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2019 European Parliament election in France

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2019 European Parliament election in France

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All 79 French seats in the European Parliament
Opinion polls
Turnout50.12% Increase7.69%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Jordan Bardella Nathalie Loiseau Yannick Jadot
Party RN R[a] EELV
Alliance EAPN ALDE-R EGP
Last election 24 seats, 24.86% New
(L'Alternative)
6 seats, 10.41%
Seats before 16 9 5
Seats won 23 23 13
Seat change Decrease1 Increase16 Increase7
Popular vote 5,286,939 5,079,015 3,055,023
Percentage 23.34% 22.42% 13.48%
Swing Decrease1.52% Increase12.48% Increase3.08%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader François-Xavier Bellamy Manon Aubry Raphaël Glucksmann
Party LRLC LFI PSPP
NDPRG
Alliance EPP MLP PES
Last election 20 seats, 20.81% New
(FG)
13 seats, 16.88%
Seats before 16 2 7
Seats won 8 6 6
Seat change Decrease12 Increase6 Decrease7
Popular vote 1,920,407 1,428,548 1,403,170
Percentage 8.48% 6.31% 6.19%
Swing Decrease12.33% New Decrease10.69%

Results by department

European Parliament elections were held in France on 26 May 2019 (and on 25 May in parts of overseas France and for some nationals abroad), electing members of the 9th French delegation to the European Parliament as part of the elections held across the European Union. The election featured two major changes since the 2014 election: the return to a single national constituency and the increase in the number of French seats from 74 to 79 upon the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union. Officially, 79 MEPs were considered to have been elected, including five "virtual" MEPs who did not take their seats until the UK formally left the EU. The election featured 34 separate electoral lists, a record number at the national level.

It was the first national election in France since the election of Emmanuel Macron as president and therefore his first major electoral test, taking place amid dismal approval ratings. For his party, Nathalie Loiseau led the Renaissance list of La République En Marche!, Democratic Movement (MoDem), Agir, and the Radical Movement which ultimately arrived in second with 22.42% of the vote, behind the National Rally (RN) list led by the 23-year-old Jordan Bardella which received 23.34% of the vote, with a lower vote percentage but more overall votes than its 2014 result.

Turnout, at just over 50%, was the highest since the 1994 elections. Led by Yannick Jadot, Europe Ecology – The Greens (EELV) managed a surprise third-place finish with 13.48% of the vote, short of its score in the 2009 elections in which it also achieved a surprise result. At the same time, the list of The Republicans (LR) led by the 33-year-old Catholic philosopher François-Xavier Bellamy ended up with a historically poor result of just 8.48% of the vote and the loss of 12 MEPs despite expectations of a strong electoral dynamic created by Bellamy's selection as the party's lead candidate. Similarly, the results were also a significant disappointment for Jean-Luc Mélenchon's La France Insoumise, which fell far short of both its presidential and legislative results in 2017 with only 6.31% of the vote, narrowly ahead of the joint list between the Socialist Party (PS), Place Publique, and New Deal led by Raphaël Glucksmann (the first time in its history the PS did not lead an autonomous list), which managed to remain in the European Parliament with its score of 6.19% of the vote, slightly above the 5% threshold needed for seats.

Numerous other lists fell short of the 5% threshold, including Nicolas Dupont-Aignan's Debout la France (DLF) and Benoît Hamon's Génération.s, the scores of which (both slightly above 3%) nevertheless allow their campaign expenses to be compensated by the state. The two were closely followed by the centre-right Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) led by Jean-Christophe Lagarde and the French Communist Party (PCF) led by Ian Brossat. The recently founded Animalist Party, an animal rights party, also created a small surprise with its score of 2.16%, comparable to some of the more prominent lists, despite its limited presence in the campaign. The only two notable pro-Frexit parties received 1.82% of the vote combined. Other lists included Urgence Écologie, consisting of several small green parties, led by Dominique Bourg (garnering 1.82% of the vote); Lutte Ouvrière with 0.78% of the vote; and a list of gilets jaunes which collected 0.54% of the vote.

Background

[edit]

Electoral system

[edit]
European Parliament constituencies of France in the 2014 election

Starting from the 2004 elections, France was divided into eight large regional electoral constituencies for the purposes of European Parliament elections with members elected by proportional representation. The electoral system changed ahead of the 2019 election, with broad support in the French political class for a return to a national vote.[1] On 29 November, Prime Minister Édouard Philippe announced that all parties consulted except for The Republicans supported returning to national lists, and confirmed the intention of the government to prepare a bill to change the voting system to that end,[2] which was officially unveiled on 3 January 2018,[3] preserving the 5% threshold for representation and 3% for reimbursement of campaign expenses. The possibility of transnational lists following the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union was also considered. The return to national lists in effect benefits smaller parties which were previously disadvantaged by the system of large regional constituencies, while larger parties would win fewer seats.[2]

The bill creating a single national constituency was approved by a vote the National Assembly vote on the first reading on 20 February 2018,[4] and the Senate officially adopted the bill on 23 May 2018,[5] which was promulgated on 25 June after its validation by the Constitutional Council.[6]

Dates

[edit]

As the European elections are scheduled from 23 to 26 May 2019 and French votes are traditionally held on Sundays, the date of the 2019 European election in France was confirmed to be 26 May 2019.[7] Declarations of lists and candidacies were to be submitted between 23 April and 3 May 2019, while voting in some of the overseas territories and for nationals in the Americas officially took place on 25 May 2019.[8]

Number of seats

[edit]

