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2022 French presidential election

The 2022 French presidential election was held on 10 and 24 April 2022. As no candidate won a majority in the first round, a runoff was held, in which Emmanuel Macron defeated Marine Le Pen and was re-elected as President of France.[1] Macron, from La République En Marche! (LREM), had defeated Le Pen, leader of the National Rally, once already in the 2017 French presidential election, for the term which expired on 13 May 2022. Macron became the first President of France to win a re-election bid since Jacques Chirac won in 2002.[2]

2022 French presidential election

← 2017 10 April 2022 (1st round)
24 April 2022 (2nd round)
2027 →
Opinion polls
Turnout73.69% (first round) 4.08 pp
71.99% (second round) 2.57 pp
 
Nominee Emmanuel Macron Marine Le Pen
Party LREM RN
Popular vote 18,768,639 13,288,686
Percentage 58.55% 41.45%

Results of the first round by department and region

Results of the second round by department and region

President before election

Emmanuel Macron
LREM

Elected President

Emmanuel Macron
LREM

In the first round, Macron took the lead with 27.9% of votes, followed by Le Pen with 23.2%, Jean-Luc Mélenchon of La France Insoumise with 22%, and Éric Zemmour of Reconquête with 7.1%. Valérie Pécresse of The Republicans took 4.8% of the vote, and Anne Hidalgo, mayor of Paris and Socialist Party candidate, 1.8%. Both the Republicans and Socialist parties, considered to be the dominant parties until 2017,[3] received their worst results in a presidential election.[4]

In the second round, Macron beat Le Pen with 58.5% of the vote to her 41.5%, a narrower margin than in the 2017 election. Turnout was 72.0%, the lowest in a presidential election run-off since 1969.[5] Le Pen conceded defeat after exit projections became available. The presidential election was followed by the 2022 French legislative election, held on 12–19 June, to elect the 577 members of the National Assembly, the lower house of the French Parliament.

Electoral system

 
Official logo of the election

Under Article 7 of the Constitution of France, the president is elected to a five-year term in a two-round election.[6] If no candidate secures an absolute majority of votes in the first round, a second round is held two weeks later between the two candidates who received the most votes.[7] According to the Constitution of France, the first round of the presidential election must be held between 20 and 35 days before the transition of power at the end of the five-year term of the incumbent officeholder.[citation needed] As Emmanuel Macron took office on 14 May 2017, the transition of power is expected to take place on 13 May 2022. Correspondingly, the first round of the presidential election was to be held between 8 and 23 April 2022, with the second round held two weeks after the first.[8] On 13 July 2021, Government Spokesman Gabriel Attal announced the dates for the election, respectively 10 April 2022 for the first round and 24 April 2022 for the eventual second round.[9]

To be listed on the first-round ballot, candidates needed to secure 500 signatures (often referred to as parrainages in French) from national or local elected officials from at least 30 different departments or overseas collectivities, with no more than a tenth of these signatories from any single department. The signatures were submitted to the Constitutional Council, which is the sole authority to designate participants.[10]

First round

Campaign

Following the 2017 presidential election, The Republicans (LR) sent its members a questionnaire on the topic of the "re-foundation" of the party; of the 40,000 respondents, 70% voted against an open primary like that which was held in 2016 to determine the party nominee.[11] In a document dated 17 October 2017, the Socialist Party (PS) wrote that the financing of the 2022 presidential campaign was not assured despite "economic restructuring" but still planned to spend €12,000,000, the maximum legally permitted before the first round. According to the report, the party's leadership had seriously considered the possibility of not presenting a PS candidate in 2022.[12]

Marine Le Pen, the president of the National Rally (RN), announced on 16 January 2020 that she would be running in the election. She previously ran in the 2012 and 2017 presidential elections as the party's candidate, then called the National Front (FN). She came third in 2012 with 17.9% of the vote in the first round and second in 2017 with 21.3% of the vote in the first round and 33.9% of the vote in the second round. Le Pen was elected to the National Assembly in the 2017 French legislative election.[13]

Jean Lassalle, who ran in the 2017 presidential election under the Résistons! banner, coming in seventh place with 1.2% of the vote, announced that he would run again.[14] In 2020, MP Joachim Son-Forget, a radiologist who was elected to the National Assembly for La République En Marche! (LREM) in 2017, formed a new political party called Valeur Absolue and announced his intention to enter the race for the presidency. He had resigned from the LREM group after posting tweets in 2018 that were deemed sexist; he then joined the UDI and Independents group in 2019 before resigning his membership later that year.[15]

On 8 November 2020, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, founder of La France Insoumise (LFI), announced that he would be running in the election. He previously ran in the 2012 presidential election for the Left Front (coming fourth with 11.1% of the vote in the first round) and in the 2017 presidential election for LFI (coming fourth again with 19.5% of the vote in the first round). Mélenchon was elected to the National Assembly in 2017.[16]

In November 2021, Ensemble Citoyens was founded. It is a political coalition composed of the presidential majority led under Emmanuel Macron.[17]

In January 2022, Éric Zemmour's party Reconquête, which was founded the month prior, gained a member of the National Assembly in Guillaume Peltier, previously elected as a member of LR,[18] as well as two Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) when Jérôme Rivière and Gilbert Collard defected from Le Pen's RN.[19][20] Previously, Son-Forget, who had declared he would run for the presidency, rallied behind Zemmour's candidacy. In early February 2022, the party gained a third MEP when Maxette Grisoni-Pirbakas defected from the RN.[21] Stéphane Ravier became Zemmour's first supporter in the Senate after he left the RN mid-February 2022.[22]

In February 2022, a wave of defections hit Valérie Pécresse, candidate put forward by LR, in favour of Macron.[23] She was accused by members of the party's centrist wing of trying to pander to the voters of Zemmour,[24] whose sharp rise in the polls has been qualified as "meteoric".[25] During a rally in February 2022, Pécresse said "in ten years time ... will we be a sovereign nation, a US satellite or a Chinese trading post? Will we be unified or divided? Nothing is written, whether it is loss of economic status, or the Great Replacement." She was criticised for referring to the Great Replacement; she later said that her mention was not an endorsement of what she considered to be a "theory of hate".[26][27][28][29]

The 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine that began on 24 February had significant implications for the campaign. As media coverage switched to covering the war, Macron's polling improved significantly during the crisis.[30] Le Pen and Zemmour were made to explain historic statements of praise for Vladimir Putin.[31][32][33] In a 14 March 2022 interview with newspaper Le Figaro, Gérard Larcher, Senate President and a supporter of Pécresse, put into question the legitimacy of a possible second Macron term, stating: "If there is no campaign, the question of the legitimacy of the winner will arise."[34] Those comments echoed Macron's refusal to participate in any debate with the other candidates prior to the election's first round.[35]

Macron formally announced his candidacy for re-election on 3 March 2022, by which time he had already received well more than the sponsorships from elected officials to qualify for the ballot.

Marion Maréchal of the Le Pen family, granddaughter of FN founder Jean-Marie Le Pen and niece of its current leader Marine Le Pen, formalised her support for Zemmour at a large rally in Toulon on 6 March 2022.[36][37] In the final days before the first round of voting, Le Pen's polling numbers improved to within the margin of error of defeating Macron in the second round, while those of Pécresse and Zemmour fell.[38][39][40]

Mélenchon's polling numbers also surged in the final days of campaigning.[41][42][43] Left-leaning independent candidate Christiane Taubira, former Minister of Justice (2012–2014) under President François Hollande and winner of the 2022 People's Primary vote, withdrew her candidacy on 2 March 2022, endorsing Mélenchon.[44]

Primaries and congresses

Ecologist primary

In September 2021, the Ecology Pole organised a presidential primary to determine their candidate. The following candidates participated in this primary:[45]

Nominee
Eliminated

Socialist primary

In October 2021, the Socialist Party had its primary. Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo won with 72% of the vote.[49][50]

Nominee
Eliminated

People's Primary

Independent activists launched a primary with the intention of nominating a unity left-wing candidate. The voting took place online from 27 to 30 January 2022. Of the seven candidates listed in the primary, three declined to participate.[51] The primary was conducted according to a majority judgment voting system, in which all voters are to rate all candidates, with the candidate with the highest median rating winning.[52]

Nominee
"Eliminated"

The Republicans congress

The Republicans selected their candidate via a congress of party members. On 4 December 2021, Valérie Pécresse won the nomination with 60.95% of the votes against Éric Ciotti.[53][54]

Nominee
Eliminated

Candidates

On 7 March 2022, the Constitutional Council published names of the 12 candidates who received 500 valid sponsorships, with the order determined by drawing lots.[55]

Sponsorships

A candidate must have secured 500 Présentation signatures from elected officials in order to appear on the first-round ballot. The signature collection period ended on 4 March.[56] The table below lists sponsorships received by the Constitutional Council by candidate.[57] On the form, this is named a présentation but is more widely known as parrainage.[58] There were 46 individuals who received at least 1 sponsorship as of the closing date deadline of 4 March 2022. Some of them received sponsorships without being candidates, and one sponsored himself. Candidates labeled SE (sans etiquette) do not belong to any political party.

