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FRANCE
Assemblée nationale (National Assembly)
ELECTIONS IN 2007

Compare data for parliamentary chambers in the Last elections module

A historical Archive of past election results for this chamber can be found on a separate page

Parliament name (generic / translated) Parlement / Parliament
Structure of parliament Bicameral
Chamber name (generic / translated) Assemblée nationale / National Assembly
Related chamber (for bicameral parliaments) Sénat / Senate
BACKGROUND
Dates of election / renewal (from/to) (from/to)10 June 2007
17 June 2007
Purpose of elections Elections were held for all the seats in the National Assembly on the normal expiry of the members' term of office.
The 2007 elections to the National Assembly followed the election as President of the Republic of Mr. Nicolas Sarkozy of the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP the ruling centre-right party see note 1). In May Mr. Sarkozy defeated Ms. Ségolène Royal of the main opposition Socialist Party (PS) in a run-off election and pledged to take the country into a new era both economically and socially. The UMP held 359 seats in the outgoing legislature while the PS had 149.

The June parliamentary elections saw once again a duel between the UMP and the PS. President Sarkozy insisted that he needed a majority in the National Assembly to carry out his presidential programme. Pre-election polls predicted a major victory for the UMP.

The PS argued that the country stood to benefit from a diversity of opinion. It was therefore important for the socialist group to be well-represented in the National Assembly. The centrist Union for French Democracy (UDF) whose leader Mr. François Bayrou had taken 18.5% of the vote in the first round of the presidential election split in two before the parliamentary elections. Most of the incumbent UDF members offered their support to Mr. Sarkozy in the second round of presidential elections. In late May they launched a new party the 'New Centre' party led by Defence Minister Mr. Hervé Morin. UDF members loyal to Mr. Bayrou formed the Union for French Democracy-Democratic Movement (MODEM) which refused any electoral alliances with either side of the political divide.

In all 7 639 candidates contested 577 seats in the National Assembly.

On 10 June 60.42 per cent of registered voters turned out at the first round of the polls the lowest figure since 1958. 110 candidates were elected in the first round compared to 58 in the 2002 elections. The UMP and its allies took 98 of those 110 seats securing 39.54 per cent of the valid votes while the PS obtained 24.73 per cent of the votes. Twelve women were elected.

Fiscal issues took centre stage during the period between the first and second rounds. Prime Minister François Fillon came in for scathing criticism from the PS over the government's supposed plans to introduce a "social VAT" (value-added tax).

On 17 June the second round of elections for the remaining 467 seats involved candidates who had obtained over 12.5 per cent of the registered vote in the first round. Nearly 60 per cent of registered voters turned out at the polls.

The UMP fared less well than opinion polls had predicted. The Energy and Environment Minister and former prime minister Alain Juppé (UMP) was narrowly defeated and subsequently resigned as minister.

The final results nevertheless confirmed a clear victory for the UMP giving it a total of 313 of the 577 seats. The PS took 186 seats. The New Centre party (see note 2) won 20 seats whereas the MODEM took only three. In all 107 women were elected.

On 26 June the newly elected National Assembly held its first session and elected Mr. Bernard Accoyer (UMP) as its new Speaker.

Note 1:
Prior to the 2002 presidential elections supporters of the then President Jacques Chirac founded an electoral alliance the Union on the Move (Union en mouvement). It was renamed the Union for the Presidential Majority (UMP) for the 2002 parliamentary elections and subsequently changed its name again to the Union for a Popular Movement following the elections.

Note 2:
According to the official results published by the Ministry of the Interior the 20 candidates elected from the New Centre party as well as two other candidates appear under the Presidential Majority (MAJ) banner. The latter two in fact belong to the New Centre parliamentary group.
STATISTICS
Voter turnout
Round no 110 June 2007
Number of registered electors
Voters
Blank or invalid ballot papers
Valid votes
43'896'043
26'521'824 (60.42%)
495'358
26'026'466
Notes
Round no 217 June 2007
Number of registered electors
Voters
Blank or invalid ballot papers
Valid votes
35'223'911
21'130'346 (59.99%)
723'561
20'406'785
Notes
Distribution of votes
Round no 1
Political Group Candidates Votes %
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) 10'289'732 39.54
Presidential Majority (MAJ) 616'440 2.37
Other parties of the right 641'842 2.47
Movement for France (MPF) 312'581 1.20
Socialist Party (PS) 6'436'521 24.73
Left Radical 343'565 1.32
Union for French Democracy-Democratic Movement (MODEM) 1'981'107 7.61
Regionalist 133'473 0.51
Others 3'108'734 11.94
Communist Party (PC) 1'115'663 4.29
Other left wing parties 513'407 1.97
Greens 845'977 3.25
Round no 2
Political Group Candidates Votes %
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) 9'461'087 46.36
Socialist Party (PS) 8'624'472 42.26
Communist Party (PC) 464'739 2.28
Other left wing parties 503'556 2.47
Presidential Majority (MAJ) 433'057 2.12
Left Radical 333'194 1.63
Other parties of the right 238'588 1.17
Greens 90'975 0.45
Union for French Democracy-Democratic Movement (MODEM) 100'115 0.49
Regionalist 106'484 0.52
Others 33'068 0.16
Movement for France (MPF)
Distribution of seats
Round no 1
Political Group Total Grand Total
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) 98
Presidential Majority (MAJ) 8
Other parties of the right 2
Movement for France (MPF) 1
Socialist Party (PS) 1
Left Radical 0
Union for French Democracy-Democratic Movement (MODEM) 0
Regionalist 0
Others 0
Communist Party (PC) 0
Other left wing parties 0
Greens 0
Round no 2
Political Group Total Grand Total
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) 215 313
Socialist Party (PS) 185 186
Communist Party (PC) 15 15
Other left wing parties 15 15
Presidential Majority (MAJ) 14 22
Left Radical 7 7
Other parties of the right 7 9
Greens 4 4
Union for French Democracy-Democratic Movement (MODEM) 3 3
Regionalist 1 1
Others 1 1
Movement for France (MPF) 0 1
Distribution of seats according to sex
Men
Women
Percent of women
470
107
18.54%
Distribution of seats according to age
21 to 30 years
31 to 40 years
41 to 50 years
51 to 60 years
61 to 70 years
Over 70 years
2
29
139
256
141
10
Distribution of seats according to profession
Business/trade/industry employees including executives 102
Civil/public servants/administrators (including social/development workers) 89
Educators 82
Medical professions (doctors dentists nurses) 72
Others 59
Legal professions 45
Entrepreneurs 27
Retired 22
Engineers/PC experts 22
Unknown 20
Liberal professions (including artists authors) and sports professionals 17
Farmers/agricultural workers (including wine growers) 16
Bankers (including invest bankers)/accountants 3
Architects 1
Comments
Sources:
- Ministry of the Interior (13.06.2007 19.06.2007 01.01.2008 22.02.2008 01.01.2010)
- http://www.interieur.gouv.fr/
- http://www.assemblee-nationale.fr

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