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Union for a Popular Movement

The Union for a Popular Movement (French: Union pour un mouvement populaire, French pronunciation: ​[ynjɔ̃ puʁ œ̃ muvmɑ̃ pɔpylɛʁ]; UMP, French pronunciation: ​[y.ɛmpe]) was a centre-right[3] political party in France belonging to the Gaullist tradition. During its existence, the UMP was one of the two major parties in French politics along with the Socialist Party (PS). The UMP was formed in 2002 as a merger of several centre-right parties under the leadership of President Jacques Chirac. In May 2015, the party was succeeded by The Republicans.[4][5]

Union for a Popular Movement
Union pour un mouvement populaire
PresidentNicolas Sarkozy[1]
Vice PresidentNathalie Kosciusko-Morizet
General SecretaryLaurent Wauquiez
FounderJacques Chirac
Founded27 September 2002; 20 years ago (2002-09-27)
Dissolved30 May 2015; 7 years ago (2015-05-30)
Merger of
Succeeded byThe Republicans
Headquarters238, rue de Vaugirard 75015 Paris Cedex 15
Membership (2014)143,000[citation needed]
IdeologyLiberal conservatism
Gaullism
Political positionCentre-right
European affiliationEuropean People's Party[2]
International affiliationCentrist Democrat International[2]
International Democrat Union[2]
European Parliament groupEuropean People's Party
Colours
  •   Blue
  •   White
  •   Red
Website
. Archived from the original on 21 May 2015. Retrieved 4 March 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

Nicolas Sarkozy, then the president of the UMP, was elected President of France in the 2007 French presidential election, until he was later defeated by PS candidate François Hollande in the 2012 presidential election. After the November 2012 party congress, the UMP experienced internal fractioning and was plagued by monetary scandals which forced its president, Jean-François Copé, to resign. After Sarkozy's re-election as UMP president in November 2014, he put forward an amendment to change the name of the party to The Republicans, which was approved and came into effect on 30 May 2015.[4][5]

The UMP enjoyed an absolute majority in the National Assembly from 2002 to 2012, and was a member of the European People's Party (EPP), the Centrist Democrat International (CDI) and the International Democrat Union (IDU).

History

Background

Since the 1980s, the political groups of the parliamentary right have joined forces around the values of economic liberalism and the building of Europe. Their rivalries had contributed to their defeat in the 1981 and 1988 legislative elections.

Before the 1993 legislative election, the Gaullist Rally for the Republic (RPR) and the centrist Union for French Democracy (UDF) formed an electoral alliance, the Union for France (UPF). However, in the 1995 presidential campaign they were both divided between followers of Jacques Chirac, who was eventually elected, and supporters of Prime Minister Edouard Balladur. After their defeat in the 1997 legislative election, the RPR and UDF created the Alliance for France in order to coordinate the actions of their parliamentary groups.

Foundation and early years

Before the 2002 presidential campaign, the supporters of President Jacques Chirac, divided in three centre-right parliamentary parties, founded an association named Union on the Move (Union en mouvement).[6] After Chirac's re-election, in order to contest the legislative election jointly, the Union for the Presidential Majority (Union pour la majorité présidentielle) was created. It was renamed "Union for a Popular Movement" and as such established as a permanent organisation.[6]

The UMP was the merger of the Gaullist-conservative Rally for the Republic (RPR), the conservative-liberal party Liberal Democracy (DL), a sizeable portion of the Union for French Democracy (UDF),[7] more precisely the UDF's Christian Democrats (such as Philippe Douste-Blazy and Jacques Barrot), the Radical Party and the centrist Popular Party for French Democracy (both associate parties of the UDF until 2002). In the UMP four major French political families were thus represented: Gaullism, republicanism (the kind of liberalism put forward by parties like the Democratic Republican Alliance or the PR, heir of DL), Christian democracy (Popularism) and radicalism.

Chirac's close ally Alain Juppé became the party's first president at the party's founding congress at the Bourget in November 2002. Juppé won 79.42% of the vote, defeating Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, the leader of the party's Eurosceptic Arise the Republic faction, and three other candidates.[6] During the party's earlier years, it was marked by tensions and rivalries between Juppé and other chiraquiens and supporters of Nicolas Sarkozy, the then-Minister of the Interior.

In the 2004 regional elections the UMP suffered a heavy blow, winning the presidencies of only 2 out of 22 regions in metropolitan France (Alsace and Corsica) and only half of the departments (the right had previously won numerous departmental presidencies) in the simultaneous 2004 cantonal elections. In the 2004 European Parliament election on 13 June 2004, the UMP also suffered another heavy blow, winning 16.6% of the vote, far behind the Socialist Party (PS), and only 16 seats.

Nicolas Sarkozy (2004–2012)

Juppé resigned the party's presidency on 15 July 2004 after being found guilty in a corruption scandal in January of the same year. Nicolas Sarkozy rapidly announced that he would take over the presidency of the UMP and resign his position as finance minister, ending months of speculation. On 28 November 2004, Sarkozy was elected to the party's presidency with 85.09% of the votes against 9.1% for Dupont-Aignan and 5.82% for Christine Boutin, the leader of the UMP's social conservatives.[6][8] Having gained control of what had been Chirac's party, Sarkozy focused the party machinery and his energies on the 2007 presidential election.

The failure of the referendum on the European Constitution on 25 May 2005 led to the fall of the government of Jean-Pierre Raffarin and to the formation of a new cabinet, presided by another UMP politician, Dominique de Villepin. However, during this time, the UMP under Sarkozy gained a record number of new members and rejuvenated itself in preparation of the 2007 election. On 14 January 2007, Sarkozy was nominated unopposed as the UMP's presidential candidate for the 2007 election.

On the issues, the party under Sarkozy publicly disapproved of Turkey's proposed membership in the European Union, which Chirac had previously endorsed several times publicly, and generally took a more right-wing position.

On 22 April 2007 Nicolas Sarkozy won the plurality of votes in the first round of the 2007 presidential election. On 6 May he faced the Socialist Party candidate Ségolène Royal in the second round and won, taking 53.06% of the vote. As a consequence, he resigned from the presidency of the UMP on 14 May 2007, two days before becoming President of the French Republic. François Fillon was appointed Prime Minister. On 17 June 2007, at a 2007 legislative election, the UMP gained a majority in the National Assembly with 313 out of 577 seats.

Following Sarkozy's election to the presidency, interim leader Jean-Claude Gaudin prevented a leadership struggle between Patrick Devedjian and Jean-Pierre Raffarin by announcing that the UMP should have a collegial leadership while Sarkozy was President of the Republic.[9] In July, the UMP's national council approved an amendment to the party's statute allowing for a collegial leadership around three vice-presidents (Jean-Pierre Raffarin, Jean-Claude Gaudin and Pierre Méhaignerie) and a secretary-general (Patrick Devedjian) and two associate secretary-generals.

On 9 March 2008 municipal and cantonal elections, the party performed quite poorly, losing numerous cities, such as Toulouse and Strasbourg, as well as eight departmental presidencies to the left. Xavier Bertrand was selected as secretary-general of the party in late 2008 to replace Patrick Devedjian, who resigned to take up a cabinet position.[10]

In the 2009 European Parliament election on 7 June 2009, the UMP ran common lists with its junior allies including Jean-Louis Borloo's Radical Party, the New Centre and Modern Left. The UMP list won 27.9%, a remarkably good result for a governing party in off-year "mid-term" elections, and elected 29 MEPs, significantly improving on the UMP's poor result in the 2004 European election – also an off-year election. However, in the 2010 regional elections on 14 and 21 March 2010, the UMP obtained a very poor result with only 26%. While it lost Corsica, it retained Alsace but also defeated the left in La Réunion and French Guiana.