Colour legend
1–50 51–100 101–150 151–200 201–250 251–300 301–350 351–400 401–450 451–500 500+

Second round

Endorsements

Arthaud and Lassalle both said they would vote blank, with Lassalle saying he trusts the French people to do what is right.[59] Mélenchon, Poutou,[60] and Roussel stated their opposition to Le Pen but did not endorse Macron.[61][62][63]

Campaign

On 14 April 2022, Le Pen said if elected she would hold a referendum on whether to reinstate capital punishment in France, if such a proposal garnered enough signatures under the citizens' initiative referendum system she wants to implement.[70][71] Le Pen had also campaigned for a ban on wearing Muslim headscarves in public.[72][73]

On 20 April, the only election debate of the campaign (moderated by Léa Salamé and Gilles Bouleau) to feature both major candidates was held. Polls conducted after the debate to ascertain which candidate performed best, showed that 59% of viewers thought that Macron had performed better, compared to 39% for Le Pen.[74][75]

Candidates

Opinion polls

The trendlines below are constructed using local regressions.[76]

First round

 

Second round

 

Results

Macron was re-elected with 58.55% of the vote to 41.45% for Le Pen in the second round of the election.[77] Exit poll projections by Ipsos and Sopra Steria for France Télévisions and Radio France, released as voting closed, estimated that Macron defeated Le Pen with 58.2% of the vote to 41.8%.[78] He became the first French president to win re-election since Jacques Chirac in 2002.[79][80][81] The projections, based on actual ballot papers, also showed that 28% of registered voters did not show up to the second round,[82] making it the lowest turnout since 1969.[83] Official results showed that the turnout was 71.99%, with over 13 million abstentions in the second round, in addition to over 8.6% of ballots cast being blank or invalid (a marked increase over the first round).[77]

Summary of the 10 April and 24 April 2022 French presidential election results
Candidate Party 1st round
10 April 2022
2nd round
24 April 2022
Votes % Votes %
Emmanuel Macron La République En Marche! LREM 9,783,058 27.85 18,768,639 58.55
Marine Le Pen National Rally RN 8,133,828 23.15 13,288,686 41.45
Jean-Luc Mélenchon La France Insoumise LFI 7,712,520 21.95
Éric Zemmour Reconquête R! 2,485,226 7.07
Valérie Pécresse The Republicans LR 1,679,001 4.78
Yannick Jadot Europe Ecology – The Greens EELV 1,627,853 4.63
Jean Lassalle Résistons! RES 1,101,387 3.13
Fabien Roussel French Communist Party PCF 802,422 2.28
Nicolas Dupont-Aignan Debout la France DLF 725,176 2.06
Anne Hidalgo Socialist Party PS 616,478 1.75
Philippe Poutou New Anticapitalist Party NPA 268,904 0.77
Nathalie Arthaud Lutte Ouvrière LO 197,094 0.56
Total 35,132,947 100.00 32,057,325 100.00
Valid votes 35,132,947 97.80 32,057,325 91.34
Blank ballots 543,609 1.51 2,233,904 6.37
Invalid ballots 247,151 0.69 805,249 2.29
Turnout 35,923,707 73.69 35,096,478 71.99
Not voted 12,824,169 26.31 13,655,861 28.01
Registered voters 48,747,876 48,752,339
Source: Minister of the Interior[84]
Vote share – 1st round
Emmanuel Macron
27.85%
Marine Le Pen
23.15%
Jean-Luc Mélenchon
21.95%
Éric Zemmour
7.07%
Valérie Pécresse
4.78%
Yannick Jadot
4.63%
Jean Lassalle
3.13%
Fabien Roussel
2.28%
Nicolas Dupont-Aignan
2.06%
Anne Hidalgo
1.75%
Philippe Poutou
0.77%
Nathalie Arthaud
0.56%
Vote share – 2nd round
Emmanuel Macron
58.55%
Marine Le Pen
41.45%

First round

Tables

Maps

Second round

Tables

Maps

Aftermath

The New York Times commented that the race was much closer than in 2017, when Macron won 66.1% of the vote to Le Pen's 33.9%, but that Macron's margin was wider than expected prior to the election.[85] Le Pen conceded defeat minutes after the estimated results were released,[83] but still called the outcome a victory for her political movement and for the upcoming parliamentary elections.[86][1] It was the best result for the far right in France since the founding of the Fifth French Republic in 1958.[87]

Olivier Véran, Minister for Solidarity and Health, stated that the government has "heard the French people's message", referring to the increasing number of votes for the far-right, and that "there will be a change of method".[86] Macron reflected on the results of the elections self-critically, assuming that many voters voted for him to counter the far right rather than in support of his political positions.[88] Macron was congratulated by several world leaders on his re-election, with his first call coming from German chancellor Olaf Scholz.[89][90]

Notes

Footnotes

  1. ^ The Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) announced it would support the candidate put forward by The Republicans (LR), Valérie Pécresse.

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External links

  • Constitutional Council official site (in French)