On 23 January 2018, the European Parliament Committee on Constitutional Affairs adopted a proposal to reduce the size of the hemicycle from 751 to 705, splitting 27 former British seats between 14 underrepresented member states of which France was set to gain 5, increasing its representation from 74 to 79.[9] On 7 February, the European Parliament voted 368 to 274 against the principle of reallocating British seats to transnational lists, though the idea's fate was ultimately in the hands of the European Council.[10]

After the agreement on 10 April to postpone the British departure from the EU to 31 October, the participation of the United Kingdom in the European Parliament elections will mean that the number of elected MEPs will remain fixed at 74 until the eventual withdrawal of the UK. As a result, legislation to "provide for two phrases", one with 74 MEPs, and later with 79 in total,[11] was tabled on 24 April; electoral lists will still require 79 candidates, of which 74 will take their seats immediately and the remaining 5 "virtual" MEPs upon the departure of the UK from the EU.[12]

Broadcast campaign

[edit]
Total time allocated for campaign political broadcasts by the CSA by list under the revised allocation formula[13]
LREMMoDem
55'53"
RN
48'11"
LRLC
38'20"
PSPPND
19'43"
FI
18'37"
EELV
14'14"
UDI
10'52"
DLFCNIP
8'13"
PCF
7'40"
G.s
4'23"
GEMEIMdP
4'14"
LP
3'58"
All 22 others
3'33" each

The length of campaign clips for each list was determined by its declared support among national parliamentarians (senators, deputies, and MEPs),[14] a change largely to the benefit of the governing majority at the expense of opposition parties.[15]

From 15 April 2019, the Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel (CSA) ensured that all candidates receive a fair distribution of time in broadcast media, with the exact timing monitored by stations themselves and speaking time relayed every Monday until the elections. The campaign officially commenced on 13 May.[16]

Televised debates

[edit]

Hamon appealed against his exclusion from the France 2 debate on 4 April on 27 March, questioning the choice not to invite him given the inclusion of other lead candidates;[17] this came after the earlier non-invitation of Brossat and Lagarde.[18] He was joined in his case by Philippot and Asselineau, with the Paris administrative court subsequently ordering France 2 to invite the three to its debate, judging France Télévisions's excuse that Hamon's views were sufficiently represented by the invitation of Glucksmann to have been insufficient.[19]

France Télévisions contested this decision, and although the Conseil d'État ultimately ruled that France 2 was not obligated to invite the three, France 2 maintained its invitation out of courtesy.[20] This first debate was watched by only 1.62 million viewers, representing an audience share of 9.8%.[21]

On 9 April, just before the debate hosted by RFI and France 24, the RN announced Bardella would not participate in the debate, taking issue with its format and apparent lack of preparedness on the part of the hosts.[22] As Mélenchon was unable to appear on the CNews debate on 10 April due to a planned campaign meeting,[23] Adrien Quatennens was invited to take his place instead.[24]

The decision to split the debate on 22 May, hosted by France 2 and France Inter, into two separate segments provoked consternation among those invited to the second part, as did the choice not to invite the lead candidates of three of the principal lists (Bellamy, Loiseau, and Bardella) but their party leaders (Wauquiez, Guerini, and Le Pen) instead. On 14 May, Brossat said he would file an appeal with the CSA to intervene in the debate, while Hamon castigated France Télévisions president Delphine Ernotte for the decision, with Lagarde, Dupont-Aignan, and Philippot also denouncing the arrangement.[25] On 15 May, Hamon, Lagarde, and Dupont-Aignan held a joint press conference in front of the France Télévisions headquarters to announce that they would boycott the debate unless its format was modified,[26] and Yahoo! later announced that the three would participate in a debate on its site before the debate that evening, hosted by Clément Viktorovitch.[27] The LCI debate on 20 May was held in a similar fashion, with the first part dedicated to "small" lists and the later part of the evening reserved for the "main" ones.[28]

Meanwhile, doubts about her performance meant Loiseau would not appear at the debate hosted by France 2, but rather Bayrou, while some considered inviting Canfin to the LCI debate.[29] On 19 May, both Canfin and Loiseau demanded that the three final debates feature live fact-checking in spite of logistical difficulties.[30]