In a cabinet reshuffle in November 2010, which disappointed centrists within and outside the UMP, François Fillon was confirmed Prime Minister and Alain Juppé re-joined the government. Among those who resigned from the cabinet were Bernard Kouchner, Hervé Morin and, above all, Jean-Louis Borloo. Xavier Bertrand, who re-joined the government, was replaced as general-secretary of the UMP by Jean-François Copé on 17 November 2010.[11][12]

The party suffered another major electoral defeat in the 2011 cantonal elections held on 20 and 27 March 2011, and in September, the centre-right lost control of the French Senate for the first time in the history of the Fifth Republic.

In May 2011, during a party congress, the Radical Party, led by Borloo, decided to leave the UMP and launch The Alliance, a new centrist coalition.[13][14][15]

The party opted not to organise primaries ahead of the 2012 presidential election[16] and endorsed Nicolas Sarkozy's bid for second term. Sarkozy lost reelection to the Socialist Party candidate François Hollande on 6 May 2012, winning 48.36% in the runoff. The party was defeated by the new President's left-wing majority in the subsequent legislative election.

After May 2012

Prior to Sarkozy's defeat on 6 May, the UMP's secretary-general Jean-François Copé announced that he supported the creation of internal "movements" within the party[17] and the organisation of primaries for the next presidential election.[18]

Campaign for the November 2012 congress

The UMP's political bureau announced the organisation of a party congress on 18 and 25 November 2012,[19] leading prominent party leaders to organise factions and "movements" to influence the party's new direction.[20]

Ultimately, two candidates amassed the required endorsements to run for the party's presidency: former Prime Minister François Fillon[21] and incumbent party secretary-general Jean-François Copé.[22] Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet,[23] Bruno Le Maire,[24] Xavier Bertrand,[25] Henri Guaino,[26] and Dominique Dord[27] had also announced their candidacies but did not meet tough candidacy requirements.

The campaign between Fillon and Copé lasted two months. Fillon had a strong lead in polls of UMP 'sympathizers' (as opposed to actual members, who would be the only eligible voters) and was backed by most UMP parliamentarians[28] while Copé claimed he was the candidate of party activists rather than party 'barons'.[29] However, Copé remained as secretary-general and retained control of the party machinery.[30]

While Fillon's campaign was regarded as more consensual, moderate and centre-right; Copé campaigned as the candidate of the droite décomplexée ('uninhibited right')[31] and introduced issues such as anti-white racism.[32] However, both candidates received support from moderate and conservative members of the party and their main differences were in rhetoric, style and temperament.[33] Copé, again, appeared more militant and activist, saying that he would support and participate in street demonstrations[34] while Fillon disagreed with his rival.[35]

Six 'motions' (declarations of principles) were submitted to party voters; under the new statutes, motions which won over 10% of the vote at the congress would be recognised as "movements" by the UMP leadership, granted financial autonomy and receive positions in the party structures.[citation needed]

Results and subsequent crisis

The vote on 18 November saw high turnout but was quickly marred by allegations of irregularities and potential fraud on both sides.[36] Both candidates proclaimed victory within 20 minutes of each other on the night of the vote.[37]

24 hours later, the control commission in charge of the vote (COCOE) announced Copé's victory by only 98 votes.[38] While Fillon initially conceded defeat, by 21 November his campaign claimed victory anew, with a 26-vote advantage over Copé.[39] Fillon's campaign argued that the COCOE had failed to take into account votes cast in three overseas federations.

Party elder Alain Juppé accepted to lead a mediation between both candidates on 23 November,[40] but it failed within two days. Fillon's announced "precautionary seizure" of ballots cast "to protect them from tampering or alteration"[41] and threatened to take the matter to court.[42] On 26 November, the party appeals commission – led by a close supporter of Copé – decided in Copé's favour and rejected Fillon's arguments.[43]

On 27 November 72 filloniste parliamentarians in the National Assembly announced the creation of a new parliamentary group, the Rassemblement-UMP, led by Fillon.[44] Copé took up former President Nicolas Sarkozy's proposal of organising a referendum on a revote, but he saw the creation of the dissident filloniste group as a casus belli and took back his proposal. Luc Chatel, the new vice-president and a Copé supporter, later announced that he supported a new presidential vote and a modification of party statutes.[45] The next day, Copé announced that he favoured organising a referendum the modification of party statutes and a reduction of his own term as president to two years (until November 2014); while Fillon welcomed the "consensus on the organisation of a new election" he rejected his rival's timeline and called for a new election before 2014.[46] 'Unaligned' members of the UMP led by Bruno Le Maire and Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet appealed for the organisation of a new election in the spring of 2013 and a reform of the party statutes.[47]

Resolution

Both rivals reached an agreement at the end of December 2012,[48] with Copé agreeing to the organisation of a new election and a modification of party statutes while Fillon agreed to dissolve his parliamentary group.

The party's leadership was reorganized in January 2013 to accommodate Copé and Fillon's supporters: Laurent Wauquiez and Valérie Pécresse joined Luc Chatel and Michèle Tabarot as vice-president and secretary-general respectively. Christian Estrosi, Gérard Longuet, Henri de Raincourt (pro-Fillon), Jean-Claude Gaudin, Brice Hortefeux and Roger Karoutchi (pro-Copé) also became vice-presidents. Other positions in the party hierarchy were divided between supporters of both candidates.[49] New leaders were also nominated in February 2013.

Bygmalion Scandal

Several spending scandals appeared in 2014. In early 2014, the Bygmalion scandal (fr) pushed the party's leader Jean-François Copé to resign. In early July, Sarkozy got held in custody due to possible spying and active corruption of the judiciary system. On 8 July 2014, the UMP was discovered to have a hidden debt of €79.1 million for the year 2013.[50] On 20 May 2021, the criminal trial began for Sarkozy and 13 other defendants who were said to have been involved in the Bygmalion scandal.[51] The scandal allegations that Sarkozy diverting tens of millions of euros which was intended to be spent on the his failed 2012 re-election campaign and then hiring a PR firm to cover it up.[51] The illicit campaign finance money which was not reported as being spent on Sarkozy's re-election campaign was instead used to overspend on lavish campaign rallies and events.[51] On 30 September 2021, Sarkozy and his co-defendants would be convicted for violating France's campaign finance spending limit law.[52] For this conviction, Sarkozy was given a 1-year prison sentence, though he was also given the option to instead serve this sentence at home with an electronic bracelet.[52]

Name change and dissolution

After the election of Nicolas Sarkozy, the former President of France (2007–2012), as president of the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) in November 2014, he put forward a request to the party's general committee to change its name to the Republicans as well as the statutes of the party. With the name already chosen Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, vice president of the UMP, presented Nicolas Sarkozy and the party's political bureau a project of new statutes. The proposed statutes provided for, among others, the election of the presidents of the departmental federations by direct suffrage, the end of the political currents and consulting members on election nominations.[53]

Critics of Sarkozy claimed it was illegal for him to name the party "Republicans" because every French person is a republican in that they support the values and ideals of the French Republic that emanated from the French Revolution, and as such the term is above party politics.[54] The new name was adopted by the bureau on 5 May 2015 and approved by the party membership on 28 May by an online yes vote of 83.28% on a 45.74% participation after a court ruling in favor of Sarkozy.[55] Similarly the new party statutes are adopted by 96.34% of voters and the composition of the new party's political bureau by 94.77%. The Republicans thus became the legal successor of the UMP as the leading centre-right party in France.[5]

Ideology and platform

The UMP was a party of the centre-right[3] belonging to the Gaullist lineage,[56][57] and was variously described as liberal-conservative,[2][58] conservative,[59] conservative-liberal,[57] and Christian democratic.[2]

The UMP believed that each individual's destiny must be unencumbered and it rejects political systems which "stifle economic freedom". It said that work, merit, innovation and personal initiative must be encouraged to reduce unemployment and boost economic growth; but at the same time, it maintained that adherence to the rule of law and the authority of the state is necessary. In a Gaullist tradition, the UMP supported solidarity, with the state guaranteeing social protection of less fortunate individuals. But in a more liberal vein, the party always denounced l'assistanat, a French term which can refer to "welfare handouts".