2022, french, presidential, election, held, april, 2022, candidate, majority, first, round, runoff, held, which, emmanuel, macron, defeated, marine, elected, president, france, macron, from, république, marche, lrem, defeated, leader, national, rally, once, al. The 2022 French presidential election was held on 10 and 24 April 2022 As no candidate won a majority in the first round a runoff was held in which Emmanuel Macron defeated Marine Le Pen and was re elected as President of France 1 Macron from La Republique En Marche LREM had defeated Le Pen leader of the National Rally once already in the 2017 French presidential election for the term which expired on 13 May 2022 Macron became the first President of France to win a re election bid since Jacques Chirac won in 2002 2 2022 French presidential election 2017 10 April 2022 1st round 24 April 2022 2nd round 2027 Opinion pollsTurnout73 69 first round 4 08 pp71 99 second round 2 57 pp Nominee Emmanuel Macron Marine Le PenParty LREM RNPopular vote 18 768 639 13 288 686Percentage 58 55 41 45 Results of the first round by department and regionResults of the second round by department and regionPresident before electionEmmanuel MacronLREM Elected President Emmanuel MacronLREMIn the first round Macron took the lead with 27 9 of votes followed by Le Pen with 23 2 Jean Luc Melenchon of La France Insoumise with 22 and Eric Zemmour of Reconquete with 7 1 Valerie Pecresse of The Republicans took 4 8 of the vote and Anne Hidalgo mayor of Paris and Socialist Party candidate 1 8 Both the Republicans and Socialist parties considered to be the dominant parties until 2017 3 received their worst results in a presidential election 4 In the second round Macron beat Le Pen with 58 5 of the vote to her 41 5 a narrower margin than in the 2017 election Turnout was 72 0 the lowest in a presidential election run off since 1969 5 Le Pen conceded defeat after exit projections became available The presidential election was followed by the 2022 French legislative election held on 12 19 June to elect the 577 members of the National Assembly the lower house of the French Parliament Contents 1 Electoral system 2 First round 2 1 Campaign 2 2 Primaries and congresses 2 2 1 Ecologist primary 2 2 2 Socialist primary 2 2 3 People s Primary 2 2 4 The Republicans congress 2 3 Candidates 2 3 1 Sponsorships 3 Second round 3 1 Endorsements 3 2 Campaign 3 3 Candidates 4 Opinion polls 4 1 First round 4 2 Second round 5 Results 5 1 First round 5 1 1 Tables 5 1 2 Maps 5 2 Second round 5 2 1 Tables 5 2 2 Maps 6 Aftermath 7 Notes 7 1 Footnotes 7 2 References 8 External linksElectoral system Edit Official logo of the election Under Article 7 of the Constitution of France the president is elected to a five year term in a two round election 6 If no candidate secures an absolute majority of votes in the first round a second round is held two weeks later between the two candidates who received the most votes 7 According to the Constitution of France the first round of the presidential election must be held between 20 and 35 days before the transition of power at the end of the five year term of the incumbent officeholder citation needed As Emmanuel Macron took office on 14 May 2017 the transition of power is expected to take place on 13 May 2022 Correspondingly the first round of the presidential election was to be held between 8 and 23 April 2022 with the second round held two weeks after the first 8 On 13 July 2021 Government Spokesman Gabriel Attal announced the dates for the election respectively 10 April 2022 for the first round and 24 April 2022 for the eventual second round 9 To be listed on the first round ballot candidates needed to secure 500 signatures often referred to as parrainages in French from national or local elected officials from at least 30 different departments or overseas collectivities with no more than a tenth of these signatories from any single department The signatures were submitted to the Constitutional Council which is the sole authority to designate participants 10 First round EditCampaign Edit Following the 2017 presidential election The Republicans LR sent its members a questionnaire on the topic of the re foundation of the party of the 40 000 respondents 70 voted against an open primary like that which was held in 2016 to determine the party nominee 11 In a document dated 17 October 2017 the Socialist Party PS wrote that the financing of the 2022 presidential campaign was not assured despite economic restructuring but still planned to spend 12 000 000 the maximum legally permitted before the first round According to the report the party s leadership had seriously considered the possibility of not presenting a PS candidate in 2022 12 Marine Le Pen the president of the National Rally RN announced on 16 January 2020 that she would be running in the election She previously ran in the 2012 and 2017 presidential elections as the party s candidate then called the National Front FN She came third in 2012 with 17 9 of the vote in the first round and second in 2017 with 21 3 of the vote in the first round and 33 9 of the vote in the second round Le Pen was elected to the National Assembly in the 2017 French legislative election 13 Jean Lassalle who ran in the 2017 presidential election under the Resistons banner coming in seventh place with 1 2 of the vote announced that he would run again 14 In 2020 MP Joachim Son Forget a radiologist who was elected to the National Assembly for La Republique En Marche LREM in 2017 formed a new political party called Valeur Absolue and announced his intention to enter the race for the presidency He had resigned from the LREM group after posting tweets in 2018 that were deemed sexist he then joined the UDI and Independents group in 2019 before resigning his membership later that year 15 On 8 November 2020 Jean Luc Melenchon founder of La France Insoumise LFI announced that he would be running in the election He previously ran in the 2012 presidential election for the Left Front coming fourth with 11 1 of the vote in the first round and in the 2017 presidential election for LFI coming fourth again with 19 5 of the vote in the first round Melenchon was elected to the National Assembly in 2017 16 In November 2021 Ensemble Citoyens was founded It is a political coalition composed of the presidential majority led under Emmanuel Macron 17 In January 2022 Eric Zemmour s party Reconquete which was founded the month prior gained a member of the National Assembly in Guillaume Peltier previously elected as a member of LR 18 as well as two Members of the European Parliament MEPs when Jerome Riviere and Gilbert Collard defected from Le Pen s RN 19 20 Previously Son Forget who had declared he would run for the presidency rallied behind Zemmour s candidacy In early February 2022 the party gained a third MEP when Maxette Grisoni Pirbakas defected from the RN 21 Stephane Ravier became Zemmour s first supporter in the Senate after he left the RN mid February 2022 22 In February 2022 a wave of defections hit Valerie Pecresse candidate put forward by LR in favour of Macron 23 She was accused by members of the party s centrist wing of trying to pander to the voters of Zemmour 24 whose sharp rise in the polls has been qualified as meteoric 25 During a rally in February 2022 Pecresse said in ten years time will we be a sovereign nation a US satellite or a Chinese trading post Will we be unified or divided Nothing is written whether it is loss of economic status or the Great Replacement She was criticised for referring to the Great Replacement she later said that her mention was not an endorsement of what she considered to be a theory of hate 26 27 28 29 The 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine that began on 24 February had significant implications for the campaign As media coverage switched to covering the war Macron s polling improved significantly during the crisis 30 Le Pen and Zemmour were made to explain historic statements of praise for Vladimir Putin 31 32 33 In a 14 March 2022 interview with newspaper Le Figaro Gerard Larcher Senate President and a supporter of Pecresse put into question the legitimacy of a possible second Macron term stating If there is no campaign the question of the legitimacy of the winner will arise 34 Those comments echoed Macron s refusal to participate in any debate with the other candidates prior to the election s first round 35 Macron formally announced his candidacy for re election on 3 March 2022 by which time he had already received well more than the sponsorships from elected officials to qualify for the ballot Marion Marechal of the Le Pen family granddaughter of FN founder Jean Marie Le Pen and niece of its current leader Marine Le Pen formalised her support for Zemmour at a large rally in Toulon on 6 March 2022 36 37 In the final days before the first round of voting Le Pen s polling numbers improved to within the margin of error of defeating Macron in the second round while those of Pecresse and Zemmour fell 38 39 40 Melenchon s polling numbers also surged in the final days of campaigning 41 