUPES was projected to win 131 Ministry of the Interior or 142 seats Le Monde while RN became the largest parliamentary opposition as a party 89 The UDC received enough seats 64 or 71 to be a kingmaker in the next government but suffered losses 8 The results were perceived by political commentators as a dramatic blow for Macron 9 11 who all at once lost his majority in Parliament three government ministers Amelie de Montchalin for Ecological Transition Brigitte Bourguignon for Health and Justine Benin for the Sea and three close parliamentary allies incumbent president of the National Assembly Richard Ferrand Macron s own former Interior minister and head of the LREM parliamentary group Christophe Castaner and MoDem parliamentary group leader Patrick Mignola all defeated in their constituencies The 2022 UEFA Champions League final chaos at the Stade de France on 28 May 12 rape accusations against newly appointed minister Damien Abad or the unusually long period between Macron s reelection as President and the formation of the new Borne government 26 days have been cited as major factors in Macron s majority wipeout 13 Macron s government which enjoyed a 115 seat majority before the election now fell at least 38 short of an overall majority the largest margin for any French Cabinet since 1958 This near unprecedented situation created potential for political instability and gridlock 3 Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne offered her resignation on 21 June 2022 but Macron refused to accept it Talks among the various parties to form a stable majority government began later on 21 June but rapidly failed On 6 July Prime Minister Borne presented her minority government policy plan to the Parliament Contents 1 Background 2 Electoral system 3 Dates 4 Major parties and alliances contesting 4 1 Deputies not standing for reelection 5 Opinion polls 6 Results 6 1 First round 6 2 Second round 6 3 National results 6 4 Results by constituency 6 5 Electorate 7 Aftermath 7 1 Parliamentary groups formation 7 2 Vote of no confidence 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesBackground editFollowing the 2017 French legislative election the incumbent president Emmanuel Macron s party La Republique En Marche LREM and its allies held a majority in the National Assembly 577 seats The LREM group had 308 deputies the Democratic Movement and affiliated democrats group had 42 deputies and Agir ensemble which was created in November 2017 had 9 deputies 14 Although a proposal to have part of the French Parliament elected with a proportional representation system was included in Macron s platform in 2017 this election promise was not fulfilled 15 A similar promise was made by Francois Hollande during the 2012 presidential election 16 Macron from the centrist LREM had defeated Marine Le Pen leader of the far right National Rally 66 34 in the 2017 French presidential election 1 17 The 2022 French presidential election was held on 10 and 24 April As no candidate won a majority in the first round a runoff was held in which Macron defeated Le Pen 58 41 and was reelected as President of France 18 In the first round Macron took the lead with 27 9 of votes while Valerie Pecresse the candidate for the Republicans took under 5 of the vote in the first round the worst result in the history of the party or its Gaullist predecessors Anne Hidalgo the mayor of Paris received 1 75 of the vote the worst in the history of the Socialist Party PS 19 With more than 30 of the vote 3 it was the best result for French far right figures since the founding of the Fifth French Republic with the 1958 French presidential election 20 Jean Luc Melenchon of La France Insoumise LFI came third in the first round with 21 95 of the vote and 1 2 behind second placed Le Pen also coming first in the 18 24 and 25 34 age groups as well in Ile de France the most populous region of France 21 22 In the context of the legislative election common participation as the largest French Left force in the presidential election 23 24 25 LFI sought to unite the main left leaning parties around the banner of the New Ecological and Social People s Union 4 26 27 or NUPES 28 29 Discussions were held with Europe Ecology The Greens 30 31 including the Ecologist Pole 32 33 as well as the French Communist Party 34 which joined the coalition on 2 3 May 2022 respectively 35 the PS reached an agreement to join the coalition on 4 May which was confirmed by a National Council party vote on 5 May 36 37 This resulted in the first wide left wing alliance since the Plural Left in the 1997 French legislative election 4 Discussion with the Federation of the Republican Left FGR which wanted to join NUPES 38 39 went unanswered 40 the FGR then formed alliances with the Radical Party of the Left which internally rejected integration into NUPES and the dissident minority in the PS among the miscellaneous left Their candidates presented themselves as part of the secular and republican left between Macron and Melenchon 41 The New Anticapitalist Party announced it would not enter the coalition due to what they called insurmountable ideological differences with the PS 42 43 44 while Lutte Ouvriere announced that the party would run its own slate separate from NUPES which they believe to be reformist 45 On 5 May 2022 LREM changed its name to Renaissance introducing its big tent coalition for the legislative election made up of the presidential majority parties called Ensemble Citoyens Ensemble 46 47 On 16 May Macron appointed Elisabeth Borne as Prime Minister replacing Jean Castex Borne a member of Renaissance and formerly of the PS was serving as Macron s Minister of Labour Employment and Economic Inclusion prior to her appointment as prime minister She is only the second woman to hold the office 48 Electoral system editThe 577 members of the National Assembly known as deputies are elected for five years by a two round system in single member constituencies A candidate who receives an absolute majority