The party took more nationalist positions at times, and often adopted tough stances against immigration and illegal immigration. It strongly supported the integration and assimilation of immigrants into French society and always denounced communitarianism as a danger to the French nation-state. However, the UMP traditionally was a strong proponent of European integration and the European Union, albeit sometimes with a hint of traditional Gaullist souverainism.[60]

Under Nicolas Sarkozy's leadership, the UMP adopted a liberal and security-oriented platform. His platform in the 2007 and 2012 presidential elections emphasised the ideas of personal responsibility and individual initiative. He developed the idea of "working more to earn more", promising that overtime hours would not be taxed and employers exonerated from non-wage labour costs.[61] Under his presidency, the government's short-lived tax cap for high-income earners was denounced by the left but also several centrist and centre-right politicians within or outside the UMP.

Having gained his popularity as a 'hardliner' Interior minister, Sarkozy's policies also carried a strong law-and-order and tough on crime orientation. He supported tougher sentences for criminals and repeat offenders.[61] As candidate and President, he placed heavy emphasis on immigration and national identity, presenting immigration as a danger to French identity and as source of increased criminality. As President, he imposed stricter limits on family reunification, created a Ministry of Immigration, and National Identity for three years between 2007 and 2010, launched a controversial national dialogue on national identity and expelled thousands of Roma from illegal camps.[61]

Critics of the right-wing government denounced what they felt was a rapprochement with the controversial far-right National Front (FN). While several members of the UMP's right-wing have indicated that they would favour local alliances with the FN and prefer to vote for a FN candidate over a Socialist Party or left-wing candidate in runoff elections between the left and the FN; the party's official position continues to reject alliances with the FN at any level but also opposes so-called "republican fronts" with the left against the FN.[62][63]

Factions

The UMP's original statutes in 2002 allowed for the organisation of formal factions or movements within the party, to represent the various political families of which it was made up. However, fearing leadership rivalries and divisions, Juppé, Chirac and later Sarkozy 'postponed' the creation of such organised movements indefinitely. Nevertheless, prior to the organisations of formal "movements" in November 2012, there existed informal groupings of like-minded members, either through associations, political clubs, associated political parties or even informal factions.

Jean-François Copé allowed for the organisation of formal movements within the party following the November 2012 congress. According to the party's statutes, motions backed by at least 10 parliamentarians from 10 departmental federations and which obtain at least 10% support from members at a congress are recognised as movements. They are granted financial autonomy by way of a fixed grant and additional funding in proportion to the votes they obtained; but the sum of funds transferred by the party to its movements can be no larger than 30% of the annual public subsidies the UMP receives from the state.[64]

Official movement and factions

Six motions representing various ideological tendencies within the party ran to be recognised as official movements following the November 2012 congress. Five of these motions met the conditions to be recognised as such, and their leaders have since integrated the UMP's leadership structure:

Associate parties

The Hunting, Fishing, Nature, Tradition, the Christian Democratic Party, the Rally for France and The Progressives are associate parties of the UMP. By adhering to these parties, members also adhered to the UMP and could participate in the UMP's inner organisation. The Radical Party was associated with the UMP from 2002 through 2011.

Overseas parties associated with the UMP included O Porinetia To Tatou Ai'a in French Polynesia and The Rally–UMP in New Caledonia.

2012 leadership election

The aforementioned November 2012 congress saw the division of the party between the two candidates who sought the party's presidency, François Fillon and Jean-François Copé – the fillonistes and copéistes.

Elected officials

Major officeholders

Popular support

The UMP's electoral base reflects that of the old Rally for the Republic (RPR) and, in some cases, that of the Union for French Democracy (UDF). In the 2007 presidential election, Nicolas Sarkozy performed best in the east of France – particularly Alsace (36.2%); Provence-Alpes-Côte-d'Azur (37.0%) – the wealthy coastal department of the Alpes-Maritimes (43.6%) was his best department in France; Champagne-Ardenne (32.7%) and Rhône-Alpes (32.7%). These areas were among National Front candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen's best regions in 2002 and are conservative on issues such as immigration. Sarkozy received a lot of votes from voters who had supported the far-right in April 2002. For example, in the Alpes-Maritimes, Sarkozy performed 21.6% better than Chirac did in 2002 while Le Pen lost 12.6% in five years.[68] Sarkozy also appealed more than average to blue-collar workers in regions such as northern Meurthe-et-Moselle and the Nord-Pas-de-Calais, although most of these regions, despite his gains, remain reliably left-wing.[69] The party is also strong in every election in very wealthy suburban or coastal (and, in some cases, urban) areas such as Neuilly-sur-Seine (72.6% for Sarkozy in the first round),[70] Saint-Tropez (54.79%),[71] Cannes (48.19%)[72] or Marcq-en-Barœul (47.35%).[73] It is strong in most rural areas, like most conservative parties in the world, but this does not extend to the rural areas of the south of France, areas which are old strongholds of republican and secular ideals. However, in old "clerical" Catholic rural areas, such as parts of Lozère or Cantal, it is very strong, as was the UDF during its hey day.

However, the UMP does poorly in one of the UDF's best regions, Brittany, where the decline of religious practice, a moderate electorate and urbanisation has hurt the UMP and also the UDF. Nicolas Sarkozy performed relatively poorly in departments with a large share of moderate Christian democratic (often centrist or centre-right) voters, such as Lozère where the Socialist candidate Ségolène Royal performed better (44.3%) than François Mitterrand had in his 1988 left-wing landslide (43.1%). While former President Jacques Chirac, the right's strongman in normally left-wing Corrèze had always done very well in Corrèze and the surrounding departments, Sarkozy did very poorly and actually lost the department in the 2007 runoff. However, in the 2009 European election, the UMP's results in those departments were superior to Sarkozy's first round result (nationally, they were 4% lower).[68]

Leadership

 
Nicolas Sarkozy speaking at a UMP party congress in 2004

Presidents

No. Name Photo Began Left
1 Alain Juppé
 
17 November 2002 16 July 2004
Interim
Jean-Claude Gaudin
 
16 July 2004 28 November 2004
2 Nicolas Sarkozy
 
28 November 2004 14 May 2007

Vacant (Secretaries-general as the head of the party)

