French legislative election, 2017

French legislative election, 2017
France
11 and 18 June 2017

All 577 seats to the National Assembly
289 seats needed for a majority
 
Leader Manuel Valls (candidate for Prime minister of France for second mandate) Laurent Wauquiez Jean-Christophe Lagarde
Party PS LR UDI
Leader since 1 April 2014 23 August 2016 13 November 2014
Leader's seat Essonne's 1st Haute-Loire's 1st Seine-Saint-Denis 5th
Last election 280 seats 194 seats New
Current seats 273 199 30
Seats needed Increase16 Increase90 Increase259

 
Leader David Cormand Sylvia Pinel André Chassaigne
Party EELV PRG FG
Leader since 11 February 2016 17 February 2016 21 June 2012
Leader's seat None Tarn-et-Garonne's 2nd Puy-de-Dôme's 5th
Last election 17 seats 12 seats 10 seats
Current seats 17 13 10
Seats needed Increase272 Increase276 Increase279

Constituency results after the first and second round

Incumbent Prime Minister

Manuel Valls
PS


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Legislative elections are scheduled to take place on 11 and 18 June 2017 to elect the members of the 15th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic.

Background

2012

The previous French legislative election was held on 10 June 2012, with a second round of voting on 17 June. The election was held shortly after the election of the Socialist François Hollande as President of France in the presidential elections of 21–22 April and 5–6 May that year. The legislative elections granted the left-wing parties a majority in the National Assembly, with 341 (59%) of the 577 seats going to the left, against 229 (40%) for the parties supporting the then-incumbent President Nicolas Sarkozy.[1] Hollande was sworn in on 15 May,[2] and subsequently formed a coalition cabinet consisting of the Socialists, the Radical Party of the Left, and The Greens. The cabinet was headed by Jean-Marc Ayrault until 31 March 2014.

2014

In early 2014, amid declining approval ratings for the Socialist administration,[3] and after the defeat of the left-wing parties in the 2014 local elections, Manuel Valls was chosen to replace Ayrault as Prime Minister of France; he took office on 31 March 2014.[4] Two months later, in May, elections were held for the European Parliament in all the EU members states, including France. Elections for the French delegation, consisting of 74 MEPs overall, took place on 24–25 May 2014. In the event, the National Front party of Marine Le Pen emerged victorious, taking close to 25% of the vote and 24 seats in the European Parliament. Meanwhile, the main opposition Union for a Popular Movement (now The Republicans) fell to 21% and 20 MEPs, while the Socialist Party slipped to 14% and 13 MEPs.[5]

In August 2014, President Hollande asked Manuel Valls to reshuffle his cabinet, leading to the formation of the Second Valls Government on 27 August.[6]

The Senate elections on 28 September handed a majority to the center-right UMP-led alliance, with Gérard Larcher subsequently becoming the President of the Senate.

2015

The offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo were attacked on 7 January 2015, by affiliates of the Yemeni Al-Qaeda branch Saïd and Chérif Kouachi, both French citizens born to Algerian immigrants. The attacks resulted in 12 deaths and a further 11 injuries. In the aftermath of the attack, the approval ratings of President François Hollande spiked, reaching 40% for the first time since February 2013.[7]

In elections held throughout 2015, namely the March departmental elections and the December regional elections, the Socialist Party suffered further setbacks.[8]

Electoral system

The 577 members of the National Assembly are elected from single-member constituencies using the two-round system. Citizens may field their candidacies in a district, and participate in the first round. If a single candidate obtains over 50% of the vote, as well as a minimum of 25% of all registered voters, they win. If no candidate meets these criteria, a second round is held in which the two most-voted candidates from the first round, plus any other candidate who obtained above 12.5%, are allowed to participate. Of the 577 constituencies, 539 are in Metropolitan France, 27 are in overseas departments and territories and 11 are for French citizens living abroad.[9]

Opinion polls

Voting intention

Polling Firm Last Date
of Polling
FG PS PRG DVG EELV MoDem UDI DVD UMP/
LR
DLF FN Margin
of Error
Sample
Size
Lead
CSA December 2, 2014 8 18 7 12 24 1 23 1
Legislative Election June 10, 2012 6.9 29.4 1.4 3.4 5.5 1.8 4.0 3.5 27.1 0.6 13.6 2.3

Seat projections

Polling Firm Last Date
of Polling
FG PS PRG DVG EELV MoDem UDI DVD UMP/
LR
DLF FN
Opinion Way June, 2016 188–208 266–292 58–64
CSA December 2, 2014 56–66 485–505 1–3 14–24
Legislative Election June 10, 2012 10 280 12 22 17 2 20 15 194 2 2

References

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