of valid votes and a vote total greater than 25 of the registered electorate is elected in the first round If no candidate reaches this threshold a runoff election is held between the top two candidates plus any other candidate who received a vote total greater than 12 5 of registered voters The candidate who receives the most votes in the second round is elected 49 Dates editAccording to the provisions of the Electoral Code the election must be held within the sixty days which precede the expiry of the powers of the outgoing National Assembly attached to the third Tuesday of June five years after its election except in the event of dissolution of the National Assembly 50 The end of the mandate of the Assembly elected in 2017 is set for 21 June 2022 The dates for the legislative elections in mainland France were set for 12 and 19 June 51 Declarations of candidacy must be submitted no later than 20 May for the first round and 14 June for the second round 52 French nationals who live abroad were able to vote in the days preceding the ballot 53 Major parties and alliances contesting editBelow are the major parties and alliances contesting the elections listed by their combined results in the previous elections According to Le Journal du dimanche the elections are mainly contested between three blocs a left wing bloc NUPES a presidential bloc on the center right Ensemble and a far right bloc 2 Party or alliance Main ideology Position LeaderEnsemble La Republique En Marche and allies Liberalism Center Stanislas GueriniDemocratic Movement Liberalism Center to center right Francois BayrouHorizons Liberal conservatism Center right Edouard PhilippeUDC The Republicans and allies Liberal conservatism Center right to right wing Christian JacobUnion of Democrats and Independents Liberalism Center to center right Jean Christophe LagardeNUPES La France Insoumise and allies Democratic socialism Left wing to far left Adrien QuatennensEurope Ecology The Greens and allies Green politics Center left to left wing Julien BayouSocialist Party and allies Social democracy Center left Olivier FaureFrench Communist Party Communism Left wing to far left Fabien RousselNational Rally and allies Right wing nationalism Far right Jordan BardellaRadical Party of the Left and allies Social liberalism Center left Guillaume LacroixUPF Debout la France and allies National conservatism Right wing to far right Nicolas Dupont AignanLes Patriotes Right wing nationalism Right wing to far right Florian PhilippotReconquete and allies Right wing nationalism Far right Eric ZemmourDeputies not standing for reelection edit Main article Candidates in the 2022 French legislative electionOpinion polls editMain article Opinion polling for the 2022 French legislative electionSee also Opinion polling on the Emmanuel Macron presidency nbsp Local regression of polls conductedResults editFirst round edit After the first round the New Ecological and Social People s Union NUPES and Ensemble Citoyens Ensemble obtained about 26 Amid significant losses on the right wing of the political spectrum for the Republicans LR and the Union of the Right and Centre UDC 3 results for Emmanuel Macron s Ensemble alliance showed it was now the centre right having performed strongly among the traditionally centre right electorate of UDC 6 The French far right achieved mixed results while the National Rally RN achieved 18 and was likely to obtain the necessary seats to form a parliamentary group Eric Zemmour s Reconquete reached 4 and both he and the party failed to win a seat and former RN leader Marine Le Pen had to go through the second round for her seat due to low turnout 6 In contests between NUPES and RN candidates officials from Ensemble said they would decide on a case by case basis on whether or not to support a candidate 6 Elisabeth Borne Prime Minister of France said Our position is no vote for RN At the same time she expressed support only for NUPES candidates who in her view respect republican values 54 55 The first round confirmed that La France Insoumise LFI within NUPES and among the French Left while the centre left dissidents achieved a much lower numbers of votes like the 2022 French presidential election of the over 70 dissident candidates only 15 qualified for the second round 56 The first round was marked by a record low turnout at 47 5 7 Additionally there was some controversy in the results between the Ministry of the Interior and French news outlets such as France Info and Le Monde in particular on whether NUPES or Ensemble finished first 57 This was due to disagreements on whether left wing candidates should be considered within the NUPES framework or not 5 similar discrepancies also existed for UDC and other alliances 58 NUPES finished either second per the Ministry of the Interior or first per Le Monde slightly behind or ahead of Ensemble 25 75 25 66 per the Ministry of the Interior and 26 1 25 9 per Le Monde 59 60 61 Second round edit nbsp Constituency results after the second round by partiesThe second round had a higher turnout than that in the 2017 French legislative election but did not match that of the first round a week earlier The Ensemble alliance slightly underperforming polls and lost their absolute majority in Parliament 62 while still winning the most seats 8 NUPES slightly underperformed from polling but still managed to substantially increase their proportion of seats and was to reported to have won 131 seats per the Ministry of the Interior RN substantially overperformed polls to win an unprecedented 89 seats and become the largest parliamentary opposition group due to each component party of NUPES intending to form their own parliamentary group 63 64 eclipsing the UDC coalition which received enough seats to be a kingmaker in the next government but lost seats as expected and was projected to win 75 seats 8 It was the best performance for the far right in the era of the French Fifth Republic 65 and the best overall since the late 19th century 20 