 
14 May 2007 19 November 2012
3 Jean-François Copé
 
19 November 2012 15 June 2014
Interim
15 June 2014 October 2014
(2) Nicolas Sarkozy
 
30 November 2014 30 May 2015

Vice presidents

Presidents of the National Council

Secretaries-general

Group leaders in the National Assembly

Group leaders in the Senate

Election results

Presidential

President of the French Republic
Election Candidate First round Second round Result
Votes % Votes %
2002 Jacques Chirac 5,665,855 19.88% 25,537,956 82.21% Won
2007 Nicolas Sarkozy 11,448,663 31.18% 18,983,138 53.06% Won
2012 9,753,629 27.18% 16,860,685 48.36% Lost

National Assembly

National Assembly
Election Leader First round Second round Seats Position Result
Votes % Votes %
2002 Jean-Pierre Raffarin 8,408,023 33.30% 10,026,669 47.26%
357 / 577
1st Government
2007 François Fillon 10,289,737 39.54% 9,460,710 46.36%
313 / 577
1st Government
2012 Jean-François Copé 7,037,268 27.12% 8,740,625 34.49%
194 / 577
2nd Opposition

European Parliament

European Parliament
Election Leader Votes % Seats Position
2004 Jean-Pierre Raffarin 2,856,368 16.64%
17 / 74
2nd
2009 Xavier Bertrand 4,799,908 27.88%
29 / 74
1st
2014 Jean-François Copé 3,942,766 20.80%
20 / 74
2nd