Date Organizers Moderators  P  Present  I  Invitee  NI  Non-invitee  A  Absent Notes
LO PCF FI G.s PSPP EELV UE LREM MoDem UDI LR DLF RN LP UPR AJ
4 April France 2
France Inter
Thomas Sotto [fr]
Alexandra Bensaïd [fr]
NI
Arthaud
P
Brossat
P
Aubry
P
Hamon
P
Glucksmann
P
Jadot
NI
Bourg
P
Loiseau
P
Lagarde
P
Bellamy
P
Dupont-Aignan
P
Bardella
P
Philippot
P
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
[31][19]
9 April RFI
France 24
Frédéric Rivière
Caroline de Camaret
NI
Arthaud
NI
Brossat
P
Aubry
NI
Hamon
P
Glucksmann
P
Jadot
NI
Bourg
P
Loiseau
NI
Lagarde
P
Bellamy
NI
Dupont-Aignan
A
Bardella
NI
Philippot
NI
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
[32]
10 April CNews
Europe 1
Laurence Ferrari
Matthieu Belliard
NI
Arthaud
NI
Roussel
P
Quatennens
NI
Hamon
P
Faure
P
Cormand
NI
Bourg
P
Guerini
NI
Bayrou
NI
Lagarde
P
Wauquiez
P
Dupont-Aignan
P
Le Pen
NI
Philippot
NI
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
[33][24]
24 April LCI David Pujadas NI
Arthaud
NI
Roussel
P
Quatennens
NI
Hamon
P
Faure
NI
Cormand
NI
Bourg
P
Guerini
P
Bayrou
NI
Lagarde
P
Wauquiez
NI
Dupont-Aignan
P
Le Pen
NI
Philippot
NI
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
[34][35]
7 May CNews
Europe 1
Laurence Ferrari
Matthieu Belliard
P
Arthaud
P
Roussel
NI
Mélenchon
P
Balas
NI
Faure
NI
Cormand
NI
Bourg
NI
Guerini
NI
Bayrou
P
Lagarde
NI
Wauquiez
NI
Dupont-Aignan
NI
Le Pen
P
Philippot
P
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
[36]
15 May BFM TV Ruth Elkrief NI
Arthaud
NI
Brossat
NI
Aubry
NI
Hamon
NI
Glucksmann
NI
Jadot
NI
Bourg
P
Loiseau
NI
Lagarde
NI
Bellamy
NI
Dupont-Aignan
P
Bardella
NI
Philippot
NI
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
[37]
20 May LCI
RTL
Le Figaro
David Pujadas
Élizabeth Martichoux
Alexis Brézet [fr]
P
Arthaud
P
Brossat
NI
Aubry
P
Hamon
NI
Glucksmann
NI
Jadot
NI
Bourg
NI
Loiseau
P
Lagarde
NI
Bellamy
NI
Dupont-Aignan
NI
Bardella
P
Philippot
P
Asselineau
P
Lalanne
[38][28]
NI
Arthaud
NI
Brossat
P
Aubry
NI
Hamon
P
Glucksmann
P
Jadot
NI
Bourg
P
Loiseau
NI
Lagarde
P
Bellamy
P
Dupont-Aignan
P
Bardella
NI
Philippot
NI
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
22 May France 2
France Inter
Thomas Sotto NI
Arthaud
NI
Brossat
P
Aubry
NI
Balas [fr]
P
Glucksmann
P
Jadot
NI
Bourg
NI
Guerini
P
Bayrou
NI
Lagarde
P
Wauquiez
NI
Dupont-Aignan
P
Le Pen
NI
Philippot
NI
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
[25][29][39]
P
Arthaud
P
Brossat
NI
Aubry
P
Balas
NI
Glucksmann
NI
Jadot
P
Bourg
NI
Guerini
NI
Bayrou
P
Lagarde
NI
Wauquiez
P
Dupont-Aignan
NI
Le Pen
P
Philippot
P
Asselineau
P
Lalanne
23 May BFM TV Ruth Elkrief
Apolline de Malherbe
NI
Arthaud
P
Brossat
P
Aubry
P
Hamon
P
Glucksmann
P
Jadot
NI
Bourg
P
Loiseau
P
Lagarde
P
Bellamy
P
Dupont-Aignan
P
Bardella
P
Philippot
NI
Asselineau
NI
Lalanne
[38]

Other events

[edit]

On 23 September 2018, the national congress of the Association of Rural Mayors of France (Association des maires ruraux de France, or AMRF) announced that they would refuse to directly transmit the results of the elections to the state on the night of the election to voice their discontent with the lack of attention given by the government to rural policy.[40]

The 3 February 2019 edition of Le Journal du Dimanche revealed that Macron was interested in holding a referendum concurrent with the European elections on 26 May to conclude the grand débat national (great national debate) and end the gilets jaunes protests.[41] The opposition, suspicious about the referendum's timing, expressed skepticism, and the idea also lacked support from members of the government.[42]

Following the Notre-Dame de Paris fire on 15 April, several parties briefly suspended their campaigns for the European elections.[43]

Outgoing delegation

[edit]
Distribution of MEPs by European Parliament group as of 3 May 2019
Distribution of MEPs by national party as of 3 May 2019

The table below shows the composition of the delegation of France to the European Parliament as of 3 May 2019.[44] MEPs marked with an asterisk (*) are not standing as candidates; those marked with two asterisks (**) are candidates, but only in a clearly non-electable position near the end of electoral lists.[45]

Party Seatsi Group Seats MEPs
LR 16 EPP 20
DVD 2
Agir 2
RN 14 ENF 15
SE 1
PS 7 S&D 12
G.s 3
LREM 1
LRDG [fr], former PRG 1
MoDem 2 ALDE 7
MR 2
UDI 1
LREM 1
GC 1
EELV 5 Greens/EFA 6
DVE 1
DLF 2 EFDD 6
LP 2
PCD 1
LFL 1
PCF 2 GUE/NGL 5
FG 1
FI 1
GRS 1
RN 1 NI 3
CJ 1
SE 1

Electoral lists

[edit]

Summary

[edit]

The table below is a summary of the main parties contesting the 2019 European elections in France.

Party Lead candidate Outgoing MEPs
Lutte Ouvrière (LO) Nathalie Arthaud
0 / 74
French Communist Party (PCF)
Ian Brossat
3 / 74
La France Insoumise (FI)
Manon Aubry
2 / 74
Génération.s
Benoît Hamon
3 / 74
Socialist Party (PS)
Raphaël Glucksmann
7 / 74
Europe Ecology – The Greens (EELV)
Yannick Jadot
5 / 74
La République En Marche! (LREM)
Nathalie Loiseau
9 / 74
Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) Jean-Christophe Lagarde
1 / 74
The Republicans (LR)
François-Xavier Bellamy
16 / 74
Debout la France (DLF)
Nicolas Dupont-Aignan
2 / 74
National Rally (RN) Jordan Bardella
16 / 74
The Patriots (LP)
  • Jaunes et Citoyens (J&C)
Florian Philippot
2 / 74
Popular Republican Union (UPR) François Asselineau
0 / 74
Other notable lists
Urgence Écologie
Dominique Bourg
0 / 74
Animalist Party (PA) Hélène Thouy
0 / 74
Alliance Jaune (AJ) Francis Lalanne
0 / 74