Several news outlets such as Agence France Presse gave a different result as to the final seat count with Ensemble on 247 NUPES on 142 and UDC on 64 respectively per Le Monde This was due to differences as to candidates particularly in the French overseas constituencies being classified as members of these alliances or not 10 Differences Final seatsAlliance Officially AlternativeParty Ministry of the Interior Le Monde 10 NUPES 131 142LFI 71 71PS 24 24Pole ecologiste 22 22EELV 16 16G s 4 4GE 2 2PCF 12 12POI LFI 1 1LND DVG 1 1DVG 22 13PS 5 5PRG 1 1PPM 1 1GUSR 1 1PPDG 1 1PS DVG 1 1DVG 2 2PS 3 3DVG LFI 3 3PLR 1 1PLR DVG 1 1Peyi A 1 1MoDem 1 1DIV 1 1DIV 1 1REG 10 6Femu RPS 2 2PNC RPS 1 1Peyi A 1 1Peyi A 1 1MDES 1 1DVG REG 1 1Tavini 3 3ENS 245 246LREM 110 152TdP 52MoDem 48 48Horizons 27 27Agir 10PRV 4 4FP LREM 1 1CE UL 1 1GNC UL 1 1LREM DVD 1 1DVC 4 5LREM 2 2DVC LREM 1 1DVC 1 1UDC LR UDI 64 64UDI 3 3LR 60 60LR DVD 1 1DVD 10 9DVD 3 3AD 1 1LC 1 1DVD UDI 1 1DVD LR 1 1DVD PRV 1 1DVD UDI 1 1DVD EXD 1 1DSV 1 0UPF DLF 1 1RN 89 89RN 89 89EXD 0 2Total 577 577The elections resulted in a hung parliament as Ensemble had only a relative majority a plurality 9 It was the first hung parliament since the establishment of the five year presidential term after the 2000 French constitutional referendum 11 as well as the first relative majority only since the 1988 French legislative election 3 The overall results were seen as a disavowal and major blow for Macron with a risk of political instability and gridlock 11 Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire called the outcome a democratic shock and said that if the other blocs did not cooperate this would block our capacity to reform and protect the French 9 Prime Minister Borne commented The result is a risk for our country in view of the challenges we have to face 9 LR the leading party of UDC was thought to be the kingmaker and potentially play a role for Macron to keep his presidential majority 6 however Christian Jacob the president of LR and the leader of UDC stated that his party would remain in opposition meaning Macron s party would not remain in control of the legislature 66 67 Melenchon called the results disappointing and said that NUPES and the French Left should form a united single parliamentary group to avoid RN from becoming the largest opposition group in Parliament 68 69 which was refused by leaders of Europe Ecology The Greens EELV French Communist Party PCF and Socialist Party PS 70 National results edit nbsp PartyFirst roundSecond roundTotalseats Votes SeatsVotes SeatsEnsemble5 857 36425 7518 002 41938 57244245 105New Ecological and Social People s Union5 836 07925 6646 556 19831 60127131 79National Rally4 248 53718 6803 589 46517 308989 81Union of the Right and Centre2 568 50211 2901 512 2817 296464 66Reconquete964 7754 2400NewMiscellaneous left b 713 5743 140408 7061 972121 9Ecologists608 3142 6700 1Miscellaneous right530 7822 330231 0711 111010 4Regionalists291 3841 280264 7791 281010 5Miscellaneous centre283 6121 25099 1450 4844 4Miscellaneous far left c 266 4121 17011 2290 05000Sovereignist right d 249 6031 10019 3060 09110Miscellaneous192 6240 85018 2950 0911 2Radical Party of the Left126 6890 56034 5760 1711 2Miscellaneous far right6 4570 0300 1Total22 744 708100 00520 747 470100 005725770Valid votes22 744 70897 8020 747 47092 36Invalid votes149 3060 64480 9622 14Blank votes362 1931 561 235 8445 50Total votes23 256 207100 0022 464 276100 00Registered voters turnout48 953 74847 5148 589 36046 23Source Ministry of the InteriorPopular vote first round Ensemble 25 75 NUPES 25 66 RN 18 68 UDC 11 29 REC 4 24 DVG 3 14 ECO 2 67 DVD 2 33 REG 1 28 DVC 1 25 DXG 1 17 DSV 1 10 DIV 0 85 PRG 0 56 DXD 0 03 Popular vote second round Ensemble 38 57 NUPES 31 60 RN 17 3 UDC 7 29 DVG 1 97 REG 1 28 DVD 1 11 DVC 0 48 PRG 0 17 DSV 0 09 DIV 0 09 DXG 0 05 REC 0 00 ECO 0 00 DXD 0 00 Popular vote seats Ensemble 42 50 NUPES 22 70 RN 15 40 UDC 11 09 DVG 0 03 DVD 0 02 REG 0 02 DVC 0 01 PRG 0 00 DSV 0 00 DIV 0 00 Results by constituency edit Main article Results of the 2022 French legislative election by constituency See also Election results of Cabinet Ministers during the 2022 French legislative election List of MPs who lost their seat in the 2022 French legislative election and List of deputies of the 16th National Assembly of France 2022 French legislative election map results by constituency nbsp Simplified map shows which group led in each seat after the 1st round nbsp Simplified map shows which group won in each seat after the 2nd round nbsp Winning party in each constituency after the 2nd round Constituency Elected deputy 2017 election Party Elected deputy 2022 election PartyAin 1st Xavier Breton LR Xavier Breton LR2nd Charles de la Verpilliere LR Romain Daubie MoDem3rd Olga Givernet LREM Olga Givernet LREM4th Stephane Trompille LREM Jerome Buisson RN5th Damien Abad LR Damien Abad DVDAisne 1st Aude Bono Vandorme LREM Nicolas Dragon RN2nd Julien Dive LR Julien Dive LR3rd Jean Louis Bricout PS Jean Louis Bricout DVG4th Marc Delatte LREM Jose Beaurain RN5th Jacques Krabal LREM Jocelyn Dessigny RNAllier 1st Jean Paul Dufregne PCF Yannick Monnet PCF2nd Laurence Vanceunebrock Mialon LREM Jorys Bovet RN3rd Benedicte Peyrol LREM Nicolas Ray LRAlpes de Haute Provence 1st Delphine Bagarry LREM Christian Girard RN2nd Christophe Castaner LREM Leo Walter LFIHautes Alpes 1st Pascale Boyer LREM Pascale Boyer LREM2nd Joel Giraud PRG Joel Giraud LREMAlpes Maritimes 1st Eric Ciotti LR Eric Ciotti LR2nd Loic Dombreval LREM Lionel Tivoli RN3rd Cedric Roussel LREM Philippe Pradal Horizons4th Alexandra Valetta Ardisson LREM Alexandra Masson RN5th Marine Brenier LR Christelle d Intorni LR6th Laurence Trastour Isnart LR Bryan Masson RN7th Eric Pauget LR Eric Pauget LR8th Bernard Brochand LR Alexandra Martin LR9th Michele Tabarot LR Michele Tabarot LRArdeche 1st Herve Saulignac PS Herve Saulignac PS2nd Olivier Dussopt PS Olivier Dussopt TDP3rd Fabrice Brun LR Fabrice Brun LRArdennes 1st Berengere Poletti