42 43 Left leaning independent candidate Christiane Taubira former Minister of Justice 2012 2014 under President Francois Hollande and winner of the 2022 People s Primary vote withdrew her candidacy on 2 March 2022 endorsing Melenchon 44 Primaries and congresses Edit Ecologist primary Edit Main article 2021 French Green Party presidential primary In September 2021 the Ecology Pole organised a presidential primary to determine their candidate The following candidates participated in this primary 45 NomineeYannick Jadot Member of the European Parliament since 2009 46 EliminatedSandrine Rousseau deputy national secretary of Europe Ecology The Greens from 2016 to 2017 47 Delphine Batho president of Ecology Generation and deputy for the 2nd constituency of Deux Sevres since 2013 Eric Piolle Mayor of Grenoble since 2014 Jean Marc Governatori co president of Cap Ecologie and city councillor for Nice since 2020 48 Socialist primary Edit In October 2021 the Socialist Party had its primary Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo won with 72 of the vote 49 50 NomineeAnne Hidalgo Mayor of Paris since 2014 49 50 EliminatedStephane Le Foll Mayor of Le Mans since 2018 49 50 People s Primary Edit Main article 2022 French People s Primary Independent activists launched a primary with the intention of nominating a unity left wing candidate The voting took place online from 27 to 30 January 2022 Of the seven candidates listed in the primary three declined to participate 51 The primary was conducted according to a majority judgment voting system in which all voters are to rate all candidates with the candidate with the highest median rating winning 52 NomineeChristiane Taubira Minister of Justice 2012 2016 withdrew endorsed Melenchon Eliminated Anna Agueb Porterie environmental activist Anne Hidalgo Mayor of Paris since 2014 Socialist Party candidate still a candidate Yannick Jadot Member of the European Parliament since 2009 Green Party candidate still a candidate Pierre Larrouturou Member of the European Parliament since 2019 Charlotte Marchandise public health expert Jean Luc Melenchon Member of the National Assembly La France Insoumise candidate still a candidate The Republicans congress Edit Main article 2021 The Republicans congress The Republicans selected their candidate via a congress of party members On 4 December 2021 Valerie Pecresse won the nomination with 60 95 of the votes against Eric Ciotti 53 54 NomineeValerie Pecresse President of the Regional Council of Ile de France since 2016EliminatedEric Ciotti deputy for the 1st constituency of Alpes Maritimes since 2007 Michel Barnier head of the Task Force for Relations with the United Kingdom from 2019 to 2021 Xavier Bertrand President of the Regional Council of Hauts de France since 2016 Philippe Juvin Mayor of La Garenne Colombes since 2001Candidates Edit On 7 March 2022 the Constitutional Council published names of the 12 candidates who received 500 valid sponsorships with the order determined by drawing lots 55 Nathalie ArthaudWorkers Struggle Fabien RousselFrench Communist Party Emmanuel MacronLa Republique En Marche Jean Luc MelenchonLa France Insoumise Jean LassalleResistons Marine Le PenNational Rally Eric ZemmourReconquete Anne HidalgoSocialist Party Yannick JadotEurope Ecology The Greens Valerie PecresseThe Republicans Philippe PoutouNew Anticapitalist Party Nicolas Dupont AignanDebout la FranceSponsorships Edit A candidate must have secured 500 Presentation signatures from elected officials in order to appear on the first round ballot The signature collection period ended on 4 March 56 The table below lists sponsorships received by the Constitutional Council by candidate 57 On the form this is named a presentation but is more widely known as parrainage 58 There were 46 individuals who received at least 1 sponsorship as of the closing date deadline of 4 March 2022 Some of them received sponsorships without being candidates and one sponsored himself Candidates labeled SE sans etiquette do not belong to any political party Colour legend1 50 51 100 101 150 151 200 201 250 251 300 301 350 351 400 401 450 451 500 500 Signatures received by the Constitutional Council as of 7 March 57 Candidate Party 1 Feb 3 Feb 8 Feb 10 Feb 15 Feb 17 Feb 22 Feb 24 Feb 1 Mar 3 Mar 4 Mar Total NotesChristian Jacques Arnal SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 Not a candidateNathalie Arthaud LO 12 126 230 51 90 20 30 3 6 2 6 576 500 signatures validated by 15 FebruaryFrancois Asselineau UPR 10 46 115 22 17 7 24 6 16 16 14 293Michel Barnier LR 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Not the nominee of LRCorinne Bekaert SE 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 1 6Christophe Blanchet LREM 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 Not a candidateJean Louis Borloo UDI a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 Not a candidateThierry Cahez SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1Marie Cau SE 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 2 1 8Bernard Cazeneuve PS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1Michel Chaudot SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1Arnaud Chiche SE 0 1 3 1 3 0 1 0 3 4 5 21Patrick Cojan SE 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Not a candidateVincent Delaby SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1Carole Delga PS 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Not a candidateNicolas Dupont Aignan DLF 10 67 155 48 80 19 43 35 75 50 18 600 500 signatures validated by 1 MarchClara Egger SE 0 3 3 1 6 3 6 2 4 6 2 36Bertrand Fessard de Foucault SE 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1Eric Regis Fiorile SE 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 2Jean Marc Fortane SE 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 4 2 3 12Jean Baptiste Giffon SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1Raphael Glucksmann PP 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 Not a candidateCedric Herrou SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1Anne Hidalgo PS 48 218 386 138 217 67 103 49 92 69 43 1 440 500 signatures validated by 8 FebruaryFrancois Hollande PS 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Not a candidateYannick Jadot EELV 11 69 188 57 125 40 75 50 54 20 23 712 500 signatures validated by 22 FebruaryAlexandre Juving Brunet SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 2Anasse Kazib RP 1 20 63 15 17 6 6 2 14 5 11 155Gaspard Koenig S 0 2 21 4 1 3 7 11 23 19 16 107Georges Kuzmanovic RS 1 8 16 2 8 3 2 2 3 1 3 48Nicolas Lacroix LR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 Not a candidateYaya Lam SE 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1Jean Lassalle RES 15 109 192 66 89 32 58 18 23 18 22 642 500 signatures validated by 17 FebruaryChristian Laurut SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2Marine Le Pen RN 2 33 104 135 57 35 27 21 89 100 19 622 500 signatures validated by 1 MarchEmmanuel Macron LREM 105 424 397 124 210 85 118 81 241 189 124 2 098 500 signatures validated by 3 FebruaryPhilippe Celestin Marechal SE 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Self sponsoredAntoine Martinez VPF 0 0 5 0 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 13Philippe Mazuel PACE 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1Jean Luc Melenchon LFI 14 86 124 34 74 38 72 98 268 65 33 906 500 signatures validated by 24 FebruaryEmmanuelle Menard EXD 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Not a candidateGuillaume Meurice SE 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 3 0 6 Not a candidateNicolas Miguet RCF 0 2 7 0 3 0 0 6 9 8 5 40Arnaud Montebourg DVG 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 Withdrew candidacy on 19 JanuaryPaul Montserrat SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1Valerie Pecresse LR 34 290 615 310 575 121 198 128 186 99 80 2 636 500 signatures validated by 8 FebruaryThomas Pesquet SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 Not a candidateEdouard Philippe Horizons 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 Not a candidateFlorian Philippot LP 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Withdrew candidacy on 18 FebruaryPhilippe Poutou NPA 4 50 73 19 42 11 25 19 99 97 157 596 500 signatures validated by 4 MarchStephanie Rivoal SE 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2Martin Rocca SE 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 5 1 0 9Antoine Rocquemont SE 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1Fabien Roussel PCF 30 129 167 55 111 37 53 11 20 6 7 626 500 signatures validated by 17 FebruaryFrancois Ruffin PD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 Not a candidateLaetitia Saint Paul LREM 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Not a candidateJosef Schovanec SE 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Not a candidateRafik Smati OF 0 0 2 0 3 2 1 0 1 0 1 10Christiane Taubira Walwari 0 8 28 11 26 13 18 24 53 60 33 274 Withdrew candidacy on 2 MarchHelene Thouy PA 2 20 26 8 14 4 15 8 17 10 15 139Gildas Vieira