Lutte Ouvrière

[edit]
Final list[46]
# Candidate
1 Nathalie Arthaud
2 Jean-Pierre Mercier
3 Ghislaine Joachim-Arnaud
4 Éric Pecqueur
5 Claire Rocher
6 Éric Bellet
7 Monique Dabat
8 Eddy Le Beller
9 Farida Megdoud
10 Pascal Le Manach
11 Chantal Gomez
12 Jean-Yves Payet
13 Valérie Hamon
14 François Roche
15 Valérie Foissey
16 Julien Wostyn
17 Anne Zanditénas
18 Jean-Marie Nomertin
19 Isabelle Bonnet
20 Salah Keltoumi
21 Dominique Clergue
22 Thomas Rose
23 Fanny Quandalle
24 Patrice Villeret
25 Marie Savre
26 Christophe Garcia
27 Malena Adrada
28 Ali Kaya
29 Nathalie Malhole
30 Michel Darras
31 Julie Lucotte
32 Vincent Chevrollier
33 Marie-Claude Rondeaux
34 Olivier Minoux
35 Mélanie Peyraud
36 Jean Camonin
37 Anne Brunet
38 Olivier Nicolas
39 Élisabeth Faucon
40 Martial Collet
41 Agathe Martin
42 Antoine Colin
43 Renée Potchtovik
44 Mario Rinaldi
45 Josefa Torrès
46 Nicolas Bazille
47 Kelig Lagrée
48 Pierre Nordemann
49 Adèle Kopff
50 Michel Treppo
51 Cécile Faurite
52 Dominique Mariette
53 Fatima Abdellaoui
54 Richard Blanco
55 Fabienne Delorme
56 Liberto Plana
57 Aurélie Jochaud
58 Vincent Goutagny
59 Jacqueline Uhart
60 Vincent Combes
61 Catherine Van Cauteren
62 Romain Brossard
63 Louise Fève
64 François Meunier
65 Charline Joliveau
66 Guillaume Perchet
67 Martine Amelin
68 Bruno Paleni
69 Isabelle Leclerc
70 Jacques Matteï
71 Estelle Jaquet
72 Yves Cheère
73 Marie-José Faligant
74 Maurice Chaynes
75 Dominique Revoy
76 Philippe Julien
77 Mink Takawé
78 Roland Szpirko
79 Arlette Laguiller

The leadership of the New Anticapitalist Party (NPA) initially voted in favor of a common list with Lutte Ouvrière (LO), with its national political council on 6 and 7 October 2018 voting 37–22 (with 5 abstentions and 10 non-participants) in favor of an alliance in the 2019 European elections;[47] however, in November 2018, the parties acknowledged the failure to arrive to an agreement for a common list.[48] The annual party congress of Lutte Ouvrière on 8 and 9 December voted to present an autonomous list, with spokeswoman and former presidential candidate Nathalie Arthaud announcing that she would be its lead candidate.[49] Arthaud said the party refused an alliance with the NPA because the interests of workers were not a priority for the latter, and because she did not want to run a campaign on "all the struggles that can be fought, from ecology to feminism".[50]

French Communist Party

[edit]
Final list[45]
# Candidate
1 Ian Brossat
2 Marie-Hélène Bourlard
3 Patrick Le Hyaric
4 Marie-Pierre Vieu
5 Mamoudou Bassoum
6 Julie Pontalba (PCR)
7 Anthony Gonçalves
8 Maryam Madjidi
9 Benjamin Amar
10 Barbara Filhol
11 Arthur Hay
12 Claire Cemile Renkliçay
13 Michel Jallamion (R&S)
14 Sophia Hocini
15 Stanislas Baugé
16 Manuela Dona
17 Michel Branchi (PCM)
18 Elina Dumont
19 Franck Sailliot
20 Sarah Lamoine-Chaussy
21 Loïc Pen
22 Christine Mequignon
23 Pascal Pontac
24 Michèle Picard
25 Ralph Blindauer
26 Anne-Laure Perez
27 Franck Mérouze
28 Marianne Journiac (R&S)
29 Belaïde Bedreddine
30 Amandine Miguel
31 Nacim Bardi
32 Cinderella Bernard
33 Jean-Luc Bou
34 Isabelle Liron
35 Dominique Pani
36 Hülliya Turan
37 Khaled Bouchajra
38 Katja Krüger
39 Pierre Lacaze
40 Nora Bachiri
41 Jean Mouzat
42 Delphine Piétu
43 Denis Lanoy
44 Charlotte Blandiot-Faride
45 Arnaud Petit
46 Virginie Neumayer
47 Aurélien Gall
48 Patricia Tejas
49 Aurélien Aramini
50 Sandrine Macigno
51 Cyrille Bonnefoy
52 Émilie Lecroq
53 Emmanuel Trigo
54 Cathy Apourceau-Poly
55 Michel Stefani
56 Lucie Martin
57 Youssef Ben Amar
58 Christelle Dumont
59 Sébastien Nugou
60 Laetitia Maure
61 David Blaise
62 Lamya Kirouani
63 Aurélien Crifo
64 Maryline Lucas
65 Yves Dévédec
66 Mina Idir
67 Glenn Le Saout
68 Geneviève De Gouveia
69 Alain Pagano
70 Sandra Blaise
71 Edmond Baudoin
72 Ghislaine Noirault
73 Florian Monteil
74 Nathalie Fabre
75 Frédéric Boulanger
76 Cécile Cukierman
77 Gilbert Garrel
78 Carine Picard-Niles
79 André Chassaigne