LR Lionel Vuibert Agir2nd Pierre Cordier LR Pierre Cordier LR3rd Jean Luc Warsmann UDI Jean Luc Warsmann UDIAriege 1st Benedicte Taurine LFI Benedicte Taurine LFI2nd Michel Larive LFI Laurent Panifous PSAube 1st Gregory Besson Moreau LREM Jordan Guitton RN2nd Valerie Bazin Malgras LR Valerie Bazin Malgras LR3rd Gerard Menuel LR Angelique Ranc RNAude 1st Daniele Herin LREM Christophe Barthes RN2nd Alain Perea LREM Frederic Falcon RN3rd Mireille Robert LREM Julien Rancoule RNAveyron 1st Stephane Mazars LREM Stephane Mazars LREM2nd Anne Blanc LREM Laurent Alexandre LFI3rd Arnaud Viala LR Jean Francois Rousset LREMBouches du Rhone 1st Valerie Boyer LR Sabrina Agresti Roubache LREM2nd Claire Pitollat LREM Claire Pitollat LREM3rd Alexandra Louis LREM Gisele Lelouis RN4th Jean Luc Melenchon LFI Manuel Bompard LFI5th Cathy Racon Bouzon LREM Hendrik Davi LFI6th Guy Teissier LR Lionel Royer Perreaut DVD7th Said Ahamada LREM Sebastien Delogu LFI8th Jean Marc Zulesi LREM Jean Marc Zulesi LREM9th Bernard Deflesselles LR Joelle Melin RN10th Francois Michel Lambert PE Jose Gonzalez RN11th Mohamed Laqhila MoDem Mohamed Laqhila MoDem12th Eric Diard LR Franck Allisio RN13th Pierre Dharreville PCF Pierre Dharreville PCF14th Anne Laurence Petel LREM Anne Laurence Petel LREM15th Bernard Reynes LR Romain Baubry RN16th Monica Michel LREM Emmanuel Tache RNCalvados 1st Fabrice Le Vigoureux LREM Fabrice Le Vigoureux LREM2nd Laurence Dumont PS Arthur Delaporte PS3rd Nathalie Porte LR Jeremie Patrier Leitus Horizons4th Christophe Blanchet LREM Christophe Blanchet LREM5th Bertrand Bouyx LREM Bertrand Bouyx LREM6th Alain Tourret LREM Elisabeth Borne LREMCantal 1st Vincent Descœur LR Vincent Descœur LR2nd Jean Yves Bony LR Jean Yves Bony LRCharente 1st Thomas Mesnier LREM Thomas Mesnier Horizons2nd Sandra Marsaud LREM Sandra Marsaud LREM3rd Jerome Lambert MDC Caroline Colombier RNCharente Maritime 1st Olivier Falorni DVG Olivier Falorni PRG2nd Frederique Tuffnell MoDem Anne Laure Babault LREM3rd Jean Philippe Ardouin LREM Jean Philippe Ardouin LREM4th Raphael Gerard LREM Raphael Gerard LREM5th Didier Quentin LR Christophe Plassard HorizonsCher 1st Francois Cormier Bouligeon LREM Francois Cormier Bouligeon LREM2nd Nadia Essayan MoDem Nicolas Sansu PCF3rd Loic Kervran LREM Loic Kervran HorizonsCorreze 1st Christophe Jerretie MoDem Francis Dubois LR2nd Frederique Meunier LR Frederique Meunier LRCorse du Sud 1st Jean Jacques Ferrara LR Laurent Marcangeli Horizons CCB2nd Paul Andre Colombani PNC Paul Andre Colombani PNCHaute Corse 1st Michel Castellani Femu Michel Castellani Femu2nd Jean Felix Acquaviva Femu Jean Felix Acquaviva FemuCote d Or 1st Didier Martin LREM Didier Martin LREM2nd Remi Delatte LR Benoit Bordat FP3rd Fadila Khattabi LREM Fadila Khattabi LREM4th Yolaine de Courson LREM Hubert Brigand LR5th Didier Paris LREM Didier Paris LREMCotes d Armor 1st Bruno Joncour MoDem Mickael Cosson MoDem2nd Herve Berville LREM Herve Berville LREM3rd Marc Le Fur LR Marc Le Fur LR4th Yannick Kerlogot LREM Murielle Lepvraud LFI5th Eric Bothorel LREM Eric Bothorel LREMCreuse 1st Jean Baptiste Moreau LREM Catherine Couturier LFIDordogne 1st Philippe Chassaing LREM Pascale Martin LFI2nd Michel Delpon LREM Serge Muller RN3rd Jean Pierre Cubertafon MoDem Jean Pierre Cubertafon MoDem4th Jacqueline Dubois LREM Sebastien Peytavie G sDoubs 1st Fannette Charvier LREM Laurent Croizier MoDem2nd Eric Alauzet LREM Eric Alauzet LREM3rd Denis Sommer LREM Nicolas Pacquot Horizons4th Frederic Barbier LREM Geraldine Grangier RN5th Annie Genevard LR Annie Genevard LRDrome 1st Mireille Clapot LREM Mireille Clapot LREM2nd Alice Thourot LREM Lisette Pollet RN3rd Celia de Lavergne LREM Marie Pochon EELV4th Emmanuelle Anthoine LR Emmanuelle Anthoine LREure 1st Bruno Le Maire LREM Christine Loir RN2nd Fabien Gouttefarde LREM Katiana Levavasseur RN3rd Marie Tamarelle Verhaeghe LREM Kevin Mauvieux RN4th Bruno Questel LREM Philippe Brun PS5th Claire O Petit LREM Timothee Houssin RNEure et Loir 1st Guillaume Kasbarian LREM Guillaume Kasbarian LREM2nd Olivier Marleix LR Olivier Marleix LR3rd Laure de La Raudiere LR Luc Lamirault Horizons4th Philippe Vigier MoDem Philippe Vigier MoDemFinistere 1st Annaig Le Meur LREM Annaig Le Meur LREM2nd Jean Charles Larsonneur LREM Jean Charles Larsonneur LREM3rd Didier Le Gac LREM Didier Le Gac LREM4th Sandrine Le Feur LREM Sandrine Le Feur LREM5th Graziella Melchior LREM Graziella Melchior LREM6th Richard Ferrand LREM Melanie Thomin PS7th Liliane Tanguy LREM Liliane Tanguy LREM8th Erwan Balanant MoDem Erwan Balanant MoDemGard 1st Francoise Dumas LREM Yoann Gillet RN2nd Nicolas Meizonnet RN Nicolas Meizonnet RN3rd Anthony Cellier LREM Pascale Bordes RN4th Annie Chapelier LREM Pierre Maurin RN5th Catherine Daufes Roux LREM Michel Sala LFI6th Philippe Berta MoDem Philippe Berta MoDemHaute Garonne 1st Pierre Cabare LREM Hadrien Clouet LFI2nd Jean Luc Lagleize MoDem Anne Stambach Terrenoir LFI3rd Corinne Vignon LREM Corinne Vignon LREM4th Mickael Nogal LREM Francois Piquemal LFI5th Jean Francois Portarrieu LREM Jean Francois Portarrieu LREM6th Monique Iborra LREM Monique Iborra LREM7th Elisabeth Toutut Picard LREM Christophe Bex LFI8th Joel Aviragnet PS Joel Aviragnet PS9th Sandrine Morch LREM Christine Arrighi EELV10th Sebastien Nadot LREM Dominique Faure PRVGers 1st Jean Rene Cazeneuve LREM Jean Rene Cazeneuve LREM2nd Gisele Biemouret PS David Taupiac PSGironde 1st Dominique David LREM Thomas Cazenave LREM2nd Catherine Fabre LREM Nicolas Thierry EELV3rd Loic Prud homme LFI Loic Prud homme LFI4th Alain David PS Alain David PS5th Benoit Simian LREM Gregoire de Fournas RN6th Eric Poulliat LREM Eric Poulliat LREM7th Berangere Couillard LREM Berangere Couillard LREM8th Sophie Panonacle LREM Sophie Panonacle LREM9th Sophie Mette MoDem Sophie Mette MoDem10th Florent Boudie LREM Florent Boudie LREM11th Veronique Hammerer LREM Edwige Diaz RN12th Christelle Dubos LREM Pascal Lavergne LREMHerault 1st Patricia Miralles LREM Patricia Miralles TDP2nd Muriel Ressiguier