LaFRA 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2Antoine Waechter MEI 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 3 0 7Stephane Wendlinger SE 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1Eric Zemmour REC 14 44 91 32 69 41 59 65 205 101 20 741 500 signatures validated by 1 MarchTotal 313 1 756 3 017 1 139 1 851 593 948 648 1 523 963 12 751Second round EditEndorsements Edit Arthaud and Lassalle both said they would vote blank with Lassalle saying he trusts the French people to do what is right 59 Melenchon Poutou 60 and Roussel stated their opposition to Le Pen but did not endorse Macron 61 62 63 Candidate EndorsementAnne Hidalgo Macron 61 Yannick Jadot Macron 61 64 Valerie Pecresse Macron 61 65 Nicolas Dupont Aignan Le Pen 66 Eric Zemmour Le Pen 61 Nathalie Arthaud No endorsement 67 68 Jean Lassalle No endorsement 59 69 Jean Luc Melenchon Against Le Pen 61 Philippe Poutou Against Le Pen 60 Fabien Roussel Against Le Pen 62 63 Campaign Edit On 14 April 2022 Le Pen said if elected she would hold a referendum on whether to reinstate capital punishment in France if such a proposal garnered enough signatures under the citizens initiative referendum system she wants to implement 70 71 Le Pen had also campaigned for a ban on wearing Muslim headscarves in public 72 73 On 20 April the only election debate of the campaign moderated by Lea Salame and Gilles Bouleau to feature both major candidates was held Polls conducted after the debate to ascertain which candidate performed best showed that 59 of viewers thought that Macron had performed better compared to 39 for Le Pen 74 75 Candidates Edit Candidates in the second roundEmmanuel Macron Marine Le PenLa Republique En Marche National Rally IncumbentPresident of France 2017 present Member of the National Assemblyfor Pas de Calais 2017 present Opinion polls EditSee also Opinion polling for the 2022 French presidential election and Opinion polling on the Emmanuel Macron presidency The trendlines below are constructed using local regressions 76 First round Edit Second round Edit Results Edit Wikinews has related news Macron defeats Le Pen in French presidential runoff electionMacron was re elected with 58 55 of the vote to 41 45 for Le Pen in the second round of the election 77 Exit poll projections by Ipsos and Sopra Steria for France Televisions and Radio France released as voting closed estimated that Macron defeated Le Pen with 58 2 of the vote to 41 8 78 He became the first French president to win re election since Jacques Chirac in 2002 79 80 81 The projections based on actual ballot papers also showed that 28 of registered voters did not show up to the second round 82 making it the lowest turnout since 1969 83 Official results showed that the turnout was 71 99 with over 13 million abstentions in the second round in addition to over 8 6 of ballots cast being blank or invalid a marked increase over the first round 77 Summary of the 10 April and 24 April 2022 French presidential election results Candidate Party 1st round 10 April 2022 2nd round 24 April 2022Votes Votes Emmanuel Macron La Republique En Marche LREM 9 783 058 27 85 18 768 639 58 55Marine Le Pen National Rally RN 8 133 828 23 15 13 288 686 41 45Jean Luc Melenchon La France Insoumise LFI 7 712 520 21 95Eric Zemmour Reconquete R 2 485 226 7 07Valerie Pecresse The Republicans LR 1 679 001 4 78Yannick Jadot Europe Ecology The Greens EELV 1 627 853 4 63Jean Lassalle Resistons RES 1 101 387 3 13Fabien Roussel French Communist Party PCF 802 422 2 28Nicolas Dupont Aignan Debout la France DLF 725 176 2 06Anne Hidalgo Socialist Party PS 616 478 1 75Philippe Poutou New Anticapitalist Party NPA 268 904 0 77Nathalie Arthaud Lutte Ouvriere LO 197 094 0 56Total 35 132 947 100 00 32 057 325 100 00Valid votes 35 132 947 97 80 32 057 325 91 34Blank ballots 543 609 1 51 2 233 904 6 37Invalid ballots 247 151 0 69 805 249 2 29Turnout 35 923 707 73 69 35 096 478 71 99Not voted 12 824 169 26 31 13 655 861 28 01Registered voters 48 747 876 48 752 339Source Minister of the Interior 84 Vote share 1st roundEmmanuel Macron 27 85 Marine Le Pen 23 15 Jean Luc Melenchon 21 95 Eric Zemmour 7 07 Valerie Pecresse 4 78 Yannick Jadot 4 63 Jean Lassalle 3 13 Fabien Roussel 2 28 Nicolas Dupont Aignan 2 06 Anne Hidalgo 1 75 Philippe Poutou 0 77 Nathalie Arthaud 0 56 Vote share 2nd roundEmmanuel Macron 58 55 Marine Le Pen 41 45 First round Edit Tables Edit Results by department Department EmmanuelMacron MarineLe Pen Jean LucMelenchon EricZemmour ValeriePecresse YannickJadot JeanLassalle FabienRoussel NicolasDupont Aignan AnneHidalgo PhilippePoutou NathalieArthaudVotes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Ain 92 206 27 69 86 755 26 05 57 832 17 37 27 530 8 27 17 572 5 28 15 843 4 76 10 876 3 27 5 938 1 78 8 998 2 70 5 644 1 69 2 172 0 65 1 658 0 50 Aisne 58 721 22 09 104 342 39 25 41 172 15 49 18 266 6 87 10 920 4 11 7 074 2 66 6 468 2 43 5 968 2 24 5 790 2 18 2 983 1 12 2 118 0 80 2 038 0 77 Allier 49 706 26 73 50 315 27 06 31 013 16 68 12 361 6 65 10 319 5 55 5 982 3 22 7 782 4 18 8 119 4 37 4 216 2 27 3 280 1 76 1 503 0 81 1 359 0 73 Alpes de Haute Provence 20 800 21 51 26 010 26 90 21 856 22 61 7 926 8 20 3 834 3 97 3 957 4 09 4 309 4 46 2 721 2 81 2 504 2 59 1 396 1 44 865 0 89 505 0 52 Hautes Alpes 20 507 23 78 19 696 22 84 19 718 22 87 6 164 7 15 4 511 5 23 5 013 5 81 3 871 4 49 1 925 2 23 2 142 2 48 1 459 1 69 801 0 93 428 0 50 Alpes Maritimes 139 966 24 99 149 219 26 64 92 815 16 57 78 329 13 99 31 304 5 59 23 419 4 18 12 784 2 28 8 883 1 59 13 326 2 38 5 424 0 97 2 994 0 53 1 630 0 29 Ardeche 45 353 23 03 49 594 25 18 42 837 21 75 14 199 7 21 9 553 4 85 8 544 4 34 9 033 4 59 5 710 2 90 4 927 2 50 4 189 2 13 1 817 0 92 1 219 0 62 Ardennes 31 656 23 64 48 242 36 02 22 281 16 64 8 771 6 55 5 556 4 15 3 446 2 57 4 084 3 06 3 009 2 25 2 957 2 21 1 741 1 30 1 112 0 83 1 081 0 81 Ariege 18 070 19 71 21 958 23 94 23 908 26 07 5 820 6 35 2 724 2 97 3 020 3 29 7 532 8 21 2 701 2 95 1 621 1 77 3 208 3 50 723 0 79 417 0 45 Aube 38 321 25 60 49 316 32 95 22 483 15 02 11 374 7 60 8 923 5 96 4 619 3 09 3 787 2 53 3 094 2 07 3 966 2 65 1 720 1 15 1 062 0 71 1 005 0 67 Aude 43 104 20 29 64 027 30 14 42 039 19 79 18 434 8 68 7 350 3 46 6 322 2 98 12 382 5 83 5 622 2 65 4 206 1 98 6 166 2 90 1 748 0 82 1 026 0 48 Aveyron 47 430 27 75 34 357 20 10 32 734 19 15 10 112 5 92 9 988 5 84 6 746 3 95 14 825 8 67 4 515 2 64 3 477 2 03 4 470 2 62 1 354 0 79 894 0 52 Bouches du Rhone 229 038 22 71 264 754 26 25 237 971 23 59 108 617 10 77 36 228 3 59 42 109 4 17 24 256 2 40 24 295 2 41 20 051 1 99 11 760 1 17 5 963 0 59 3 578 0 35 Calvados 120 366 31 16 91 774 23 76 73 950 19 15 22 255 5 76 18 383 4 76 19 641 5 09 9 816 2 54 8 777 2 27 7 920 2 05 6 848 1 77 3 764 0 97 2 757 0 71 Cantal 25 038 28 42 21 570 24 48 12 944 14 69 4 906 5 57 6 987 7 93 2 751 3 12 6 848 7 77 2 496 2 83 1 547 1 76 1 810 2 05 650 0 74 555 0 63 Charente 53 126 27 57 50 430 26 18 37 305 19 36 10 617 5 51 8 343 4 33 7 557 3 92 8 482 4 40 5 374 2 79 4 345 2 26 4 003 2 08 1 763 0 92 1 319 0 68 Charente Maritime 113 753 28 87 99 790 25 32 71 633 18 18 24 347 6 18 19 316 4 90 19 012 4 82 14 335 3 64 10 002 2 54 9 289 2 36 6 857 1 74 3 403 0 86 2 330 0 59 Cher 43 497 27 10 44 772 27 89 27 901 17 38 10 822 6 74 8 147 5 07 5 028 3 13 5 495 3 42 5 749 3 58 3 770 2 35 2 585 1 61 1 463 0 91 1 304 0 82 Correze 33 125 23 23 31 658 22 20 27 731 19 45 8 012 5 62 12 278 8 61 5 040 3 53 10 177 7 14 6 292 4 41 2 618 1 84 3 605 2 53 1 179 0 83 885 0 62 Corse du Sud 13 022 18 76 20 285 29 22 9 412 13 56 9 279 13 37 3 808 5 48 2 281 3 29 6 807 9 80 1 866 2 69 1 226 1 77 630 0 91 612 0 88 198 0 29 Haute Corse 13 773 17 54 21 998 28 02 10 367 13 20 9 657 12 30 5 555 7 08 2 520 3 21 8 601 10 96 2 687 3 42 1 374 1 75 959 1 22 762 0 97 257 0 33 Cote d Or 80 734 28 55 69 110 24 44 53 875 19 05 21 651 7 66 14 344 5 07 13 462 4 76 8 183 2 89 5 721 2 02 6 478 2 29 5 126 1 81 2 286 0 81 1 775 0 63 Cotes d Armor 113 656 31 02 79 850 21 79 74 226 20 26 17 319 4 73 17 235 4 70 19 349 5 28 11 949 3 26 11 628 3 17 6 404 1 75 8 279 2 26 3 895 1 06 2 603 0 71 Creuse 15 542 23 25 16 772 25 09 13 679 20 46 3 501 5 24 4 391 6 57 1 906 2 85 4 275 6 40 2 430 3 64 1 556 2 33 1 641 2 45 665 0 99 490 0 73 Dordogne 58 648 23 74 63 498 25 70 50 164 20 30 15 815 6 40 11 300 4 57 8 582 3 47 15 885 6 43 8 877 3 59 5 428 2 20 5 374 2 17 2 224 0 90 1 295 0 52 Doubs 76 338 27 55 66 703 24 07 55 587 20 06 19 486 7 03 15 107 5 45 13 096 4 72 8 688 3 14 5 001 1 80 7 775 2 81 4 902 1 77 2 345 0 85 2 069 0 75 Drome 72 228 24 78 70 574 24 22 65 258 22 39 22 010 7 55 13 204 4 53 14 234 4 88 9 945 3 41 6 752 2 32 7 758 2 66 5 311 1 82 2 109 0 72 2 041 0 70 Eure 83 058 26 05 102 952 32 29 55 571 17 43 20 930 6 56 13 552 4 25 11 477 3 60 7 768 2 44 7 056 2 21 7 563 2 37 4 027 1 26 2 710 0 85 2 197 0 69 Eure et Loir 59 869 27 21 61 960 28 16 40 529 18 42 14 803 6 73 13 003 5 91 7 904 3 59 5 694 2 59 4 267 1 94 5 731 2 60 3 076 1 40 1 766 0 80 1 419 0 64 Finistere 174 894 32 21 100 890 18 58 116 591 21 47 25 607 4 72 26 541 4 89 33 200 6 12 18 320 3 37 15 340 2 83 8 566 1 58 13 077 2 41 6 266 1 