See also

References

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External links

    union, popular, movement, french, union, pour, mouvement, populaire, french, pronunciation, ynjɔ, puʁ, muvmɑ, pɔpylɛʁ, french, pronunciation, ɛmpe, centre, right, political, party, france, belonging, gaullist, tradition, during, existence, major, parties, fren. The Union for a Popular Movement French Union pour un mouvement populaire French pronunciation ynjɔ puʁ œ muvmɑ pɔpylɛʁ UMP French pronunciation y ɛmpe was a centre right 3 political party in France belonging to the Gaullist tradition During its existence the UMP was one of the two major parties in French politics along with the Socialist Party PS The UMP was formed in 2002 as a merger of several centre right parties under the leadership of President Jacques Chirac In May 2015 the party was succeeded by The Republicans 4 5 Union for a Popular Movement Union pour un mouvement populairePresidentNicolas Sarkozy 1 Vice PresidentNathalie Kosciusko MorizetGeneral SecretaryLaurent WauquiezFounderJacques ChiracFounded27 September 2002 20 years ago 2002 09 27 Dissolved30 May 2015 7 years ago 2015 05 30 Merger ofRally for the RepublicLiberal DemocracyDemocratic ConventionSucceeded byThe RepublicansHeadquarters238 rue de Vaugirard 75015 Paris Cedex 15Membership 2014 143 000 citation needed IdeologyLiberal conservatismGaullismPolitical positionCentre rightEuropean affiliationEuropean People s Party 2 International affiliationCentrist Democrat International 2 International Democrat Union 2 European Parliament groupEuropean People s PartyColours Blue White RedWebsite UMP Union pour un Mouvement Populaire Archived from the original on 21 May 2015 Retrieved 4 March 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Politics of FrancePolitical partiesElectionsNicolas Sarkozy then the president of the UMP was elected President of France in the 2007 French presidential election until he was later defeated by PS candidate Francois Hollande in the 2012 presidential election After the November 2012 party congress the UMP experienced internal fractioning and was plagued by monetary scandals which forced its president Jean Francois Cope to resign After Sarkozy s re election as UMP president in November 2014 he put forward an amendment to change the name of the party to The Republicans which was approved and came into effect on 30 May 2015 4 5 The UMP enjoyed an absolute majority in the National Assembly from 2002 to 2012 and was a member of the European People s Party EPP the Centrist Democrat International CDI and the International Democrat Union IDU Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Foundation and early years 1 3 Nicolas Sarkozy 2004 2012 1 4 After May 2012 1 4 1 Campaign for the November 2012 congress 1 4 2 Results and subsequent crisis 1 4 3 Resolution 1 4 4 Bygmalion Scandal 1 5 Name change and dissolution 2 Ideology and platform 3 Factions 3 1 Official movement and factions 3 2 Associate parties 3 3 2012 leadership election 4 Elected officials 4 1 Major officeholders 5 Popular support 6 Leadership 6 1 Presidents 6 2 Vice presidents 6 3 Presidents of the National Council 6 4 Secretaries general 6 5 Group leaders in the National Assembly 6 6 Group leaders in the Senate 7 Election results 7 1 Presidential 7 2 National Assembly 7 3 European Parliament 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditBackground Edit Since the 1980s the political groups of the parliamentary right have joined forces around the values of economic liberalism and the building of Europe Their rivalries had contributed to their defeat in the 1981 and 1988 legislative elections Before the 1993 legislative election the Gaullist Rally for the Republic RPR and the centrist Union for French Democracy UDF formed an electoral alliance the Union for France UPF However in the 1995 presidential campaign they were both divided between followers of Jacques Chirac who was eventually elected and supporters of Prime Minister Edouard Balladur After their defeat in the 1997 legislative election the RPR and UDF created the Alliance for France in order to coordinate the actions of their parliamentary groups Foundation and early years Edit Before the 2002 presidential campaign the supporters of President Jacques Chirac divided in three centre right parliamentary parties founded an association named Union on the Move Union en mouvement 6 After Chirac s re election in order to contest the legislative election jointly the Union for the Presidential Majority Union pour la majorite presidentielle was created It was renamed Union for a Popular Movement and as such established as a permanent organisation 6 The UMP was the merger of the Gaullist conservative Rally for the Republic RPR the conservative liberal party Liberal Democracy DL a sizeable portion of the Union for French Democracy UDF 7 more precisely the UDF s Christian Democrats such as Philippe Douste Blazy and Jacques Barrot the Radical Party and the centrist Popular Party for French Democracy both associate parties of the UDF until 2002 In the UMP four major French political families were thus represented Gaullism republicanism the kind of liberalism put forward by parties like the Democratic Republican Alliance or the PR heir of DL Christian democracy Popularism and radicalism Chirac s close ally Alain Juppe became the party s first president at the party s founding congress at the Bourget in November 2002 Juppe won 79 42 of the vote defeating Nicolas Dupont Aignan the leader of the party s Eurosceptic Arise the Republic faction and three other candidates 6 During the party s earlier years it was marked by tensions and rivalries between Juppe and other chiraquiens and supporters of Nicolas Sarkozy the then Minister of the Interior In the 2004 regional elections the UMP suffered a heavy blow winning the presidencies of only 2 out of 22 regions in metropolitan France Alsace and Corsica and only half of the departments the right had previously won numerous departmental presidencies in the simultaneous 2004 cantonal elections In the 2004 European Parliament election on 13 June 2004 the UMP also suffered another heavy blow winning 16 6 of the vote far behind the Socialist Party PS and only 16 seats Nicolas Sarkozy 2004 2012 Edit Juppe resigned the party s presidency on 15 July 2004 after being found guilty in a corruption scandal in January of the same year Nicolas Sarkozy rapidly announced that he would take over the presidency of the UMP and resign his position as finance minister ending months of speculation On 28 November 2004 Sarkozy was elected to the party s presidency with 85 09 of the votes against 9 1 for Dupont Aignan and 5 82 for Christine Boutin the leader of the UMP s social conservatives 6 8 Having gained control of what had been Chirac s party Sarkozy focused the party machinery and his energies on the 2007 presidential election The failure of the referendum on the European Constitution on 25 May 2005 led to the fall of the government of Jean Pierre Raffarin and to the formation of a new cabinet presided by another UMP politician Dominique de Villepin However during this time the UMP under Sarkozy gained a record number of new members and rejuvenated itself in preparation of the 2007 election On 14 January 2007 Sarkozy was nominated unopposed as the UMP s presidential candidate for the 2007 election On the issues the party under Sarkozy publicly disapproved of Turkey s proposed membership in the European Union which Chirac had previously endorsed several times publicly and generally took a more right wing position On 22 April 2007 Nicolas Sarkozy won the plurality of votes in the first round of the 2007 presidential election On 6 May he faced the Socialist Party candidate Segolene Royal in the second round and won taking 53 06 of the vote As a consequence he resigned from the presidency of the UMP on 14 May 2007 two days before becoming President of the French Republic Francois Fillon was appointed Prime Minister On 17 June 2007 at a 2007 legislative election the UMP gained a majority in the National Assembly with 313 out of 577 seats Following Sarkozy s election to the presidency interim leader Jean Claude Gaudin prevented a leadership struggle between Patrick Devedjian and Jean Pierre Raffarin by announcing that the UMP should have a collegial leadership while Sarkozy was President of the Republic 9 In July the UMP s national council approved an amendment to the party s statute allowing for a collegial leadership around three vice presidents Jean Pierre Raffarin Jean Claude Gaudin and Pierre Mehaignerie and a secretary general Patrick Devedjian and two associate secretary generals On 9 March 2008 municipal and cantonal elections the party performed quite poorly losing numerous cities such as Toulouse and Strasbourg as well as eight departmental presidencies to the left Xavier Bertrand was selected as secretary general of the party in late 2008 to replace Patrick Devedjian who resigned to take up a cabinet position 10 In the 2009 European Parliament election on 7 June 2009 the UMP ran common lists with its junior allies including Jean Louis Borloo s Radical Party the New Centre and Modern Left The UMP list won 27 9 a remarkably good result for a governing party in off year mid term elections and elected 29 MEPs significantly improving on the UMP s poor result in the 2004 European election also an off year election However in the 2010 regional elections on 14 and 21 March 2010 the UMP obtained a very poor result with only 26 While it lost Corsica it retained Alsace but also defeated the left in La Reunion and French Guiana In a cabinet reshuffle in November 2010 which disappointed centrists within and outside the UMP Francois Fillon was confirmed Prime Minister and Alain Juppe re joined the government Among those who resigned from the cabinet were Bernard Kouchner Herve Morin and above all Jean Louis Borloo Xavier Bertrand who re joined the government was replaced as general secretary of the UMP by Jean Francois Cope on 17 November 2010 11 12 The party suffered another major electoral defeat in the 2011 cantonal elections