LFI Nathalie Oziol LFI3rd Coralie Dubost LREM Laurence Cristol LREM4th Jean Francois Eliaou LREM Sebastien Rome LFI5th Philippe Huppe LREM Stephanie Galzy RN6th Emmanuelle Menard RN Emmanuelle Menard EXD7th Christophe Euzet LREM Aurelien Lopez Liguori RN8th Nicolas Demoulin LREM Sylvain Carriere LFI9th Patrick Vignal LREM Patrick Vignal LREMIlle et Vilaine 1st Mostapha Laabid LREM Frederic Mathieu LFI2nd Laurence Maillart Mehaignerie LREM Laurence Maillart Mehaignerie LREM3rd Claudia Rouaux PS Claudia Rouaux PS4th Gael Le Bohec LREM Mathilde Hignet LFI5th Christine Cloarec LREM Christine Cloarec LREM6th Thierry Benoit UDI Thierry Benoit Horizons7th Jean Luc Bourgeaux LR Jean Luc Bourgeaux LR8th Florian Bachelier LREM Mickael Bouloux PSIndre 1st Francois Jolivet LREM Francois Jolivet Horizons2nd Nicolas Forissier LR Nicolas Forissier LRIndre et Loire 1st Philippe Chalumeau LREM Charles Fournier EELV2nd Daniel Labaronne LREM Daniel Labaronne LREM3rd Sophie Metadier UDI Henri Alfandari Horizons4th Fabienne Colboc LREM Fabienne Colboc LREM5th Sabine Thillaye MoDem Sabine Thillaye MoDemIsere 1st Olivier Veran LREM Olivier Veran LREM2nd Jean Charles Colas Roy LREM Cyrielle Chatelain EELV3rd Emilie Chalas LREM Elisa Martin LFI4th Marie Noelle Battistel PS Marie Noelle Battistel PS5th Catherine Kamowski LREM Jeremie Iordanoff EELV6th Cendra Motin LREM Alexis Jolly RN7th Monique Limon LREM Yannick Neuder LR8th Caroline Abadie LREM Caroline Abadie LREM9th Elodie Jacquier Laforge MoDem Elodie Jacquier Laforge MoDem10th Marjolaine Meynier Millefert LREM Marjolaine Meynier Millefert LREMJura 1st Danielle Brulebois LREM Danielle Brulebois LREM2nd Marie Christine Dalloz LR Marie Christine Dalloz LR3rd Jean Marie Sermier LR Justine Gruet LRLandes 1st Fabien Laine MoDem Genevieve Darrieussecq MoDem2nd Lionel Causse LREM Lionel Causse LREM3rd Boris Vallaud PS Boris Vallaud PSLoir et Cher 1st Marc Fesneau MoDem Marc Fesneau MoDem2nd Guillaume Peltier LR Roger Chudeau RN3rd Pascal Brindeau UDI Christophe Marion LREMLoire 1st Regis Juanico G s Quentin Bataillon LREM2nd Jean Michel Mis LREM Andree Taurinya LFI3rd Valeria Faure Muntian LREM Emmanuel Mandon MoDem4th Dino Cinieri LR Dino Cinieri LR5th Nathalie Sarles LREM Antoine Vermorel Marques LR6th Julien Borowczyk LREM Jean Pierre Taite LRHaute Loire 1st Isabelle Valentin LR Isabelle Valentin LR2nd Jean Pierre Vigier LR Jean Pierre Vigier LRLoire Atlantique 1st Francois de Rugy LREM Mounir Belhamiti LREM2nd Valerie Oppelt LREM Andy Kerbrat LFI3rd Anne France Brunet LREM Segolene Amiot LFI4th Aude Amadou LREM Julie Laernoes EELV5th Luc Geismar MoDem Sarah El Hairy MoDem6th Yves Daniel LREM Jean Claude Raux EELV7th Sandrine Josso MoDem Sandrine Josso MoDem8th Audrey Dufeu Schubert LREM Matthias Tavel LFI9th Yannick Haury MoDem Yannick Haury MoDem10th Sophie Errante LREM Sophie Errante LREMLoiret 1st Stephanie Rist LREM Stephanie Rist LREM2nd Caroline Janvier LREM 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Anna Pic PSMarne 1st Valerie Beauvais LR Xavier Albertini Horizons2nd Aina Kuric LREM Anne Sophie Frigout RN3rd Eric Girardin LREM Eric Girardin LREM4th Lise Magnier LR Lise Magnier Horizons5th Charles de Courson LC Charles de Courson LCHaute Marne 1st Sylvain Templier LREM Christophe Bentz RN2nd Francois Cornut Gentille LR Laurence Robert Dehault RNMayenne 1st Guillaume Garot PS Guillaume Garot PS2nd Geraldine Bannier MoDem Geraldine Bannier MoDem3rd Yannick Favennec Becot LR Yannick Favennec Becot HorizonsMeurthe et Moselle 1st Carole Grandjean LREM Carole Grandjean LREM2nd Pascale Cesar MoDem Emmanuel Lacresse LREM3rd Xavier Paluszkiewicz LREM Martine Etienne LFI4th Thibault Bazin LR Thibault Bazin LR5th Dominique Potier PS Dominique Potier PS6th Caroline Fiat LFI Caroline Fiat LFIMeuse 1st Bertrand Pancher DVD Bertrand Pancher DVD2nd Emilie Cariou LREM Florence Goulet RNMorbihan 1st Herve Pellois LREM Anne Le Henanff Horizons2nd Jimmy Pahun MoDem Jimmy Pahun MoDem3rd Nicole Le Peih 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Osson LREM David Guiraud LFI9th Valerie Petit LREM Violette Spillebout LREM10th Vincent Ledoux LR Gerald Darmanin LREM11th Florence Morlighem LREM Roger Vicot PS12th Anne Laure Cattelot LREM Michael Taverne RN13th Christian Hutin MDC Christine Decodts LREM14th Paul Christophe LR Paul Christophe Agir15th Jennifer de Temmerman LREM Pierrick Berteloot RN16th Alain Bruneel PCF Matthieu Marchio RN17th Dimitri Houbron LREM Thibaut Francois RN18th Guy Bricout UDI Guy Bricout UDI19th Sebastien Chenu RN Sebastien Chenu RN20th Fabien Roussel PCF Fabien Roussel PCF21st Beatrice Descamps UDI Beatrice Descamps UDIOise 1st Olivier Dassault LR Victor Habert Dassault LR2nd Agnes Thill UDI Philippe Ballard RN3rd Pascal Bois LREM Alexandre Sabatou RN4th Eric Woerth LR Eric Woerth LREM5th Pierre Vatin LR Pierre Vatin LR6th Carole Bureau Bonnard LREM Michel Guiniot RN7th Maxime Minot LR Maxime Minot LROrne 1st Chantal Jourdan PS Chantal Jourdan PS2nd Veronique Louwagie LR Veronique Louwagie LR3rd Jerome Nury LR Jerome Nury LRPas de Calais 1st Bruno Duverge MoDem Emmanuel Blairy RN2nd Jacqueline Maquet LREM Jacqueline Maquet LREM3rd Emmanuel Blairy RN Jean Marc Tellier PCF4th Robert Therry LR Philippe Fait Horizons5th Jean Pierre Pont LREM Jean Pierre Pont LREM6th Christophe Leclercq LREM Christine Engrand RN7th Pierre Henri Dumont LR Pierre Henri Dumont LR8th Benoit Potterie LREM Bertrand Petit PS9th Marguerite Deprez Audebert MoDem Caroline Parmentier RN10th Ludovic Pajot RN Thierry Frappe RN11th Marine Le Pen RN Marine Le Pen RN12th Bruno Bilde RN Bruno Bilde RNPuy de Dome 1st Valerie Thomas LREM Marianne Maximi LFI2nd Christine Pires Beaune PS Christine Pires Beaune PS3rd Laurence Vichnievsky MoDem Laurence Vichnievsky MoDem4th Michel Fanget MoDem Delphine Lingemann MoDem5th Andre Chassaigne PCF Andre Chassaigne PCFPyrenees Atlantiques 1st Josy Poueyto MoDem Josy Poueyto MoDem2nd Jean Paul Mattei MoDem Jean Paul Mattei MoDem3rd David Habib PS David Habib PS4th