15 3 627 0 67 Gard 88 278 21 32 121 480 29 34 88 827 21 46 38 479 9 29 15 460 3 73 14 974 3 62 15 162 3 66 12 123 2 93 8 137 1 97 6 585 1 59 2 706 0 65 1 768 0 43 Haute Garonne 197 049 26 90 133 411 18 21 189 462 25 87 50 699 6 92 27 195 3 71 42 711 5 83 35 517 4 85 16 338 2 23 12 460 1 70 19 700 2 69 4 899 0 67 3 015 0 41 Gers 28 970 24 89 26 015 22 35 21 353 18 35 8 396 7 21 5 126 4 40 4 090 3 51 11 720 10 07 3 128 2 69 2 418 2 08 3 861 3 32 793 0 68 529 0 45 Gironde 256 179 28 72 191 542 21 47 194 775 21 84 58 321 6 54 37 575 4 21 46 677 5 23 37 725 4 23 21 522 2 41 15 693 1 76 19 598 2 20 8 734 0 98 3 679 0 41 Herault 142 306 22 28 165 734 25 95 154 819 24 24 57 751 9 04 23 230 3 64 28 057 4 39 22 068 3 45 14 165 2 22 11 475 1 80 12 150 1 90 4 393 0 69 2 580 0 40 Ille et Vilaine 205 882 34 50 101 797 17 06 132 510 22 20 27 463 4 60 26 194 4 39 42 613 7 14 13 985 2 34 12 696 2 13 10 560 1 77 13 973 2 34 5 376 0 90 3 783 0 63 Indre 31 498 26 03 34 516 28 53 20 954 17 32 7 438 6 15 6 589 5 45 3 726 3 08 4 984 4 12 3 702 3 06 2 886 2 39 2 464 2 04 1 155 0 95 1 085 0 90 Indre et Loire 101 503 30 99 70 553 21 54 68 012 20 77 19 931 6 09 16 279 4 97 16 245 4 96 8 520 2 60 7 835 2 39 7 271 2 22 6 216 1 90 2 882 0 88 2 243 0 68 Isere 180 553 26 85 154 889 23 03 153 506 22 83 47 463 7 06 28 581 4 25 40 387 6 01 17 031 2 53 14 699 2 19 14 332 2 13 12 737 1 89 4 831 0 72 3 479 0 52 Jura 36 138 24 88 38 177 26 29 28 881 19 89 9 657 6 65 7 423 5 11 6 388 4 40 6 218 4 28 3 166 2 18 4 143 2 85 2 635 1 81 1 342 0 92 1 053 0 73 Landes 69 459 26 92 58 646 22 73 44 548 17 26 16 817 6 52 10 393 4 03 8 628 3 34 24 308 9 42 8 176 3 17 4 914 1 90 9 071 3 52 1 975 0 77 1 115 0 43 Loir et Cher 50 480 27 92 50 212 27 77 30 377 16 80 12 703 7 03 9 586 5 30 7 097 3 93 5 483 3 03 4 507 2 49 4 427 2 45 3 165 1 75 1 527 0 84 1 246 0 69 Loire 104 096 26 95 97 846 25 33 78 222 20 25 28 728 7 44 18 558 4 80 16 672 4 32 11 944 3 09 9 018 2 33 9 043 2 34 6 973 1 81 2 776 0 72 2 391 0 62 Haute Loire 32 417 23 21 38 629 27 66 24 332 17 42 9 529 6 82 9 560 6 85 5 796 4 16 7 817 5 60 3 493 2 50 3 366 2 41 2 491 1 78 1 205 0 86 1 020 0 73 Loire Atlantique 256 609 31 98 135 702 16 91 187 977 23 43 42 761 5 33 37 541 4 68 60 072 7 49 18 298 2 28 18 322 2 38 14 779 1 84 18 369 2 29 7 280 0 91 4 712 0 59 Loiret 97 004 28 92 85 832 25 59 63 486 18 93 22 878 6 82 18 086 5 39 14 401 4 29 8 483 2 53 7 530 2 24 7 674 2 29 5 656 1 69 2 433 0 73 1 959 0 58 Lot 27 311 24 97 21 422 19 58 25 932 23 71 6 123 5 60 5 648 5 16 4 603 4 21 8 032 7 34 3 559 3 25 2 400 2 19 2 766 2 53 976 0 89 618 0 56 Lot et Garonne 42 568 23 12 50 290 27 32 34 044 18 49 15 646 8 50 7 703 4 18 5 686 3 09 13 600 7 38 4 970 2 70 3 912 2 12 3 357 1 82 1 437 0 78 889 0 48 Lozere 10 739 22 85 10 497 22 34 9 153 19 48 3 148 6 70 3 039 6 46 1 736 3 69 4 722 10 05 1 343 2 86 913 1 94 1 045 2 22 426 0 91 235 0 50 Maine et Loire 157 063 35 59 89 433 20 26 80 616 18 27 21 704 4 92 21 538 4 88 26 634 6 03 11 036 2 50 8 362 1 89 9 420 2 13 8 801 1 99 3 663 0 83 3 071 0 70 Manche 92 642 32 57 69 770 24 53 46 940 16 50 13 990 4 92 14 746 5 18 11 873 4 17 9 421 3 31 7 368 2 59 6 886 2 42 5 853 2 06 2 720 0 96 2 249 0 79 Marne 78 472 28 63 83 756 30 56 42 858 15 64 19 501 7 11 14 357 5 24 9 561 3 49 6 921 2 52 5 307 1 94 6 159 2 25 3 542 1 29 1 894 0 69 1 778 0 65 Haute Marne 21 886 23 33 34 331 36 60 13 228 14 10 6 450 6 88 4 841 5 16 2 580 2 75 3 327 3 55 1 833 1 95 2 584 2 75 1 305 1 39 747 0 80 696 0 74 Mayenne 60 755 36 40 37 376 22 39 25 608 15 34 8 042 4 82 9 236 5 53 7 934 4 75 4 673 2 80 3 313 1 98 3 858 2 31 3 468 2 08 1 372 0 82 1 273 0 76 Meurthe et Moselle 95 252 26 92 97 243 27 49 73 892 20 89 23 518 6 65 13 387 3 78 14 588 4 12 8 739 2 47 7 961 2 25 7 271 2 06 6 362 1 80 3 214 0 91 2 373 0 67 Meuse 24 539 24 91 34 588 35 11 13 559 13 76 7 347 7 46 4 403 4 47 3 130 3 18 3 500 3 55 1 957 1 99 2 422 2 46 1 483 1 51 883 0 90 702 0 71 Morbihan 152 740 32 68 102 856 22 01 84 200 18 02 26 595 5 69 22 838 4 89 27 036 5 78 14 399 3 08 11 529 2 47 9 586 2 05 8 267 1 77 4 376 0 94 2 952 0 63 Moselle 136 366 26 01 159 254 30 37 100 159 19 10 39 369 7 51 19 300 3 68 18 931 3 61 14 163 2 70 8 750 1 67 12 651 2 41 7 534 1 44 4 343 0 83 3 499 0 67 Nievre 28 686 25 51 32 838 29 20 19 930 17 72 7 378 6 56 5 172 4 60 3 552 3 16 4 106 3 65 4 281 3 81 2 495 2 22 2 160 1 92 1 010 0 90 833 0 74 Nord 336 138 26 37 373 127 29 27 279 785 21 95 73 168 5 74 42 470 3 33 46 962 3 68 22 459 1 76 45 902 3 60 20 617 1 62 18 215 1 43 8 265 0 65 7 673 0 60 Oise 100 388 24 30 133 449 32 30 79 648 19 28 30 448 7 37 17 508 4 24 13 836 3 35 9 205 2 23 9 076 2 20 9 420 2 28 4 274 1 03 3 060 0 74 2 869 0 69 Orne 46 005 30 48 41 804 27 69 22 993 15 23 8 910 5 90 8 838 5 85 5 513 3 65 4 895 3 24 3 261 2 16 3 826 2 53 2 368 1 57 1 334 0 88 1 203 0 80 Pas de Calais 194 649 24 61 305 900 38 68 124 759 15 77 40 776 5 16 25 320 3 20 19 302 2 44 17 019 2 15 26 152 3 31 13 975 1 77 11 619 1 47 5 491 0 69 5 891 0 74 Puy de Dome 100 134 28 00 78 182 21 86 74 534 20 84 20 624 5 77 17 352 4 85 17 029 4 76 16 136 4 51 12 713 3 56 6 922 1 94 8 216 2 30 3 189 0 89 2 556 0 71 Pyrenees Atlantiques 111 610 27 80 69 768 17 38 76 030 18 94 25 877 6 45 17 166 4 28 19 967 4 97 48 246 12 02 10 170 2 53 6 721 1 67 9 276 2 31 4 982 1 24 1 677 0 42 Hautes Pyrenees 33 692 24 98 29 938 22 19 26 449 19 61 8 714 6 46 4 560 3 38 4 872 3 61 14 761 10 94 4 539 3 37 2 409 1 79 3 315 2 46 1 003 0 74 636 0 47 Pyrenees Orientales 55 169 20 54 87 930 32 74 51 556 19 20 24 782 9 23 8 815 3 28 8 588 3 20 11 690 4 35 6 509 2 42 5 209 1 94 5 013 1 87 1 995 0 74 1 312 0 49 Bas Rhin 177 069 30 70 145 883 25 30 105 055 18 22 40 459 7 02 24 812 4 30 28 573 4 95 14 655 2 54 7 015 1 22 17 009 2 95 8 348 1 45 4 158 0 72 3 687 0 64 Haut Rhin 107 244 27 85 106 930 27 77 66 234 17 20 30 282 7 86 15 993 4 15 18 963 4 92 11 059 2 87 4 649 1 21 13 744 3 57 4 881 1 27 2 842 0 74 2 265 0 59 Rhone 278 243 30 61 150 463 16 55 229 035 25 20 74 168 8 16 50 263 5 53 51 907 5 71 17 572 1 93 15 938 1 75 16 487 1 81 15 895 1 75 5 267 0 58 3 774 0 42 Haute Saone 30 204 22 42 46 618 34 60 21 089 15 65 9 675 7 18 6 754 5 01 4 292 3 18 4 820 3 58 2 836 2 10 3 640 2 70 2 345 1 74 1 295 0 96 1 171 0 87 Saone et Loire 82 633 27 61 81 970 27 39 52 336 17 49 20 686 6 91 15 210 5 08 10 730 3 59 10 186 3 40 7 419 2 48 7 745 2 59 6 037 2 02 2 369 0 79 1 979 0 66 Sarthe 83 876 28 24 82 234 27 68 54 244 18 26 16 218 5 46 15 937 5 36 13 541 4 56 7 546 2 54 6 908 2 33 6 494 2 19 5 409 1 82 2 505 0 84 2 150 0 72 Savoie 64 689 26 26 56 733 23 03 49 858 20 24 18 045 7 32 13 608 5 52 15 642 6 35 8 081 3 28 5 536 2 25 6 694 2 72 4 418 1 79 1 849 0 75 1 205 0 49 Haute Savoie 130 422 30 53 87 744 20 54 78 062 18 28 33 353 7 81 22 349 5 23 29 948 7 01 13 371 3 13 5 997 1 40 14 175 3 32 6 606 1 55 3 232 0 76 1 880 0 44 Paris 372 820 35 34 58 429 5 54 317 472 30 08 86 088 8 16 69 564 6 59 80 374 7 61 12 139 1 15 17 267 1 64 9 591 0 91 22 901 2 17 5 732 0 54 2 891 0 27 Seine Maritime 179 698 27 95 177 806 27 65 136 136 21 17 33 361 5 19 24 281 3 78 24 785 3 85 13 588 2 11 19 896 3 09 12 365 1 92 11 139 1 73 5 477 0 85 4 433 0 69 Seine et Marne 165 386 25 00 155 897 23 57 171 080 25 86 47 935 7 25 36 867 5 57 26 754 4 04 13 813 2 09 12 851 1 94 15 061 2 28 7 858 1 19 4 608 0 70 3 446 0 52 Yvelines 246 062 33 41 101 398 13 77 168 585 22 89 64 407 8 74 61 296 8 32 40 470 5 49 13 687 1 86 11 721 1 59 13 097 1 78 9 046 1 23 3 963 0 54 2 774 0 38 Deux Sevres 68 540 32 93 47 979 23 05 39 197 18 83 8 813 4 23 9 262 4 45 10 088 4 85 7 026 3 38 4 545 2 18 4 536 2 18 4 348 2 09 2 136 1 03 1 645 0 79 Somme 83 185 27 79 98 208 32 81 52 415 17 51 16 908 5 65 11 397 3 81 8 050 2 69 7 376 2 46 7 716 2 58 5 623 1 88 3 755 1 25 2 207 0 74 2 500 0 84 Tarn 53 925 23 46 56 543 24 60 48 430 21 07 15 982 6 95 10 014 4 36 8 680 3 78 17 010 7 40 5 313 2 31 5 123 2 23 5 818 2 53 1 829 0 80 1 175 0 51 Tarn et Garonne 31 737 21 76 42 183 28 93 27 881 19 12 11 772 8 07 5 994 4 11 4 835 3 32 9 573 6 56 3 628 2 49 3 412 2 34 3 069 2 10 1 057 0 72 679 0 47 Var 142 335 23 77 183 287 30 61 89 272 14 91 79 329 13 25 28 342 4 73 21 044 3 51 17 784 2 97 10 672 1 78 15 286 2 55 5 703 0 95 3 578 0 60 2 098 0 35 Vaucluse 66 883 22 01 89 411 29 43 63 045 20 75 30 473 10 03 11 918 3 92 12 128 3 99 9 843 3 24 6 234 2 05 6 895 2 27 3 769 1 24 2 023 0 67 1 234 0 41 Vendee 149 587 35 64 97 280 23 18 60 524 14 42 25 663 6 11 22 534 5 37 19 753 4 71 13 039 3 11 8 153 1 94 9 664 2 30 7 244 1 73 3 621 0 86 2 647 0 63 Vienne 67 831 29 28 54 216 23 40 49 162 21 22 11 939 5 15 9 959 4 30 10 727 4 63 7 741 3 34 6 412 2 77 5 095 2 20 4 542 1 96 2 315 1 00 1 715 0 74 Haute Vienne 54 951 27 19 45 357 22 44 43 137 21 34 10 796 5 34 9 544 4 72 7 877 3 90 9 973 4 93 8 030 3 97 3 555 1 76 5 654 2 80 1 787 0 88 1 457 0 72 Vosges 51 477 25 25 65 676 32 22 32 690 16 04 13 195 6 47 9 359 4 59 7 569 3 71 7 210 3 54 3 850 1 89 6 155 3 02 3 115 1 53 1 988 0 98 1 572 0 77 Yonne 42 616 24 14 55 162 31 25 31 600 17 90 12 941 7 33 9 322 5 28 5 917 3 35 5 356 3 03 4 023 2 28 4 594 2 60 2 286 1 30 1 487 0 84 1 203 0 68 Territoire de Belfort 16 768 24 07 19 061 27 37 