held on 20 and 27 March 2011 and in September the centre right lost control of the French Senate for the first time in the history of the Fifth Republic In May 2011 during a party congress the Radical Party led by Borloo decided to leave the UMP and launch The Alliance a new centrist coalition 13 14 15 The party opted not to organise primaries ahead of the 2012 presidential election 16 and endorsed Nicolas Sarkozy s bid for second term Sarkozy lost reelection to the Socialist Party candidate Francois Hollande on 6 May 2012 winning 48 36 in the runoff The party was defeated by the new President s left wing majority in the subsequent legislative election After May 2012 Edit Prior to Sarkozy s defeat on 6 May the UMP s secretary general Jean Francois Cope announced that he supported the creation of internal movements within the party 17 and the organisation of primaries for the next presidential election 18 Campaign for the November 2012 congress Edit The UMP s political bureau announced the organisation of a party congress on 18 and 25 November 2012 19 leading prominent party leaders to organise factions and movements to influence the party s new direction 20 Ultimately two candidates amassed the required endorsements to run for the party s presidency former Prime Minister Francois Fillon 21 and incumbent party secretary general Jean Francois Cope 22 Nathalie Kosciusko Morizet 23 Bruno Le Maire 24 Xavier Bertrand 25 Henri Guaino 26 and Dominique Dord 27 had also announced their candidacies but did not meet tough candidacy requirements The campaign between Fillon and Cope lasted two months Fillon had a strong lead in polls of UMP sympathizers as opposed to actual members who would be the only eligible voters and was backed by most UMP parliamentarians 28 while Cope claimed he was the candidate of party activists rather than party barons 29 However Cope remained as secretary general and retained control of the party machinery 30 While Fillon s campaign was regarded as more consensual moderate and centre right Cope campaigned as the candidate of the droite decomplexee uninhibited right 31 and introduced issues such as anti white racism 32 However both candidates received support from moderate and conservative members of the party and their main differences were in rhetoric style and temperament 33 Cope again appeared more militant and activist saying that he would support and participate in street demonstrations 34 while Fillon disagreed with his rival 35 Six motions declarations of principles were submitted to party voters under the new statutes motions which won over 10 of the vote at the congress would be recognised as movements by the UMP leadership granted financial autonomy and receive positions in the party structures citation needed Results and subsequent crisis Edit The vote on 18 November saw high turnout but was quickly marred by allegations of irregularities and potential fraud on both sides 36 Both candidates proclaimed victory within 20 minutes of each other on the night of the vote 37 24 hours later the control commission in charge of the vote COCOE announced Cope s victory by only 98 votes 38 While Fillon initially conceded defeat by 21 November his campaign claimed victory anew with a 26 vote advantage over Cope 39 Fillon s campaign argued that the COCOE had failed to take into account votes cast in three overseas federations Party elder Alain Juppe accepted to lead a mediation between both candidates on 23 November 40 but it failed within two days Fillon s announced precautionary seizure of ballots cast to protect them from tampering or alteration 41 and threatened to take the matter to court 42 On 26 November the party appeals commission led by a close supporter of Cope decided in Cope s favour and rejected Fillon s arguments 43 On 27 November 72 filloniste parliamentarians in the National Assembly announced the creation of a new parliamentary group the Rassemblement UMP led by Fillon 44 Cope took up former President Nicolas Sarkozy s proposal of organising a referendum on a revote but he saw the creation of the dissident filloniste group as a casus belli and took back his proposal Luc Chatel the new vice president and a Cope supporter later announced that he supported a new presidential vote and a modification of party statutes 45 The next day Cope announced that he favoured organising a referendum the modification of party statutes and a reduction of his own term as president to two years until November 2014 while Fillon welcomed the consensus on the organisation of a new election he rejected his rival s timeline and called for a new election before 2014 46 Unaligned members of the UMP led by Bruno Le Maire and Nathalie Kosciusko Morizet appealed for the organisation of a new election in the spring of 2013 and a reform of the party statutes 47 Resolution Edit Both rivals reached an agreement at the end of December 2012 48 with Cope agreeing to the organisation of a new election and a modification of party statutes while Fillon agreed to dissolve his parliamentary group The party s leadership was reorganized in January 2013 to accommodate Cope and Fillon s supporters Laurent Wauquiez and Valerie Pecresse joined Luc Chatel and Michele Tabarot as vice president and secretary general respectively Christian Estrosi Gerard Longuet Henri de Raincourt pro Fillon Jean Claude Gaudin Brice Hortefeux and Roger Karoutchi pro Cope also became vice presidents Other positions in the party hierarchy were divided between supporters of both candidates 49 New leaders were also nominated in February 2013 Bygmalion Scandal Edit Several spending scandals appeared in 2014 In early 2014 the Bygmalion scandal fr pushed the party s leader Jean Francois Cope to resign In early July Sarkozy got held in custody due to possible spying and active corruption of the judiciary system On 8 July 2014 the UMP was discovered to have a hidden debt of 79 1 million for the year 2013 50 On 20 May 2021 the criminal trial began for Sarkozy and 13 other defendants who were said to have been involved in the Bygmalion scandal 51 The scandal allegations that Sarkozy diverting tens of millions of euros which was intended to be spent on the his failed 2012 re election campaign and then hiring a PR firm to cover it up 51 The illicit campaign finance money which was not reported as being spent on Sarkozy s re election campaign was instead used to overspend on lavish campaign rallies and events 51 On 30 September 2021 Sarkozy and his co defendants would be convicted for violating France s campaign finance spending limit law 52 For this conviction Sarkozy was given a 1 year prison sentence though he was also given the option to instead serve this sentence at home with an electronic bracelet 52 Name change and dissolution Edit After the election of Nicolas Sarkozy the former President of France 2007 2012 as president of the Union for a Popular Movement UMP in November 2014 he put forward a request to the party s general committee to change its name to the Republicans as well as the statutes of the party With the name already chosen Nathalie Kosciusko Morizet vice president of the UMP presented Nicolas Sarkozy and the party s political bureau a project of new statutes The proposed statutes provided for among others the election of the presidents of the departmental federations by direct suffrage the end of the political currents and consulting members on election nominations 53 Critics of Sarkozy claimed it was illegal for him to name the party Republicans because every French person is a republican in that they support the values and ideals of the French Republic that emanated from the French Revolution and as such the term is above party politics 54 The new name was adopted by the bureau on 5 May 2015 and approved by the party membership on 28 May by an online yes vote of 83 28 on a 45 74 participation after a court ruling in favor of Sarkozy 55 Similarly the new party statutes are adopted by 96 34 of voters and the composition of the new party s political bureau by 94 77 The Republicans thus became the legal successor of the UMP as the leading centre right party in France 5 Ideology and platform EditThe UMP was a party of the centre right 3 belonging to the Gaullist lineage 56 57 and was variously described as liberal conservative 2 58 conservative 59 conservative liberal 57 and Christian democratic 2 The UMP believed that each individual s destiny must be unencumbered and it rejects political systems which stifle economic freedom It said that work merit innovation and personal initiative must be encouraged to reduce unemployment and boost economic growth but at the same time it maintained that adherence to the rule of law and the authority of the state is necessary In a Gaullist tradition the UMP supported solidarity with the state guaranteeing social protection of less fortunate individuals But in a more liberal vein the party always denounced l assistanat a French term which can refer to welfare handouts The party took more nationalist positions at times and often adopted tough stances against immigration and illegal immigration It strongly supported the integration and assimilation of immigrants into French society and always denounced communitarianism as a danger to the French nation state However the UMP traditionally was a strong proponent of European integration and the European Union albeit sometimes with a hint of traditional Gaullist souverainism 60 Under Nicolas Sarkozy s leadership the UMP adopted a liberal and security oriented platform His platform in the 2007 and 2012 presidential elections emphasised the ideas of personal responsibility and individual initiative He developed the idea of working more to earn more promising that overtime hours would not be taxed and employers exonerated from non wage labour costs 61 Under his presidency the government s short lived tax cap for high income earners was denounced by the left but also several centrist and centre right politicians within or outside the UMP Having gained his popularity as a hardliner Interior minister Sarkozy s policies also carried a strong law and order