Jean Lassalle RES Inaki Echaniz PS5th Florence Lasserre David MoDem Florence Lasserre David MoDem6th Vincent Bru MoDem Vincent Bru MoDemHautes Pyrenees 1st Jean Bernard Sempastous LREM Sylvie Ferrer LFI2nd Jeanine Dubie PRG Benoit Mournet LREMPyrenees Orientales 1st Romain Grau LREM Sophie Blanc RN2nd Catherine Pujol RN Anais Sabatini RN3rd Laurence Gayte LREM Sandrine Dogor Such RN4th Sebastien Cazenove LREM Michele Martinez RNBas Rhin 1st Thierry Michels LREM Sandra Regol EELV2nd Sylvain Waserman MoDem Emmanuel Fernandes LFI3rd Bruno Studer LREM Bruno Studer LREM4th Martine Wonner LREM Francoise Buffet LREM5th Antoine Herth LR Charles Sitzenstuhl LREM6th Philippe Meyer LR Louise Morel LREM7th Patrick Hetzel LR Patrick Hetzel LR8th Frederic Reiss LR Stephanie Kochert Horizons9th Vincent Thiebaut LREM Vincent Thiebaut HorizonsHaut Rhin 1st Yves Hemedinger LR Brigitte Klinkert LREM2nd Jacques Cattin LR Hubert Ott MoDem3rd Jean Luc Reitzer LR Dieier Lemaire Horizons4th Raphael Schellenberger LR Raphael Schellenberger LR5th Olivier Becht DVD Olivier Becht Agir6th Bruno Fuchs MoDem Bruno Fuchs MoDemRhone 1st Thomas Rudigoz LREM Thomas Rudigoz LREM2nd Hubert Julien Laferriere LREM Hubert Julien Laferriere GE3rd Jean Louis Touraine LREM Marie Charlotte Garin EELV4th Anne Brugnera LREM Anne Brugnera LREM5th Blandine Brocard LREM Blandine Brocard LREM6th Bruno Bonnell LREM Gabriel Amard LFI7th Anissa Khedher LREM Alexandre Vincendet LR8th Nathalie Serre LR Nathalie Serre LR9th Bernard Perrut LR Alexandre Portier LR10th Thomas Gassilloud LREM Thomas Gassilloud Agir11th Jean Luc Fugit LREM Jean Luc Fugit LREM12th Cyrille Isaac Sibille MoDem Cyrille Isaac Sibille MoDem13th Daniele Cazarian LREM Sarah Tanzilli LREM14th Yves Blein LREM Idir Boumertit LFIHaute Saone 1st Barbara Bessot Ballot LREM Antoine Villedieu RN2nd Christophe Lejeune LREM Emeric Salmon RNSaone et Loire 1st Benjamin Dirx LREM Benjamin Dirx LREM2nd Josiane Corneloup LR Josiane Corneloup LR3rd Remy Rebeyrotte LREM Remy Rebeyrotte LREM4th Cecile Untermaier PS Cecile Untermaier PS5th Raphael Gauvain LREM Louis Margueritte LREMSarthe 1st Damien Pichereau LREM Julie Delpech LREM2nd Marietta Karamanli PS Marietta Karamanli PS3rd Pascale Fontenel Personne MoDem Eric Martineau MoDem4th Sylvie Tolmont PS Elise Leboucher LFI5th Jean Carles Grelier LREM Jean Carles Grelier LREMSavoie 1st Typhanie Degois LREM Marina Ferrari MoDem2nd Vincent Rolland LR Vincent Rolland LR3rd Emilie Bonnivard LR Emilie Bonnivard LR4th Patrick Mignola MoDem Jean Francois Coulomme LFIHaute Savoie 1st Veronique Riotton LREM Veronique Riotton LREM2nd Jacques Rey LREM Antoine Armand LREM3rd Christelle Petex Levet LR Christelle Petex Levet LR4th Virginie Duby Muller LR Virginie Duby Muller LR5th Marion Lenne LREM Anne Cecile Violland Horizons6th Xavier Roseren LREM Xavier Roseren LREMParis 1st Sylvain Maillard LREM Sylvain Maillard LREM2nd Gilles Le Gendre LREM Gilles Le Gendre LREM3rd Stanislas Guerini LREM Stanislas Guerini LREM4th Brigitte Kuster LR Astrid Panosyan Bouvet LREM5th Benjamin Griveaux LREM Julien Bayou EELV6th Pierre Person LREM Sophia Chikirou LFI7th Pacome Rupin LREM Clement Beaune LREM8th Laetitia Avia LREM Eva Sas EELV9th Buon Tan LREM Sandrine Rousseau EELV10th Anne Christine Lang LREM Rodrigo Arenas LFI11th Marielle de Sarnez MoDem Maud Gatel MoDem12th Olivia Gregoire LREM Olivia Gregoire LREM13th Hugues Renson LREM David Amiel LREM14th Claude Goasguen LR Benjamin Haddad LREM15th George Pau Langevin PS Danielle Simonnet LFI16th Mounir Mahjoubi LREM Sarah Legrain LFI17th Daniele Obono LFI Daniele Obono LFI18th Pierre Yves Bournazel LR Aymeric Caron REVSeine Maritime 1st Damien Adam LREM Damien Adam LREM2nd Annie Vidal LREM Annie Vidal LREM3rd Hubert Wulfranc PCF Hubert Wulfranc PCF4th Sira Sylla LREM Alma Dufour LFI5th Gerard Leseul PS Gerard Leseul PS6th Sebastien Jumel PCF Sebastien Jumel PCF7th Agnes Firmin Le Bodo LR Agnes Firmin Le Bodo Horizons8th Jean Paul Lecoq PCF Jean Paul Lecoq PCF9th Stephanie Kerbarh PRG Marie Agnes Poussier Winsback Horizons10th Xavier Batut LREM Xavier Batut LREMSeine et Marne 1st Aude Luquet MoDem Aude Luquet MoDem2nd Valerie Lacroute LR Frederic Valletoux Horizons3rd Yves Jego UDI Jean Louis Thieriot LR4th Christian Jacob LR Isabelle Perigault LR5th Franck Riester LR Franck Riester Agir6th Jean Francois Parigi LR Beatrice Roullaud RN7th Rodrigue Kokouendo LREM Ersilia Soudais LFI8th Jean Michel Fauvergue LREM Hadrien Ghomi LREM9th Michele Peyron LREM Michele Peyron LREM10th Stephanie Do LREM Maxime Laisney LFI11th Olivier Faure PS Olivier Faure PSYvelines 1st Didier Baichere LREM Charles Rodwell LREM2nd Jean Noel Barrot MoDem Jean Noel Barrot MoDem3rd Beatrice Piron LREM Beatrice Piron LREM4th Marie Lebec LREM Marie Lebec LREM5th Yael Braun Pivet LREM Yael Braun Pivet LREM6th Natalia Pouzyreff LREM Natalia Pouzyreff LREM7th Michele de Vaucouleurs MoDem Nadia Hai LREM8th Michel Vialay LR Benjamin Lucas G s9th Bruno Millienne MoDem Bruno Millienne MoDem10th Aurore Berge LREM Aurore Berge LREM11th Nadia Hai LREM William Martinet LFI12th Florence Granjus LREM Karl Olive LREMDeux Sevres 1st Guillaume Chiche LREM Bastien Marchive Horizons2nd Delphine Batho PS Delphine Batho GE3rd Jean Marie Fievet LREM Jean Marie Fievet LREMSomme 1st Francois Ruffin LFI Francois Ruffin LFI2nd Cecile Delpirou LREM Barbara Pompili LREM3rd Emmanuel Maquet LR Emmanuel Maquet LR4th Jean Claude Leclabart LREM Jean Philippe Tanguy RN5th Gregory Labille UDI Yael Menache RNTarn 1st Muriel Roques Etienne LREM Frederic Cabrolier RN2nd Marie Christine Verdier Jouclas LREM Karen Erodi LFI3rd Jean Terlier LREM Jean Terlier LREMTarn et Garonne 1st Valerie Rabault PS Valerie Rabault PS2nd Sylvia Pinel PRG Marine Hamelet RNVar 1st Genevieve Levy LR Yannick Chenevard LREM2nd Cecile Muschotti LREM Laure Lavalette RN3rd Jean Louis Masson LR Stephane Rambaud RN4th Sereine Mauborgne LREM Philippe Lottiaux RN5th Philippe Michel Kleisbauer MoDem Julie Lechanteux RN6th Valerie Gomez Bassac