On 1 December 2017, Pierre Laurent, national secretary of the French Communist Party (PCF), stated that he wanted to gather "the strongest possible left group" for the 2019 European elections, launching an appeal to Jean-Luc Mélenchon of La France Insoumise and Benoît Hamon of Génération.s.[51] The national council of the PCF on 30 and 31 March approved the principle of a "common platform" including various left-wing groups as well as members of civil society and intellectuals, postponing discussion of electoral strategy.[52] On 3 June, Ian Brossat, deputy for housing to Socialist mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo, was selected as the leader of the PCF list.[53] On 14 June, the PCF again called for a common list of the left in an open letter addressed to parties on the left, excluding the Socialist Party (PS).[54] In December, Fabien Roussel, recently elected leader of the party, indicated that he did not necessarily support a common list given disagreements between left-of-centre parties, and indicated that an alliance with Hamon would only occur if Brossat led the list.[55] On 26 January, the PCF officially unveiled its list, voted on by party members from 31 January to 2 February. It includes two incumbent MEPs (Patrick Le Hyaric and Marie-Pierre Vieu), trade unionist Marie-Hélène Bourlard in second position (featured in the documentary film Merci patron! by sitting France Insoumise deputy François Ruffin), and is half composed of workers.[56]

La France Insoumise

[edit]
Final list[57]
# Candidate
1 Manon Aubry
2 Manuel Bompard
3 Leïla Chaibi
4 Younous Omarjee
5 Anne-Sophie Pelletier
6 Emmanuel Maurel (GRS)
7 Marina Mesure
8 Gabriel Amard
9 Farida Amrani
10 Bernard Borgialli
11 Laurence Lyonnais
12 Benoit Schneckenburger
13 Pascale Le Néouannic
14 Sergio Coronado
15 Manon Le Bretton
16 Frédéric Viale
17 Evelyne Becker
18 Matthias Tavel
19 Catherine Coutard (MRC)
20 Philippe Juraver
21 Céline Léger
22 Sébastien Delogu
23 Sophie Rauszer
24 Romain Dureau
25 Jeanne Chevalier
26 Landry Ngang
27 Prune Helfter-Noah
28 Julien Poix
29 Carole Mare
30 Rhany Slimane
31 Marie-Laure Darrigade
32 Mauricio Garcia-Pereira
33 Nadège Montout
34 William Martinet
35 Nathalie Bourras
36 Jim Delémont
37 Karine Varasse
38 Laurent Thérond
39 Marie Duret-Pujol
40 Kamel Bendjeguellal
41 Magali Waechter
42 Pierre-Edouard Pialat
43 Malika Haddad-Grosjean
44 Serge Buchet
45 Paméla Hocini
46 Jean-Marie Brom
47 Karin Fischer
48 Éric Degenne
49 Édith James
50 Gaëtan Escorbiac
51 Élisabeth Chavanne
52 Paul Zilmia
53 Laëtitia Pison
54 Philippe de Laporte
55 Elisabeth Jutel
56 Alain Dontaine
57 Catherine Poggi-Aubry
58 Gilles Reynaud
59 Laure Manesse
60 Jean-Louis Boutevin
61 Raphaëlle Boudard-Ly Van Tu
62 Nicolas Guillet
63 Inès Muriot
64 Thomas Champigny
65 Julie Garnier
66 Yannick Bedin
67 Anne-Sophie Ligniert
68 Anthony Gratacos
69 Christine Piguel-Coutard
70 Vianney Orjebin
71 Sonia Naffati
72 Eric Lytwyn
73 Murielle Kosman
74 Julian Augé
75 Astrid Morin
76 Christian Benedetti
77 Isabelle Michaud
78 Jean-Luc Mélenchon
79 Charlotte Girard

At the convention of his movement on 25 November 2017, Jean-Luc Mélenchon announced that La France Insoumise would present a list in 2019, considering the elections a "referendum on the European question" to "break the chains, exit the European budgetary treaties".[58] The movement negotiating an alliance with the Spanish party Podemos and the Portuguese Left Bloc in Lisbon on 12 April 2018.[59] At the national level, Mélenchon continued to refuse any alliance with either Hamon's movement or the French Communist Party (PCF).[60] He announced on 11 March 2018 that he himself would not be a candidate.[61]

Preliminary list (30 Jun 2018)[62]
# Women Men
1 Charlotte Girard [fr] Manuel Bompard
2 Leïla Chaibi Younous Omarjee
3 Anne-Sophie Pelletier Gabriel Amard
4 Farida Amrani Bernard Borgialli
5 Laurence Lyonnais Benoit Schneckenburger
6 Pascale Le Néouannic Thomas Guénolé [fr]
7 Manon Le Bretton Sergio Coronado
8 Céline Boussié Matthias Tavel
9 Sarah Soilihi Philippe Juraver
10 Céline Léger Djordje Kuzmanovic
11 Sophie Rauszer Romain Dureau
12 Jeanne Chevalier Julien Poix
13 Prune Helfter-Noah Rhany Slimane
14 Marie-Laure Darrigade William Martinet
15 Nadège Montout Francois Cocq
16 Nathalie Bourras Jim Delémont
17 Marie Duret-Pujol Laurent Thérond
18 Magali Waechter Kamel Bendjeguellal
19 Paméla Hocini Pierre-Edouard Pialat
20 Karin Fischer Serge Buchet
21 Marie-Pierre Ratez Jean-Marie Brom
22 Hélène Franco Éric Degenne
23 Elisabeth Chavanne Paul Zilmia
24 Laëtitia Pison Philippe de Laporte
25 Catherine Poggi Aubry Laurent Courtois
26 Ninon Gillet Alain Dontaine
27 Laure Manesse Gilles Reynaud
28 Julie Garnier Nicolas Guillet
29 Anne-Sophie Ligniert Jérôme Schmitt
30 Sonia Naffati Thomas Champigny
31 Christine Valentin Yannick Bedin
32 Murielle Kosman Eric Lytwyn
33 Isabelle Michaud Julian Augé