and tough on crime orientation He supported tougher sentences for criminals and repeat offenders 61 As candidate and President he placed heavy emphasis on immigration and national identity presenting immigration as a danger to French identity and as source of increased criminality As President he imposed stricter limits on family reunification created a Ministry of Immigration and National Identity for three years between 2007 and 2010 launched a controversial national dialogue on national identity and expelled thousands of Roma from illegal camps 61 Critics of the right wing government denounced what they felt was a rapprochement with the controversial far right National Front FN While several members of the UMP s right wing have indicated that they would favour local alliances with the FN and prefer to vote for a FN candidate over a Socialist Party or left wing candidate in runoff elections between the left and the FN the party s official position continues to reject alliances with the FN at any level but also opposes so called republican fronts with the left against the FN 62 63 Factions EditThe UMP s original statutes in 2002 allowed for the organisation of formal factions or movements within the party to represent the various political families of which it was made up However fearing leadership rivalries and divisions Juppe Chirac and later Sarkozy postponed the creation of such organised movements indefinitely Nevertheless prior to the organisations of formal movements in November 2012 there existed informal groupings of like minded members either through associations political clubs associated political parties or even informal factions Jean Francois Cope allowed for the organisation of formal movements within the party following the November 2012 congress According to the party s statutes motions backed by at least 10 parliamentarians from 10 departmental federations and which obtain at least 10 support from members at a congress are recognised as movements They are granted financial autonomy by way of a fixed grant and additional funding in proportion to the votes they obtained but the sum of funds transferred by the party to its movements can be no larger than 30 of the annual public subsidies the UMP receives from the state 64 Official movement and factions Edit Six motions representing various ideological tendencies within the party ran to be recognised as official movements following the November 2012 congress Five of these motions met the conditions to be recognised as such and their leaders have since integrated the UMP s leadership structure The Strong Right La Droite forte 27 77 Sarkozysts conservatives liberal conservatives conservative liberals social conservatives Nicolas Sarkozy Jean Claude Gaudin Jean Pierre Raffarin Edouard Balladur Dominique Bussereau Michel Barnier Dominique Perben Jean Francois Mattei Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres Charles Millon Alain Lamassoure Brice Hortefeux Joseph Daul Rachida Dati Bernard Accoyer Marie Helene Descamps Blue Ecology centrist ecologists Nathalie Kosciusko Morizet The Social Right La Droite sociale 21 69 Social Gaullists or Seguinists left wing Gaullists social democrats Eurosceptics Francois Fillon Roger Karoutchi Henri Guaino Yves Guena Alain Marleix Modern and Humanist France France moderne et humaniste 18 17 The Reformers classical liberals Herve Novelli Gerard Longuet Alain Madelin Patrick Devedjian Philippe Cochet Jean Pierre Soisson Claude Goasguen Pierre Lellouche Luc Chatel Louis Giscard d Estaing Jean Jacques Descamps Democratic and Popular Christian democrats centrists Philippe Douste Blazy Pierre Mehaignerie Adrien Zeller Jacques Barrot Nicole Fontaine Marc Philippe Daubresse Alain Joyandet Antoine Herth The Progressives social liberals former members of the Socialist Party Eric Besson Christian Democratic Party social conservatives Christian democrats Christine Boutin Jean Frederic Poisson Gaullism a way forward for France Le Gaullisme une voie d avenir pour la France 12 31 Neo Gaullists formerly known also as Chiraquiens right wing slightly liberal Gaullists secular minded conservatives Jacques Chirac Michele Alliot Marie Dominique de Villepin Jean Louis Debre Jean Francois Cope Alain Juppe Patrick Ollier Francois Baroin Xavier Bertrand Xavier Darcos Valerie Pecresse Christine Albanel Eric Wœrth Roger Karoutchi Josselin de Rohan Adrien Gouteyron Herve Mariton The Free Right conservative liberals souverainists Rachid Kaci Alexandre del Valle Etienne Blanc Francois d Aubert The Popular Right La Droite populaire 10 87 Initiative and Liberty Movement Gaullists national conservatives Bernard Debre Eric Raoult Jean Tiberi Rally for France national conservatives souverainists Charles Pasqua Lionnel Luca Jacques Myard Jean Jacques Guillet Philippe PemezecAssociate parties Edit The Hunting Fishing Nature Tradition the Christian Democratic Party the Rally for France and The Progressives are associate parties of the UMP By adhering to these parties members also adhered to the UMP and could participate in the UMP s inner organisation The Radical Party was associated with the UMP from 2002 through 2011 Overseas parties associated with the UMP included O Porinetia To Tatou Ai a in French Polynesia and The Rally UMP in New Caledonia 2012 leadership election Edit The aforementioned November 2012 congress saw the division of the party between the two candidates who sought the party s presidency Francois Fillon and Jean Francois Cope the fillonistes and copeistes Copeistes supporters of Jean Francois Cope Jean Francois Cope Luc Chatel Michele Tabarot Jean Claude Gaudin Jean Pierre Raffarin Marc Philippe Daubresse Herve Novelli Christian Jacob Lionnel Luca Thierry Mariani Guillaume Peltier 65 Rachida Dati Brice Hortefeux Nadine Morano Jean Sarkozy 66 Valerie Rosso Debord etc Fillonistes supporters of Francois Fillon Francois Fillon Laurent Wauquiez Valerie Pecresse Xavier Bertrand 67 Christian Estrosi Eric Ciotti Gerard Larcher Francois Baroin Patrick Devedjian Dominique Bussereau Valerie Boyer Dominique Dord Patrick Ollier Eric Woerth Hubert Falco Gerard Longuet etc Unaligned members Bruno Le Maire Nathalie Kosciusko Morizet Nicolas Sarkozy and Alain Juppe also remained neutral and did not officially endorse any candidate Elected officials EditDeputies 186 members and 9 caucusing members in the UMP group in the National Assembly This group also includes some members of the Radical Party the Christian Democratic Party and Miscellaneous Right deputies Senators 131 members in the UMP group in the Senate This group also includes members of the Radical Party and The Rally UMP MEPs 24 members in the EPP Group in the European Parliament Major officeholders Edit Nicolas Sarkozy President of the Republic 2007 2012 Francois Fillon Prime Minister 2007 2012 Bernard Accoyer President of the National Assembly Jean Louis Debre President of the Constitutional Council Joseph Daul President of the EPP Group in the European Parliament Popular support EditThe UMP s electoral base reflects that of the old Rally for the Republic RPR and in some cases that of the Union for French Democracy UDF In the 2007 presidential election Nicolas Sarkozy performed best in the east of France particularly Alsace 36 2 Provence Alpes Cote d Azur 37 0 the wealthy coastal department of the Alpes Maritimes 43 6 was his best department in France Champagne Ardenne 32 7 and Rhone Alpes 32 7 These areas were among National Front candidate Jean Marie Le Pen s best regions in 2002 and are conservative on issues such as immigration Sarkozy received a lot of votes from voters who had supported the far right in April 2002 For example in the Alpes Maritimes Sarkozy performed 21 6 better than Chirac did in 2002 while Le Pen lost 12 6 in five years 68 Sarkozy also appealed more than average to blue collar workers in regions such as northern Meurthe et Moselle and the Nord Pas de Calais although most of these regions despite his gains remain reliably left wing 69 The party is also strong in every election in very wealthy suburban or coastal and in some cases urban areas such as Neuilly sur Seine 72 6 for Sarkozy in the first round 70 Saint Tropez 54 79 71 Cannes 48 19 72 or Marcq en Barœul 47 35 73 It is strong in most rural areas like most conservative parties in the world but this does not extend to the rural areas of the south of France areas which are old strongholds of republican and secular ideals However in old clerical Catholic rural areas such as parts of Lozere or Cantal it is very strong as was the UDF during its hey day However the UMP does poorly in one of the UDF s best regions Brittany where the decline of religious practice a moderate electorate and urbanisation has hurt the UMP and also the UDF Nicolas Sarkozy performed relatively poorly in departments with a large share of moderate Christian democratic often centrist or centre right voters such as Lozere where the Socialist candidate Segolene Royal performed better 44 3 than Francois Mitterrand had in his 1988 left wing landslide 43 1 While former President Jacques Chirac the right s strongman in normally left wing Correze had always done very well in Correze and the surrounding departments Sarkozy did very poorly and actually lost the department in the 2007 runoff However in the 2009 European election the UMP s results in those departments were superior to Sarkozy s first round result nationally they were 4 lower 68 Leadership EditThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Needs fact checking expansion and possibly update Please help improve this section if you can May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nicolas Sarkozy speaking at a UMP party congress in 2004 Presidents Edit No Name Photo Began Left1 Alain Juppe 17 November 2002 16 July 2004 InterimJean Claude Gaudin 16 July 2004 28 November 20042 Nicolas Sarkozy 28 November 2004 14 May 2007 Vacant Secretaries general as the head of the party Pierre Mehaignerie 14 May 2007 25 September 2007Patrick Devedjian 25 September 2007 5 December 2008Xavier Bertrand 5 December 2008 17 November 2010Jean Francois Cope 17 November 2010 