LREM Frank Giletti RN7th Emilie Guerel LREM Frederic Boccaletti RN8th Fabien Matras LREM Philippe Schrek RNVaucluse 1st Jean Francois Cesarini LREM Joris Hebrard RN2nd Jean Claude Bouchet LR Benedicte Auzanot RN3rd Brune Poirson LREM Herve de Lepinau RN4th Jacques Bompard LS Marie France Lorho RN5th Julien Aubert LR Jean Francois Lovisolo LREMVendee 1st Philippe Latombe MoDem Philippe Latombe MoDem2nd Patrick Loiseau LREM Beatrice Bellamy Horizons3rd Stephane Buchou LREM Stephane Buchou LREM4th Martine Leguille Balloy LREM Veronique Besse DVD5th Pierre Henriet LREM Pierre Henriet LREMVienne 1st Francoise Ballet Blu LREM Lisa Belluco EELV2nd Sacha Houlie LREM Sacha Houlie LREM3rd Jean Michel Clement LREM Pascal Lecamp MoDem4th Nicolas Turquois MoDem Nicolas Turquois MoDemHaute Vienne 1st Sophie Beaudouin Hubiere LREM Damien Maudet LFI2nd Pierre Venteau LREM Stephane Delautrette PS3rd Marie Ange Magne LREM Manon Meunier LFIVosges 1st Stephane Viry LR Stephane Viry LR2nd Gerard Cherpion LR David Valence LREM3rd Christophe Naegelen UDI Christophe Naegelen UDI4th Jean Jacques Gaultier LR Jean Jacques Gaultier LRYonne 1st Guillaume Larrive LR Daniel Grenon RN2nd Andre Villiers UDI Andre Villiers Horizons3rd Michele Crouzet MoDem Julien Odoul RNTerritoire de Belfort 1st Ian Boucard LR Ian Boucard LR2nd Michel Zumkeller UDI Florian Chauche LFIEssonne 1st Manuel Valls DVG Farida Amrani LFI2nd Franck Marlin LR Nathalie da Conceicao Carvalho RN3rd Laetitia Romeiro Dias LREM Alexis Izard LREM4th Marie Pierre Rixain LREM Marie Pierre Rixain LREM5th Cedric Villani LREM Paul Midy LREM6th Amelie de Montchalin LREM Jerome Guedj PS7th Robin Reda LR Robin Reda LREM8th Nicolas Dupont Aignan DLF Nicolas Dupont Aignan DLF9th Marie Guevenoux LREM Marie Guevenoux LREM10th Pierre Alain Raphan LREM Antoine Leaument LFIHauts de Seine 1st Elsa Faucillon PCF Elsa Faucillon PCF2nd Adrien Taquet LREM Francesca Pasquini EELV3rd Christine Hennion LREM Philippe Juvin LR4th Isabelle Florennes LREM Sabrina Sebaihi EELV5th Celine Calvez LREM Celine Calvez LREM6th Constance Le Grip LR Constance Le Grip LREM7th Jacques Marilossian LREM Pierre Cazeneuve LREM8th Jacques Maire LREM Prisca Thevenot LREM9th Thierry Solere LR Emmanuel Pellerin LREM10th Gabriel Attal LREM Gabriel Attal LREM11th Laurianne Rossi LREM Aurelien Saintoul LFI12th Jean Louis Bourlanges MoDem Jean Louis Bourlanges MoDem13th Frederique Dumas LREM Maud Bregeon LREMSeine Saint Denis 1st Eric Coquerel LFI Eric Coquerel LFI2nd Stephane Peu PCF Stephane Peu PCF3rd Patrice Anato LREM Thomas Portes LFI4th Marie George Buffet PCF Soumya Bourouaha PCF5th Jean Christophe Lagarde UDI Raquel Garrido LFI6th Bastien Lachaud LFI Bastien Lachaud LFI7th Alexis Corbiere LFI Alexis Corbiere LFI8th Sylvie Charriere LREM Fatiha Keloua Hachi PS9th Sabine Rubin LFI Aurelie Trouve LFI10th Alain Ramadier LR Nadege Abomangoli LFI11th Clementine Autain LFI Clementine Autain LFI12th Stephane Teste LREM Jerome Legavre POIVal de Marne 1st Frederic Descrozaille LREM Frederic Descrozaille LREM2nd Jean Francois Mbaye LREM Clemence Guette LFI3rd Laurent Saint Martin LREM Louis Boyard LFI4th Maud Petit MoDem Maud Petit MoDem5th Gilles Carrez LR Mathieu Lefevre LREM6th Guillaume Gouffier Cha LREM Guillaume Gouffier Cha LREM7th Jean Jacques Bridey LREM Rachel Keke LFI8th Michel Herbillon LR Michel Herbillon LR9th Luc Carvounas PS Isabelle Santiago PS10th Mathilde Panot LFI Mathilde Panot LFI11th Albane Gaillot LREM Sophie Taille Polian G sVal d Oise 1st Isabelle Muller Quoy LREM Emilie Chandler LREM2nd Guillaume Vuilletet LREM Guillaume Vuilletet LREM3rd Cecile Rilhac LREM Cecile Rilhac LREM4th Naima Moutchou LREM Naima Moutchou Horizons5th Fiona Lazaar LREM Paul Vannier LFI6th Nathalie Elimas MoDem Estelle Folest MoDem7th Dominique Da Silva LREM Dominique Da Silva LREM8th Francois Pupponi PS Carlos Martens Bilongo LFI9th Zivka Park LREM Arnaud Le Gall LFI10th Aurelien Tache LREM Aurelien Tache LNDGuadeloupe 1st Olivier Serva LREM Olivier Serva GUSR2nd Justine Benin MoDem Christian Baptiste PPDG3rd Max Mathiasin MoDem Max Mathiasin MoDem4th Helene Vainqueur Christophe PS Elie Califer PSMartinique 1st Josette Manin BPM Jiovanny William Peyi A2nd Manuela Keclard Mondesir Peyi A Marcellin Nadeau Peyi A3rd Serge Letchimy PPM Johnny Hajjar PPM4th Jean Philippe Nilor Peyi A Jean Philippe Nilor Peyi AFrench Guiana 1st Gabriel Serville Peyi G Jean Victor Castor MDES2nd Lenaick Adam GR Davy Rimane DVGReunion 1st Philippe Naillet PS Philippe Naillet PS2nd Karine Lebon PLR Karine Lebon PLR3rd Nathalie Bassire LR Nathalie Bassire LR4th David Lorion LR Emeline K Bidi DVG5th Jean Hugues Ratenon LFI Jean Hugues Ratenon LFI6th Nadia Ramassamy LR Frederic Maillot PLR7th Jean Luc Poudroux LR Perceval Gaillard LFIMayotte 1st Ramlati Ali LREM Estelle Youssouffa DVD2nd Mansour Kamardine LR Mansour Kamardine LRNew Caledonia 1st Philippe Dunoyer CE Philippe Dunoyer CE2nd Philippe Gomes CE Nicolas Metzdorf GNCFrench Polynesia 1st Maina Sage Tapura Tematai Le Gayic Tavini2nd Nicole Sanquer A here ia Steve Chailloux Tavini3rd Moetai Brotherson Tavini Moetai Brotherson TaviniSaint Pierre et Miquelon 1st Stephane Claireaux CSA Stephane Lenormand ADWallis and Futuna 1st Napole Polutele DVG Mikaele Seo LREMSaint Martin Saint Barthelemy 1st Claire Javois LR Frantz Gumbs LREMFrench residents overseas 1st Roland Lescure LREM Roland Lescure LREM2nd Paula Forteza LREM Eleonore Caroit LREM3rd Alexandre Holroyd LREM Alexandre Holroyd LREM4th Pieyre Alexandre Anglade LREM Pieyre Alexandre Anglade LREM5th Stephane Vojetta LREM Stephane Vojetta LREM6th Joachim Son Forget LREM Marc Ferracci LREM7th Frederic Petit MoDem Frederic Petit MoDem8th Meyer Habib UDI Meyer Habib UDI9th M jid El Guerrab LREM Karim Ben Cheikh G s10th Amal Amelia Lakrafi LREM Amal Amelia Lakrafi LREM11th Anne Genetet LREM Anne Genetet LREMElectorate edit Sociology of the electorateDemographic EXG NUPES DVG ECO ENS DVC UDC DVD UPF RN REC OthersTotal vote 1 2 25 2 4 1 2 6 25 2 1 5 13 7 1 2 18 9 3 