The movement published an unordered list of candidates on 5 June, with Charlotte Girard [fr] and Manuel Bompard guaranteed spots as the presumptive list leaders,[63] in first and second position, respectively,[64] and Younous Omarjee as the sole incumbent MEP. The movement received 637 applications, of which 506 were submitted by men and 131 by women; the electoral committee then ensured the demographic parity of the applicants. The resulting list was then submitted feedback until July,[63] when the list was ranked,[64] with another nine spots on the list reserved for members of civil society and trade unions and associations.[63] On 4 July, following a meeting of the electoral committee on 30 June, the movement published an updated list consisting of 66 candidates, with 13 spots reserved for members of civil society.[65]

The list produced by the electoral committee was met with criticism by dissatisfied activists, including Liêm Hoang-Ngoc of the "insubordinate Socialists", who "suspended" his movement's participation; former electoral committee member Lilian Guelfi, who denounced alleged favoritism by Manuel Bompard; and Sarah Soilihi and François Cocq, who withdrew their candidacies following its publication.[66] Djordje Kuzmanovic later quit the movement in November following his removal from the list after sexist remarks.[67] Nevertheless, the consultation of activists from 4 to 20 July resulted in its approval by 86.97% of participants.[68] After Emmanuel Maurel and Marie-Noëlle Lienemann quit the PS in mid-October.[69] the pair formed a new political party close to the Citizen and Republican Movement (MRC), the Republican and Socialist Left (GRS), in early 2019.[70] On 15 October, MRC president Jean-Luc Laurent announced an alliance with Maurel and Lienemann to create a common list with La France Insoumise,[71] with Maurel leaving the social democratic group in the European Parliament.[72] In April 2019, political scientist Thomas Guénolé [fr], in 14th position, accused La France insoumise of being "a dictatorship" : the party reacted by saying he was accused of sexual harassment and removed him from the list.[73][74]

On 15 November, Girard confirmed that she would neither lead the list nor be a candidate in 2019, and appeared to imply that she was sidelined.[75] On 9 December,[57] the movement officially voted to approve its list of 79 candidates and designate Manon Aubry, a 29-year-old tax evasion specialist and spokeswoman at Oxfam France, as its lead candidate. Manuel Bompard, campaign director, was second on the list, followed by Leïla Chaibi and outgoing MEP Younous Omarjee. Emmanuel Maurel, who quit the PS for an alliance with the movement, appeared in sixth, with Mélenchon in the symbolic penultimate position and Girard last.[76] According to Aubry, their list included several active gilets jaunes.[77] As in the 2017 presidential campaign, the movement used holograms to hold virtual meetings in 471 small towns throughout France (via "holovans").[78] Unable to secure financing, Mélenchon called for supporters to participate in a "people's loan" to fund their campaign,[79] collecting 1.5 million euros within five days,[80] and reaching 2 million euros by 10 April, with an average loan of 700 euros.[81]

Génération.s

[edit]
Final list[45]
# Candidate Party
1 Benoît Hamon G.s
2 Sarah Soilihi G.s
3 Guillaume Balas [fr] G.s
4 Isabelle Thomas G.s
5 Salah Amokrane G.s
6 Françoise Sivignon [fr] G.s
7 Éric Pliez G.s
8 Emmanuelle Justum DémE
9 Pierre Serne [fr] G.s
10 Sabrina Benmokhtar G.s
11 Sébastien Peytavie G.s
12 Zerrin Bataray G.s
13 Jérôme Vérité G.s
14 Corrine Acheriaux G.s
15 Stéphane Saubusse G.s
16 Roxane Lundy G.s
17 Michel Pouzol G.s
18 Laura Slimani G.s
19 Jacques Terrenoire DémE
20 Alice Brauns G.s
21 Arash Saeidi G.s
22 Naïma Charaï [fr] G.s
23 Alain Bénard G.s
24 Camille Bordes G.s
25 Miloud Otsmane G.s
26 Valérie de Saint-Do DémE
27 Joao Cunha G.s
28 Anne-Marie Luciani G.s
29 Bastien Recher G.s
30 Ouassila Messaoudi G.s
31 Atte Oksanen G.s
32 Colette Marie G.s
33 Frédéric Laroche DémE
34 Marie Sauts G.s
35 Laurent Taton G.s
36 Claire Chahnez Schmitt G.s
37 Laurent Limousin G.s
38 Karen Aubert G.s
39 Gilles Le Gall G.s
40 Céline Jouin DémE
41 Grégoire Verrière G.s
42 Clémentine Vazquez G.s
43 Thibaud Guillemet G.s
44 Nathalie Bernard G.s
45 Lucien Fontaine G.s
46 Sarah Ecoffet-Chartier G.s
47 Nicola Bertoldi DémE
48 Sheila Farrel McCarron G.s
49 Yann Delmon-Plantadis G.s
50 Emmanuelle Rasseneur G.s
51 Damien Landini G.s
52 Danièle Carnino G.s
53 Jean-Yves Billoré-Tennah G.s
54 Isabell Scheele DémE
55 Paul Bron G.s
56 Sophie Dupressoir G.s
57 Nicolas Dessaux DémE
58 Emmanuelle Trocadero G.s
59 Sébastien Mortreau G.s
60 Sandrine Lelandais G.s
61 Morgan Buisson G.s
62 Marianna Pastore DémE
63 Jan Kasnik G.s
64 Catherine Pagan G.s
65 Hugues Meyer G.s
66 Océane Legrand G.s
67 Romain Queffelec G.s
68 Mariam Maman G.s
69 Fabien Pic DémE
70 Alice Bosler G.s
71 Emmanuel Hugot G.s
72 Marianne Dufour DémE
73 Vincent Gatel G.s
74 Pauline Langlois G.s
75 Serge Méry [fr] G.s
76 Mélanie Russo G.s
77 Alistair Connor DémE
78 Marie Vacherot G.s
79 Édouard Martin G.s