14 601 20 96 5 583 8 02 3 322 4 77 2 798 4 02 2 000 2 87 1 485 2 13 1 821 2 61 1 052 1 51 603 0 87 560 0 80 Essonne 164 503 27 65 105 862 17 79 167 310 28 12 39 284 6 60 33 046 5 55 29 562 4 97 11 610 1 95 13 480 2 27 15 203 2 56 7 944 1 34 4 306 0 72 2 831 0 48 Hauts de Seine 287 494 37 11 64 812 8 37 199 640 25 77 62 761 8 10 62 231 8 03 47 103 6 08 11 260 1 45 13 170 1 70 9 746 1 26 10 518 1 36 3 704 0 48 2 306 0 30 Seine Saint Denis 110 117 20 27 64 542 11 88 266 630 49 09 27 968 5 15 17 479 3 22 19 352 3 56 6 805 1 25 11 642 2 14 6 300 1 16 5 890 1 08 3 662 0 67 2 756 0 51 Val de Marne 171 409 29 10 69 599 11 82 192 427 32 67 43 430 7 37 32 522 5 52 31 904 5 42 8 944 1 52 14 954 2 54 9 359 1 59 8 276 1 40 3 730 0 63 2 504 0 43 Val d Oise 138 166 26 09 91 081 17 20 175 666 33 17 37 564 7 09 26 403 4 99 20 710 3 91 9 101 1 72 10 060 1 90 8 996 1 70 6 094 1 15 3 352 0 63 2 392 0 45 Guadeloupe 18 137 13 43 24 204 17 92 75 862 56 16 3 098 2 29 3 979 2 95 1 927 1 43 1 033 0 76 668 0 49 2 114 1 56 2 266 1 68 713 0 53 1 084 0 80 Martinique 20 043 16 30 16 495 13 42 65 292 53 10 3 153 2 56 4 731 3 85 1 978 1 61 1 162 0 95 747 0 61 2 989 2 43 3 935 3 20 977 0 79 1 447 1 18 French Guiana 5 101 14 22 6 334 17 66 18 143 50 59 1 573 4 39 997 2 78 940 2 62 516 1 44 246 0 69 717 2 00 535 1 49 462 1 29 297 0 83 Reunion 62 542 18 04 85 770 24 73 139 604 40 26 13 070 3 77 9 738 2 81 7 994 2 31 4 844 1 40 3 074 0 89 8 338 2 40 5 549 1 60 2 705 0 78 3 538 1 02 Mayotte 5 936 16 94 14 958 42 68 8 398 23 96 482 1 38 2 810 8 02 295 0 84 359 1 02 206 0 59 530 1 51 318 0 91 328 0 94 430 1 23 New Caledonia 28 561 40 51 13 273 18 83 9 711 13 77 6 435 9 13 4 144 5 88 2 161 3 07 1 031 1 46 399 0 57 2 697 3 83 963 1 37 560 0 79 565 0 80 French Polynesia 24 418 40 25 11 797 19 45 8 035 13 24 4 311 7 11 4 809 7 93 2 166 3 57 618 1 02 376 0 62 1 983 3 27 874 1 44 459 0 76 819 1 35 Saint Pierre and Miquelon 534 19 77 459 16 99 1 105 40 91 80 2 96 51 1 89 116 4 29 108 4 00 19 0 70 82 3 04 75 2 78 50 1 85 22 0 81 Wallis and Futuna 2 115 39 47 579 10 80 501 9 35 118 2 20 1 354 25 27 72 1 34 78 1 46 34 0 63 244 4 55 118 2 20 48 0 90 98 1 83 Saint Martin Saint Barthelemy 2 070 24 74 1 445 17 27 2 354 28 13 1 107 13 23 354 4 23 247 2 95 208 2 49 48 0 57 339 4 05 92 1 10 63 0 75 41 0 49 French residents overseas 224 957 45 09 26 380 5 29 109 394 21 92 43 252 8 67 20 956 4 20 40 774 8 17 5 964 1 20 3 266 0 65 7 074 1 22 12 489 2 50 3 145 0 63 1 300 0 26 TotalSource Ministry of InteriorResults by region Region EmmanuelMacron MarineLe Pen Jean LucMelenchon EricZemmour ValeriePecresse YannickJadot JeanLassalle FabienRoussel NicolasDupont Aignan AnneHidalgo PhilippePoutou NathalieArthaudVotes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Auvergne Rhone Alpes 1 175 085 27 75 943 294 22 28 897 433 21 20 312 916 7 39 217 906 5 15 224 735 5 31 136 436 3 22 96 409 2 28 98 465 2 33 77 570 1 83 30 596 0 72 23 137 0 55 Bourgogne Franche Comte 394 117 26 31 409 639 27 35 277 899 18 56 107 057 7 15 76 654 5 12 60 235 4 02 49 557 3 31 33 932 2 27 38 691 2 58 26 543 1 77 12 737 0 85 10 643 0 71 Brittany 647 172 32 79 385 393 19 53 407 527 20 65 96 984 4 91 92 808 4 70 122 198 6 19 58 653 2 97 51 193 2 59 35 116 1 78 43 596 2 21 19 913 1 01 12 965 0 66 Centre Val de Loire 383 851 28 53 347 845 25 86 251 259 18 68 88 575 6 58 71 690 5 33 54 401 4 04 38 659 2 87 33 590 2 50 31 759 2 36 23 162 1 72 11 226 0 83 9 256 0 69 Corsica 26 795 18 11 42 283 28 58 19 779 13 37 18 936 12 80 9 363 6 33 4 801 3 25 15 408 10 42 4 553 3 08 2 600 1 76 1 589 1 08 1 374 0 93 455 0 31 Grand Est 762 282 27 28 825 219 29 54 492 439 17 63 200 265 7 17 120 931 4 33 111 960 4 01 77 442 2 77 47 425 1 70 74 918 2 68 40 031 1 43 22 243 0 80 18 658 0 67 Hauts de France 773 221 25 40 1 015 361 33 35 577 878 18 98 179 606 5 90 107 631 3 53 95 234 3 13 62 548 2 05 94 831 3 11 55 439 1 82 40 856 1 34 21 150 0 69 20 977 0 69 Ile de France 1 656 341 30 19 711 690 12 97 1 659 152 30 24 409 532 7 47 339 468 6 19 296 229 5 40 87 372 1 59 105 170 1 92 87 360 1 59 78 561 1 43 33 063 0 60 21 907 0 40 Normandy 521 769 29 26 484 106 27 14 335 590 18 82 99 446 5 58 79 800 4 47 73 289 4 11 45 488 2 55 46 358 2 60 38 560 2 16 30 235 1 70 16 005 0 90 12 839 0 72 Nouvelle Aquitaine 945 332 27 63 779 948 22 80 681 405 19 92 210 501 6 15 157 230 4 60 151 747 4 44 201 773 5 90 96 800 2 83 67 662 1 98 77 326 2 26 32 600 0 95 18 496 0 54 Occitanie 777 780 23 48 815 495 24 62 742 543 22 42 260 212 7 86 129 143 3 90 139 234 4 20 184 994 5 59 83 483 2 52 63 260 1 91 77 166 2 33 23 902 0 72 14 884 0 45 Pays de la Loire 707 890 33 27 442 025 20 78 408 969 19 22 114 388 5 38 106 786 5 02 127 934 6 01 54 592 2 57 45 058 2 12 44 215 2 08 43 291 2 03 18 441 0 87 13 853 0 65 Provence Alpes Cote d Azur 619 529 23 34 732 377 27 59 524 677 19 77 310 838 11 71 116 137 4 38 107 670 4 06 72 847 2 74 54 730 2 06 60 204 2 27 29 511 1 11 16 224 0 61 9 473 0 36 Guadeloupe 18 137 13 43 24 204 17 92 75 862 56 16 3 098 2 29 3 979 2 95 1 927 1 43 1 033 0 76 668 0 49 2 114 1 56 2 266 1 68 713 0 53 1 084 0 80 Martinique 20 043 16 30 16 495 13 42 65 292 53 10 3 153 2 56 4 731 3 85 1 978 1 61 1 162 0 95 747 0 61 2 989 2 43 3 935 3 20 977 0 79 1 447 1 18 French Guiana 5 101 14 22 6 334 17 66 18 143 50 59 1 573 4 39 997 2 78 940 2 62 516 1 44 246 0 69 717 2 00 535 1 49 462 1 29 297 0 83 Reunion 62 542 18 04 85 770 24 73 139 604 40 26 13 070 3 77 9 738 2 81 7 994 2 31 4 844 1 40 3 074 0 89 8 338 2 40 5 549 1 60 2 705 0 78 3 538 1 02 Mayotte 5 936 16 94 14 958 42 68 8 398 23 96 482 1 38 2 810 8 02 295 0 84 359 1 02 206 0 59 530 1 51 318 0 91 328 0 94 430 1 23 TotalSource Ministry of InteriorMaps Edit Simplified 2022 French presidential election s first round map Map of which candidate placed second in every department during the first round 2022 French presidential election s first round in Petite Couronne by commune Results of the first round by parliamentary constituency Results of the first round by municipality First place candidate by country Overseas French during the first round Second round Edit Tables Edit Results by department Department EmmanuelMacron MarineLe PenVotes Votes Ain 166 635 54 99 136 370 45 01 Aisne 102 428 40 09 153 069 59 91 Allier 87 645 52 35 79 761 47 65 Alpes de Haute Provence 41 657 48 55 44 139 51 45 Hautes Alpes 42 209 55 06 34 446 44 94 Alpes Maritimes 261 987 50 13 260 627 49 87 Ardeche 90 254 52 40 82 001 47 60 Ardennes 55 085 43 34 72 026 56 66 Ariege 39 297 51 09 37 616 48 91 Aube 68 830 48 32 73 630 51 68 Aude 85 464 45 10 104 038 54 90 Aveyron 89 953 60 07 59 789 39 93 Bouches du Rhone 481 129 52 08 442 759 47 92 Calvados 218 571 60 29 143 955 39 71 Cantal 45 054 56 07 35 301 43 93 Charente 95 654 55 06 78 085 44 94 Charente Maritime 201 159 56 32 156 020 43 68 Cher 77 739 52 56 70 160 47 44 Correze 68 272 55 78 54 131 44 22 Corse du Sud 26 160 41 69 36 595 58 31 Haute Corse 29 951 42 13 41 137 57 87 Cote d Or 144 548 57 27 107 866 42 73 Cotes d Armor 209 856 62 90 123 798 37 10 Creuse 30 552 52 04 28 152 47 96 Dordogne 111 480 51 52 104 894 48 48 Doubs 141 916 57 16 106 347 42 84 Drome 143 696 55 72 114 216 44 28 Eure 146 750 48 62 155 085 51 38 Eure et Loir 109 744 53 29 96 185 46 71 Finistere 332 396 67 50 160 073 32 50 Gard 177 662 47 85 193 659 52 15 Haute Garonne 409 932 64 42 226 450 35 58 Gers 57 115 55 66 45 490 44 34 Gironde 484 771 61 37 305 112 38 63 Herault 297 211 52 57 268 098 47 43 Ille et Vilaine 390 332 70 94 159 930 29 06 Indre 57 574 51 41 54 410 48 59 Indre et Loire 189 230 62 66 112 770 37 34 Isere 359 685 59 80 241 749 40 20 Jura 68 843 53 07 60 882 46 93 Landes 128 771 56 54 98 982 43 46 Loir et Cher 91 359 53 81 78 433 46 19 Loire 194 878 56 64 149 174 43 36 Haute Loire 62 372 50 16 61 979 49 84 Loire Atlantique 492 422 69 20 219 198 30 80 Loiret 180 882 57 57 133 331 42 43 Lot 55 130 59 18 38 031 40 82 Lot et Garonne 81 345 49 53 82 874 50 47 Lozere 22 064 54 20 18 644 45 80 Maine et Loire 274 810 66 53 138 259 33 47 Manche 159 814 59 61 108 292 40 39 Marne 136 054 52 10 125 074 47 90 Haute Marne 38 226 43 04 50 581 56 96 Mayenne 102 263 64 21 57 006 35 79 Meurthe et Moselle 179 248 54 42 150 156 45 58 Meuse 41 933 44 39 52 527 55 61 Morbihan 269 755 62 81 159 717 37 19 Moselle 249 589 50 46 245 060 49 54 Nievre 50 698 49 89 50 923 50 11 Nord 634 038 52 85 565 762 47 15 Oise 182 791 47 27 203 865 52 73 Orne 79 267 55 11 64 559 44 89 Pas de Calais 324 144 42 51 438 390 57 49 Puy de Dome 188 468 60 16 124 825 39 84 Pyrenees Atlantiques 219 766 63 05 128 779 36 95 Hautes Pyrenees 65 085 55 50 52 182 44 50 Pyrenees Orientales 106 188 43 68 136 922 56 32 Bas Rhin 320 198 58 96 222 838 41 04 Haut Rhin 191 814 52 90 170 777 47 10 Rhone 551 544 68 66 251 720 31 34 Haute Saone 53 568 43 10 70 720 56 90 Saone et Loire 144 989 53 33 126 860 46 67 Sarthe 154 909 55 41 124 658 44 59 Savoie 125 770 57 62 92 487 42 38 Haute Savoie 237 506 61 66 147 694 38 34 Paris 808 996 85 10 141 591 14 90 Seine Maritime 332 139 55 28 268 688 44 72 Seine et Marne 329 771 56 98 249 014 43 02 Yvelines 464 910 71 05 189 474 28 95 Deux Sevres 117 805 62 13 71 791 37 87 Somme 109 415 45 37 