9 2 5 First round vote in the 2022 presidential electionJean Luc Melenchon 0 85 5 3 2 0 3 0 2 0 0 Yannick Jadot 5 39 12 11 10 6 6 0 0 0 11 Emmanuel Macron 0 5 3 1 71 4 12 0 0 1 3 Valerie Pecresse 0 3 2 1 9 3 76 0 5 1 0 Marine Le Pen 0 5 0 1 2 0 9 1 78 2 2 Eric Zemmour 0 1 0 3 5 0 24 1 18 46 2 Political party affiliationLFI 0 93 3 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 EELV 1 52 9 11 9 0 7 0 2 0 9 PS 2 43 18 2 24 0 3 1 3 0 4 LREM MoDem 0 2 3 1 82 5 6 0 0 0 1 LR UDI 0 2 2 2 13 0 70 0 8 2 1 RN 0 3 0 1 2 0 3 0 87 1 3 REC 0 0 0 0 7 0 8 1 8 76 0 None 2 25 3 5 21 2 18 1 19 2 2 SexMen 1 23 4 3 25 1 14 1 21 5 2 Women 2 27 4 3 25 2 14 2 17 2 2 Age18 24 years old 1 42 3 3 13 0 10 1 18 5 4 25 34 years old 3 38 4 5 19 1 6 2 18 4 0 35 49 years old 1 31 2 3 18 2 11 1 26 2 3 50 59 years old 1 22 4 4 17 1 14 2 30 3 2 60 69 years old 2 26 5 1 28 2 13 1 13 5 4 70 or older 1 15 5 2 38 1 19 1 12 4 2 Socio occupational classificationManager professional 1 28 7 3 22 7 14 0 11 4 3 Intermediate occupation 1 35 3 4 22 0 10 1 20 2 2 White collar worker 2 31 4 3 14 3 10 3 25 3 2 Blue collar worker 1 18 3 3 11 0 11 1 45 4 3 Retired 1 18 5 2 35 1 18 1 12 4 3 Employment statusEmployee 1 29 4 4 18 2 11 1 25 3 2 Private employee 1 27 2 3 19 3 12 1 25 4 3 Public employee 2 33 7 4 16 0 9 3 24 1 1 Self employed 2 25 4 2 33 0 10 3 14 7 0 Unemployed 4 30 2 1 7 6 11 0 27 9 3 EducationLess than baccalaureat 1 17 2 3 27 3 12 1 28 4 2 Baccalaureat 1 24 5 2 23 0 15 1 23 3 4 Bac 2 1 25 5 3 23 0 16 2 18 5 2 At least bac 3 2 32 4 2 27 3 12 1 11 3 3 Monthly household incomeLess than 1 250 3 34 2 4 19 0 7 4 21 4 2 1 250 to 2 000 2 28 5 2 19 1 12 2 23 4 2 2 000 to 3 000 1 26 5 2 27 0 11 1 21 4 2 More than 3 000 0 22 4 3 28 3 17 1 15 4 3 Moment of choice of voteIn the last few weeks 1 29 3 1 28 1 10 1 20 5 1 In the last few days 3 19 6 4 20 2 22 2 17 2 3 At the last moment 2 13 7 8 18 6 20 3 12 2 9 AgglomerationFewer than 2 000 inhabitants 1 27 4 2 21 0 12 2 22 4 5 2 000 to 10 000 inhabitants 2 21 5 3 21 1 14 0 26 2 5 10 000 to 50 000 inhabitants 2 22 2 2 29 0 17 1 22 3 0 50 000 to 200 000 inhabitants 2 22 6 2 23 3 13 1 22 5 1 More than 200 000 inhabitants 1 27 4 3 28 2 14 2 13 4 2 ReligionRoman Catholic 1 13 4 3 30 1 19 1 21 5 2 Regular practitioner 1 8 8 2 26 3 29 2 14 7 0 Occasional practitioner 1 12 2 2 27 4 28 0 17 5 2 Non practitioner 1 13 4 3 31 1 16 2 23 4 2 Other religion 2 38 7 5 18 0 14 0 8 3 5 Non religion 2 39 4 2 20 2 7 1 17 3 3 DemographicEXG NUPES DVG ECO ENS DVC UDC DVD UPF RN REC OthersSociology of the electorateSource Ipsos France 71 Aftermath editSee also 16th legislature of the French Fifth Republic Borne government and Attal government Due to the Ensemble s loss of 100 seats they were now 44 seats shy of a majority in the National Assembly and need to find support among other MPs from the left or the right side of politics to help build a working majority government President Macron asked Prime Minister Borne who offered her resignation to stay in office with the same cabinet in an effort to gain time according to analysts to form a stable government with or without Borne 72 LFI requested a vote of no confidence to be held on 5 July 73 74 Despite not ruling out any deal with any party it is speculated that Macron and Ensemble are eyeing a deal with UDC 72 Despite previously stating otherwise 6 UDC s Jacob confirmed that he would take part in talks with Macron 72 RN s Le Pen and the leaders of two NUPES parties Olivier Faure PS and Fabien Roussel PCF stated that they would take part in talks with Macron LFI s Melenchon confirmed that he would not take part in talks 72 Parliamentary groups formation edit Composition of the National Assembly on 29 June 2022 75 76 nbsp Parliamentary group Members Related Total PresidentGDR Democratic and Republican Left NUPES 22 0 22 Andre ChassaigneLFI La France Insoumise NUPES 75 0 75 Mathilde PanotECO Ecologist NUPES 23 0 23 Julien BayouSOC Socialists and affiliated NUPES 27 4 31 Boris VallaudLIOT Liberties Independents Overseas and Territories 16 0 16 Bertrand PancherREN Renaissance 168 4 172 Aurore BergeDEM Democratic group MoDem and Independents 48 0 48 Jean Paul MatteiHOR Horizons and affiliated 28 2 30 Laurent MarcangeliLR The Republicans 59 3 62 Olivier MarleixRN National Rally 88 1 89 Marine Le PenNI Non Attached Members 9 9 Vote of no confidence edit Main article 2022 vote of no confidence in the government of Elisabeth Borne Shortly after the election a vote of no confidence was tabled by the left wing NUPES coalition It was rejected as only left wing parliamentary groups supported the motion 77 Prime Minister Borne offered her resignation on 21 June 2022 but President Macron refused to accept it Talks among the various parties to form a stable majority government began later on 21 June but rapidly failed On 6 July Borne presented her minority government policy plan to the Parliament 72 78 See also editList of deputies of the 16th National Assembly of France Elections in FranceNotes edit Several news outlets such as France Info and Le Monde give a different result as to the final seat count with Ensemble on 247 and NUPES on 142 respectively This is due to differences as to candidates particularly in the French overseas constituencies being classified as members of these alliances or not 10 Includes the Federation of the Republican Left and dissident candidates from the NUPES member parties Some independent candidates affiliated with the NUPES were also labelled as Miscellaneous left by the Ministry of Interior In the second round the result of the Radical Party of the Left was included in the results for the Miscellaneous left by the Ministry Includes Lutte Ouvriere and New Anticapitalist Party Includes the Union for France led by Debout la France and The Patriots References edit a b Anderson Emma 4 January 2022 European elections to watch in 2022 Politico Archived from the original on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 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