On 21 January 2018, Benoît Hamon announced alongside former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis of DiEM25 that Génération.s would contest the 2019 European elections.[82] On 10 March, Hamon called for the creation of the "first pan-European transnational list" alongside Razem in Poland, The Alternative in Denmark, and LIVRE in Portugal, publishing a common manifesto in June.[83]

Hamon sought to invite Élise Lucet, host of Cash Investigation on France 2, as a lead candidate, but was rebuffed.[84] Audrey Pulvar was also contacted, but indicated that she was not interested,[85] as was the case with Christiane Taubira.[86] The movement communicated with the Greens and PCF, even if the possibility of an alliance between the three was unlikely,[52] and Noël Mamère remained a possible "consensus candidate" in an alliance with the Greens, given his membership of both formations,[87] but ruled out running on 25 June 2018.[88] On 29 October, the movement launched a call for applications for prospective candidates from civil society,[89] receiving between 300 and 400 applications.[90] In mid-November 2018, incumbent MEP Édouard Martin confirmed that he would not seek a second term.[91]

In an interview published in Le Monde on 6 December, Hamon confirmed that he would be the lead candidate of a "citizen alliance",[92] and subsequently closed the door to an alliance with the PS on 7 January 2019, citing its membership of the Party of European Socialists (PES).[93] Le Journal du Dimanche reported that top candidates would also include MEPs Guillaume Balas [fr] and Isabelle Thomas, ex-La France Insoumise member Sarah Soilihi, spokeswoman Aurore Lalucq, and community activist Salah Amokrane.[94] In an interview published in Le Monde in early February, Hamon proposed that the left hold a "citizen vote" in April to select a common list and program,[95] though only New Deal, Les Radicaux de gauche [fr] (LRDG), and the Movement of Progressives (MdP) were receptive to the idea.[96] Hamon then announced on 23 February that he would lead an independent list,[97] revealing the first thirty candidates on the list on 26 February.[98] Lalucq later quit, announcing on 18 March that she would join Place Publique.[99] The movement indicated it was 600,000 euros short of financing its campaign, and considered soliciting donations via a "citizen bank".[100]

Socialist Party, Place Publique, and Nouvelle Donne

[edit]
Final list[45]
# Candidate Party
1 Raphaël Glucksmann PP
2 Sylvie Guillaume PS
3 Éric Andrieu PS
4 Aurore Lalucq PP
5 Pierre Larrouturou ND
6 Nora Mebarek PS
7 Christophe Clergeau PS
8 Aziliz Gouez PP
9 Jean-Marc Germain PS
10 Nadège Désir PRG
11 Jérôme Karsenti PP
12 Pernelle Richardot PS
13 Roger Vicot PS
14 Karine Gloanec Maurin [fr] PS
15 Raphaël Pitti [fr] PP
16 Violaine Lucas PP
17 Philippe Naillet PS
18 Forough Salami-Dadkhah PS
19 Saïd Benmouffok PP
20 Maylis Lavau-Malfroy ND
21 Laurent Baumel PS
22 Marine Mazel PP
23 Arnaud Hadrys PS
24 Marion Boidot PP
25 Frédéric Pic ND
26 Béatrice Bellay PS
27 Jérôme Quéré PP
28 Aline Blancher Mouquet ND
29 Rémi Cardon PS
30 Véronique Brom PP
31 Mickaël Vincent PS
32 Pascale Bousquet-Pitt PS
33 David Sanchez-David ND
34 Gabrielle Siry [fr] PS
35 Maxime Zucca PP
36 Cécilia Gondard PS
37 Gaëtan Sen Gupta PP
38 Charlotte Picard PS
39 Éric Sargiacomo PS
40 Julie Lesage PS
41 Damien Mazeau PP
42 Marie-Thérèse Mantoni ND
43 Christophe Fouillère PS
44 Myriam El-Yassa PS
45 Arnaud Lelache ND
46 Céline Véron-Pierrard PP
47 Flavien Cartier PS
48 Sandrine Hernandez PP
49 François Chemin PS
50 Athénaïs Kouidri PS
51 Cyril Fonrose PS
52 Christine Mouton-Cypriani ND
53 Timothée Schmidt PP
54 Mireille Murawski PS
55 Jean-Bernard Estrade ND
56 Nicole Lozano ND
57 Fabrice de Comarmond PS
58 Nathalie De Oliveira PS
59 Aleksander Glogowski PS
60 Maryline Chatelon PS
61 Zbyslaw Adamus ND
62 Valérie Doubinsky PP
63 Alain Girard ND
64 Béatrice Hakni-Robin PS
65 Paul Cadre PP
66 Elisabeth Humbert-Dorfmüller PS
67 Uisant Créquer ND
68 Chantal Jeoffroy PS
69 Frédéric Engelmann PS
70 Elyne Etienne PP
71 Antoine Guillou PS
72 Angèle Riglet PP
73 Sacha Rousseaux PS
74 Anne Hessel ND
75 Hugo Da Costa PS
76 Corinne Baro ND
77 Frédéric Orain PS
78 Claire Nouvian PP
79 Bruno Van Peteghem PP