131 773 54 63 Tarn 106 768 53 06 94 441 46 94 Tarn et Garonne 62 503 47 98 67 770 52 02 Var 252 723 44 90 310 126 55 10 Vaucluse 134 475 48 00 145 705 52 00 Vendee 244 494 61 86 150 772 38 14 Vienne 125 174 60 12 83 050 39 88 Haute Vienne 103 329 59 18 71 263 40 82 Vosges 91 555 47 59 100 839 52 41 Yonne 78 038 48 41 83 169 51 59 Territoire de Belfort 31 987 51 44 30 202 48 56 Essonne 338 567 65 43 178 906 34 57 Hauts de Seine 552 124 80 39 134 685 19 61 Seine Saint Denis 326 038 73 72 116 223 26 28 Val de Marne 376 204 74 48 128 873 25 52 Val d Oise 299 829 66 15 153 446 33 85 Guadeloupe 40 229 30 40 92 106 69 60 Martinique 46 918 39 13 73 000 60 87 French Guiana 14 073 39 30 21 734 60 70 Reunion 147 270 40 43 217 021 59 57 Mayotte 15 707 40 90 22 694 59 10 New Caledonia 43 794 61 04 27 958 38 96 French Polynesia 42 890 51 80 39 913 48 20 Saint Pierre and Miquelon 1 243 49 31 1 278 50 69 Wallis and Futuna 3 830 67 44 1 849 32 56 Saint Martin Saint Barthelemy 3 850 44 58 4 787 55 42 French residents overseas 458 874 86 14 73 830 13 86 Total 18 768 639 58 55 13 288 686 41 45 Source Minister of the InteriorResults by region Region EmmanuelMacron MarineLe PenVotes Votes Auvergne Rhone Alpes 2 253 507 59 76 1 517 277 40 24 Bourgogne Franche Comte 714 587 52 87 636 969 47 13 Brittany 1 202 339 66 58 603 518 33 42 Centre Val de Loire 706 528 56 44 545 289 43 56 Corsica 56 111 41 92 77 732 58 08 Grand Est 1 372 519 52 07 1 263 522 47 93 Hauts de France 1 384 266 47 87 1 507 755 52 13 Ile de France 3 496 439 73 02 1 292 212 26 98 Normandy 936 541 55 84 740 579 44 16 Nouvelle Aquitaine 1 768 079 58 33 1 263 134 41 67 Occitanie 1 574 372 53 96 1 343 130 46 04 Pays de la Loire 1 268 898 64 78 689 893 35 22 Provence Alpes Cote d Azur 1 214 180 49 52 1 237 802 50 48 Guadeloupe 40 229 30 40 92 106 69 60 Martinique 46 918 39 13 73 000 60 87 French Guiana 14 073 39 30 21 734 60 70 Reunion 147 270 40 43 217 021 59 57 Mayotte 15 707 40 90 22 694 59 10 Source Minister of the InteriorMaps Edit Simplified 2022 French presidential election s second round map Results of the second round by parliamentary constituency Results of the second round by municipalityAftermath EditThe New York Times commented that the race was much closer than in 2017 when Macron won 66 1 of the vote to Le Pen s 33 9 but that Macron s margin was wider than expected prior to the election 85 Le Pen conceded defeat minutes after the estimated results were released 83 but still called the outcome a victory for her political movement and for the upcoming parliamentary elections 86 1 It was the best result for the far right in France since the founding of the Fifth French Republic in 1958 87 Olivier Veran Minister for Solidarity and Health stated that the government has heard the French people s message referring to the increasing number of votes for the far right and that there will be a change of method 86 Macron reflected on the results of the elections self critically assuming that many voters voted for him to counter the far right rather than in support of his political positions 88 Macron was congratulated by several world leaders on his re election with his first call coming from German chancellor Olaf Scholz 89 90 Notes EditFootnotes Edit The Union of Democrats and Independents UDI announced it would support the candidate put forward by The Republicans LR Valerie Pecresse References Edit a b Clinch Silvia Amaro Matt 24 April 2022 Macron beats far right rival Le Pen in French presidential election CNBC Retrieved 24 April 2022 Bernard Mathias 24 April 2022 French president Emmanuel Macron wins re election a victory with deep challenges The Conversation Retrieved 25 April 2022 French presidential election How France s once dominant political parties fell from grace France 24 10 April 2022 Samuel Henry 11 April 2022 Valerie Pecresse could lose 5m of her own election campaign money The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 April 2022 Retrieved 12 April 2022 Macron wins French presidential election Le Monde fr 24 April 2022 Retrieved 25 April 2022 The Constitution of the Fifth Republic elysee fr 20 November 2012 Retrieved 30 April 2022 Constitution du 4 octobre 1958 Article 7 Legifrance Archived from the original on 8 December 2017 Retrieved 8 December 2017 Comment les dates de l election sont elles choisies Conseil constitutionnel presidentielle 2017 Archived from the original on 12 July 2019 Retrieved 8 December 2017 France to hold presidential election in April 2022 spokesman Reuters 13 July 2021 Archived from the original on 15 July 2021 Retrieved 15 July 2021 Concernant les parrainages qu est ce qui a change depuis 2012 Conseil constitutionnel 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sans nommer Macron BFMTV Archived from the original on 11 April 2022 Retrieved 12 April 2022 a b Fabien Roussel 10 April 2022 J appelle tous les Francais a se servir du seul bulletin a notre disposition pour la battre au second tour Tweet via Twitter yjadot 10 April 2022 Ce soir en responsabilite j appelle les electeurs et les electrices a faire battre l extreme droite en votant pour Emmanuel Macron le 24 avril prochain Tweet via Twitter vpecresse 10 April 2022 Je voterai en conscience E Macron pour empecher l arrivee au pouvoir de M Le Pen et le chaos qui en resulterait Tweet via Twitter Goldhammer Arthur 12 April 2022 In French Election It s Macron vs Le Pen in a Showdown for Melenchon s Voters The New Republic Archived from the original on 11 April 2022 Retrieved 12 April 2022 n arthaud 10 April 2022 Nous avons le choix entre 2 ennemis Le 24 avril je voterai blanc Tweet via Twitter Nous avons le choix entre 2 ennemis Le 24 avril je voterai blanc Paris March AFP 11 April 2022 Archived from the original on 11 April 2022 Retrieved 12 April 2022 Archived copy Facebook Archived from the original on 12 April 2022 Retrieved 12 April 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Samuel Henry 14 April 2022 Marine Le Pen I would hold a referendum on reinstating the death penalty The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Samuel Henry 15 April 2022 Le Pen is willing to hold death penalty referendum if she is elected The Independent Retrieved 24 April 2022 Samuel Henry 15 April 2022 I ll ban the Muslim headscarf in public says Marine Le Pen as veil enters French presidential race The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Macron clashes with Le Pen over Islamic headscarf ban France 24 15 April 2022 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Macron comes out on top in French election TV debate with Le Pen The Guardian 21 April 2022 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Rose Michel 22 April 2022 Analysis Macron cements French presidential frontrunner status with combative debate performance Reuters Retrieved 25 April 2022 POLITICO Poll of Polls French polls trends and election news for France POLITICO Archived from the original on 1 February 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2022 a b Election presidentielle 2022 www resultats elections interieur gouv fr Retrieved 24 April 2022 Macron wins French presidential election Le Monde 24 April 2022 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Macron beats Le Pen in French election projections BBC News Retrieved 24 April 2022 Cohen Roger 24 April 2022 Emmanuel Macron is re elected French president defeating Marine Le Pen The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Macron projected to win reelection as French president defeating Le Pen www cbsnews com Retrieved 24 April 2022 Noack Rick Birnbaum Michael Petit Elie 24 April 2022 France s Macron wins presidency holding off Le Pen s far right threat to upend Europe and relations with Russia Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 24 April 2022 a b Macron wins French presidential election as Le Pen concedes The Sydney Morning Herald 24 April 2022 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Resultats de l election presidentielle 2022 Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Cohen Roger 24 April 2022 Emmanuel Macron is re elected French president defeating Marine Le Pen The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 April 2022 a b Boris Johnson congratulates Macron Sky News Adghirni Sami 20 June 2022 How an Emboldened Far Right Is Changing French Politics The Washington Post Retrieved 20 June 2022 Wiegel Michaela Paris Prasident wiedergewahlt Macron will Wut der Le Pen Wahler ansprechen FAZ NET in German ISSN 0174 4909 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Macron s first phone call after re election was Germany s Scholz France24 24 April 2022 Retrieved 25 April 2022 French election World leaders congratulate Macron on victory Al Jazeera 25 April 2022 Retrieved 25 April 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to French presidential election 2022 Constitutional Council official site in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2022 French presidential election amp oldid 1132198545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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