19 November 2012 14 May 2007 19 November 20123 Jean Francois Cope 19 November 2012 15 June 2014 Interim Alain Juppe Jean Pierre Raffarin amp Francois Fillon 15 June 2014 October 2014 2 Nicolas Sarkozy 30 November 2014 30 May 2015Vice presidents Edit Jean Claude Gaudin executive vice president 2002 2007 Jean Claude Gaudin Pierre Mehaignerie Jean Pierre Raffarin as vice presidents of the national council 2007 2012 Luc Chatel 2012 2014 associate vice president from January 2013 joined by Laurent Wauquiez Jean Claude Gaudin Christian Estrosi Brice Hortefeux Roger Karoutchi Gerard Longuet and Henri de Raincourt January 2013 May 2015 joined by Hubert Falco Rachida Dati Herve Gaymard Christian Kert Jean Francois Lamour Jean Paul Fournier Jean Pierre Audy Guillaume Peltier Jean Leonetti Thierry Mariani Patrick Ollier and Bernard Perrut January 2013 May 2015 Presidents of the National Council Edit unknown 2002 2013 Jean Pierre Raffarin 2013 2015 Secretaries general Edit Philippe Douste Blazy 2002 2004 Pierre Mehaignerie 2004 2007 Patrick Devedjian 2007 2008 Xavier Bertrand 2008 2010 Jean Francois Cope 2010 2012 Michele Tabarot 2012 2015 joined by Valerie Pecresse and Marc Philippe Daubresse January 2013 2015 Group leaders in the National Assembly Edit Jacques Barrot 2002 2004 Bernard Accoyer 2004 2007 Jean Francois Cope 2007 2010 Christian Jacob 2010 2015 Group leaders in the Senate Edit Josselin de Rohan 2002 2008 Henri de Raincourt 2008 2009 Gerard Longuet 2009 2011 Jean Claude Gaudin 2011 2015 Election results EditPresidential Edit President of the French Republic Election Candidate First round Second round ResultVotes Votes 2002 Jacques Chirac 5 665 855 19 88 25 537 956 82 21 Won2007 Nicolas Sarkozy 11 448 663 31 18 18 983 138 53 06 Won2012 9 753 629 27 18 16 860 685 48 36 LostNational Assembly Edit National Assembly Election Leader First round Second round Seats Position ResultVotes Votes 2002 Jean Pierre Raffarin 8 408 023 33 30 10 026 669 47 26 357 577 1st Government2007 Francois Fillon 10 289 737 39 54 9 460 710 46 36 313 577 1st Government2012 Jean Francois Cope 7 037 268 27 12 8 740 625 34 49 194 577 2nd OppositionEuropean Parliament Edit European Parliament Election Leader Votes Seats Position2004 Jean Pierre Raffarin 2 856 368 16 64 17 74 2nd2009 Xavier Bertrand 4 799 908 27 88 29 74 1st2014 Jean Francois Cope 3 942 766 20 80 20 74 2ndSee also Edit conservatism portalPolitics of France List of political parties in FranceReferences Edit Sarkozy wins opposition UMP party vote Al Jazeera English 29 November 2014 Archived from the original on 30 November 2014 Retrieved 29 November 2014 a b c d e Nordsieck Wolfram 2012 France Parties and Elections in Europe Archived from the original on 23 May 2015 a b Magstadt Thomas M 2011 Understanding Politics 9th ed Wadsworth Cengage Learning p 183 a b Bolton Doug 30 May 2015 Nicolas Sarkozy changes UMP party s name to The Republicans ahead of political comeback The Independent Archived from the original on 30 May 2015 Retrieved 30 May 2015 a b c AFP 29 May 2015 France s Sarkozy renames UMP party The Republicans Yahoo News Archived from the original on 15 November 2015 Retrieved 1 June 2015 a b c d chronologie UMP France politique Archived from the original on 19 June 2009 Marcus E Ethridge Howard Handelman 16 January 2009 Politics in a Changing World A Comparative Introduction to Political Science Cengage Learning p 144 ISBN 978 0 495 57048 6 Retrieved 19 August 2012 e TF1 Info et Actualite en direct Toutes les actualites et infos MYTF1News in French Tf1 lci fr Archived from the original on 23 October 2009 Retrieved 30 November 2013 Devedjian Raffarin une 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August 2012 Xavier Bertrand J ai les 8000 parrainages Le Parisien 6 September 2012 Henri Guaino Pourquoi je suis candidat a la presidence de l UMP Archived 30 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine L Express 3 September 2012 Dominique Dord candidat a la tete de l UMP Archived from the original on 7 January 2013 Retrieved 15 March 2013 Le Lab Europe 1 14 07 12 Fillon Cope le match de la presidence de l UMP en chiffres Archived 30 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Le Huffington Post 2 October 2012 Jean Francois Cope se pose en defenseur des militants UMP Archived 21 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine L Express 9 September 2012 UMP pendant la campagne Cope reste secretaire general Archived 22 September 2012 at the Wayback MachineL Express 29 August 2012 UMP le projet economique decomplexe de Cope Les Echos 3 October 2012 Cope denonce l existence d un racisme anti Blanc Archived 4 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 26 September 2012 Cope Fillon ce qui les separe Archived 19 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 26 October 2012 Presidence de l UMP Cope envisagerait d appeler a manifester contre l executif Archived 3 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine Le Point 29 October 2012 Fillon ecrit aux adherents UMP et prend ses distances avec Cope Archived 14 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine L Express 4 November 2012 Presidence UMP le scrutin est clos mais des files d attente encore dans les bureaux de vote Archived 29 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Dernieres Nouvelles d Alsace 18 November 2012 Cope ou Fillon Les trois enseignements d une soiree ubuesque a l UMP Archived 5 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine France TV Info 18 November 2012 Cope la victoire au forceps Archived 9 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 20 November 2012 Presidence de l UMP le camp Fillon revendique la victoire Le Monde 21 November 2012 UMP le president de la Commission des recours rejette les conditions de Juppe Archived 28 January 2013 at the Wayback MachineLe Point 23 November 2012 UMP Leadership Struggle Suicide Business Insider 26 November 2012 Archived from the original on 27 April 2013 Retrieved 30 November 2013 Pour tout comprendre a la bataille juridique entre Cope et Fillon LeMonde fr 27 novembre 2012 Les calculs de la commission des recours favorables a M Cope Le Monde 26 November 2012 UMP le groupe filloniste depose a l Assemblee Archived 30 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 27 November 2012 Chatel Il faut redonner la parole aux militants Archived 25 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine Le JDD 1 December 2012 Fillon rejette la proposition Cope le blocage se poursuit a l UMP Le Monde AFP 2 December 2012 La crise UMP se transforme en guerre froide Archived 21 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine Mediapart 5 December 2012 UMP l accord Cope Fillon adopte a l unanimite par le bureau politique L EXPRESS 18 December 2012 Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 30 November 2013 Alexandre Lemarie Hortefeux Ciotti Morano L organigramme complet de la direction de l UMP Archived 16 January 2013 at Wikiwix lemonde fr 15 January 2013 Que deviendrait la dette de l UMP si le parti disparaissait Le Monde fr 8 July 2014 a b c Nicolas Sarkozy Ex president goes on trial for illegal campaign funding BBC News 20 May 2021 Retrieved 21 May 2021 a b Sarkozy Ex French president gets jail sentence over campaign funding BBC News 30 September 2021 Retrieved 16 November 2021 Anne Laetitia Beraud 14 April 2015 L UMP se dote des statuts du nouveau parti baptise Les Republicains 20minutes fr in French Retrieved 18 April 2015 Chrisafis Angelique 26 May 2015 France judges clear way for Sarkozy to rename UMP party Les Republicains The Guardian Archived from the original on 31 May 2015 Retrieved 1 June 2015 Pauline Theveniaud avec Olivier Beaumont Congres des Republicains Un jour de renaissance pour Sarkozy Le Parisien 30 mai 2015 Hlousek Vit Kopecek Lubomir 2010 Origin Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties East Central and Western Europe Compared Ashgate p 157 ISBN 9780754678403 a b Slomp Hans 2011 Europe A Political Profile An American Companion to European Politics Vol 2 ABC CLIO pp 393 394 ISBN 9780313391828 Kaeding Michael 2007 Better regulation in the European Union Lost in Translation or Full Steam Ahead Leiden University Press p 123 ISBN 9789087280260 Cristian Vaccari 2013 Digital Politics in Western Democracies A Comparative Study JHU Press p 89 ISBN 9781421411170 Nos valeurs Archived 24 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine UMP website consulted 15 March 2013 a b c Pierre Brechon 2011 Les partis politiques francais La documentation francaise pp 62 65 Ni FN ni front republicain l UMP choisit de ne pas choisir Archived 6 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine Liberation 11 June 2012 UMP FN La recomposition des droites hypothese credible ou fantasme mariniste Archived 21 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Slate 17 June 2012 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 18 April 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Articles 15 a 18 des statuts de l UMP Guillaume Peltier Cope est un homme de rassemblement Archived 15 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 6 November 2012 Jean Sarkozy officialise son soutien a Jean Francois Cope Archived 21 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 5 November 2012 UMP Xavier Bertrand se rallie a Francois Fillon Archived 21 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 26 October 2012 a b IFOP analysis Archived from the original on 11 July 2009 Results CDSP website Archived from the original on 4 June 2012 Ministry of the Interior results page Archived from the original on 18 July 2009 Ministry of the Interior results page Archived from the original on 23 February 2011 Ministry of the Interior results page Archived from the original on 9 March 2009 Ministry of the Interior results page External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Union pour un mouvement populaire Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Union for a Popular Movement amp oldid 1151099546, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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