Early on, a number of PS heavyweights declined to lead the list, including Najat Vallaud-Belkacem,[101] Pierre Moscovici,[102] Stéphane Le Foll,[103] Olivier Faure,[104] Christiane Taubira,[52] Paul Magnette,[105] François Hollande,[106] Bernard Cazeneuve,[107] Ségolène Royal,[108] Jean-Christophe Cambadélis,[109] and Christian Eckert.[110] Julien Dray declared his candidacy,[111] and Emmanuel Maurel was also reportedly approached to lead the list,[112] and did not rule out the possibility at the time.[113] On 8 October, Le Figaro reported that outgoing MEP Éric Andrieu was a candidate to lead the PS list,[114] as was Christine Revault d'Allonnes [fr], who announced her candidacy on 11 October.[115] Gabrielle Siry [fr],[116] Ségolène Neuville [fr], and Sylvie Guillaume were also considered potential list leaders.[117]

In preparation for the elections, the PS began drafting its platform in May 2018,[118] launching a "digital collaborative platform", laruchesocialiste.fr,[104] which only elicited 337 responses from 272 people in two months.[119] Disagreements on the left wing of the party on the final form of the program persisted through September, despite commitments to create a left-wing and ecologist "intergroup" in the European Parliament, halt any new free trade treaties, and vote against the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) with Canada. The text marked a new approach for the PS, arguing in favor of more social and environmental controls in trade agreements and a revision of the European treaties led by the left. Faure also affirmed that the PS would not support the candidacy of Frans Timmermans as Spitzenkandidat.[120] In an interview with Le Monde published on 12 October, Maurel quit the PS and castigated its failure to represent socialism,[121] soon followed by Marie-Noëlle Lienemann the following day,[122] with the creating a new left-wing party associated with Citizen and Republican Movement (MRC) in 2019, the Republican and Socialist Left (GRS).[70]

On 15 December 2018, at the ending of a meeting of the national council of the PS, Faure for the first time proposed that the party participate in a "rally" of forces on the left.[123] After Royal ruled out standing as a candidate of a common list on 11 January,[124] Faure indicated he would be ready to lead a PS list if necessary.[125] Raphaël Glucksmann, who co-founded Place Publique in an effort to unite the left, was offered the position of lead candidate.[126] On 13 February, the national office of the party approved of Faure's plans to seek an alliance with Place Publique,[127] and Glucksmann officially announced his intention to lead a list in the European elections on 15 March,[128] with the national council of the PS voting to designate Glucksmann as lead candidate the following day, with 128 votes in favor, 5 against, and 35 abstentions (including Stéphane Le Foll and Luc Carvounas). The list is composed of half PS candidates and half those of other parties and figures from civil society,[129] marking the first time since 1979 the PS did not lead its own list in the European elections.[130]

New Deal officially announced its support for the list on 18 March 2019, as did ex-Génération.s spokeswoman Aurore Lalucq.[131] After receiving 215 applications from party officials by 26 October 2018,[132] the PS approved a list of 20 women and 20 men as candidates in the European elections on 27 March 2019, with 23 votes in favor and 11 against; Le Foll, Carvounas, Martine Aubry, and their allies expressed displeasure at the list, as did a number of candidates and outgoing MEPs, who denounced the diluted list (given the number of PS candidates in non-electable positions).[133] After initially coming to an agreement, Virginie Rozière's Les Radicaux de gauche [fr] (LRDG) quit the list on 29 April, following pressure from their former PRG colleagues towards PS not to welcome the LRDG splitters while PRG was itself cancelling its merger into Macron-leaning Radical Movement.[134] On 5 May, Le Parisien reported that Christiane Taubira would back the list, appearing alongside Glucksmann on 15 May.[135]

Europe Ecology – The Greens

[edit]
Final list[136]
# Candidate Party
1 Yannick Jadot EELV
2 Michèle Rivasi EELV
3 Damien Carême EELV
4 Marie Toussaint EELV
5 David Cormand EELV
6 Karima Delli EELV
7 Mounir Satouri EELV
8 Caroline Roose AEI
9 François Alfonsi R&PS
10 Salima Yenbou AEI
11 Benoît Biteau SE
12 Gwendoline Delbos-Corfield EELV
13 Claude Gruffat SE
14 Lydie Massard R&PS
15 François Thiollet EELV
16 Julie Laernoes EELV
17 Jean-Laurent Félizia EELV
18 Sophie Bussière EELV
19 Alexis Tiouka SE
20 Catherine Hervieu [fr] EELV
21 Guillaume Cros EELV
22 Leyla Binici EELV
23 Abdallah Benbetka EELV
24 Ashley Sylvain SE
25 William Lajeanne-Coutard EELV
26 Amandine Crambes-Richaud SE
27 Grégory Doucet EELV
28 Geneviève Payet EELV
29 Ghislain Wysocinski AEI
30 Christine Juste EELV
31 Gilles Clément EELV
32 Sylvie Cassou-Schotte EELV
33 Guy Harau EELV
34 Amélie Cervello R&PS
35 Kader Chibane EELV
36 Coralie Mantion EELV
37 Pascal Clouaire EELV
38 Anna Maillard EELV
39 Christian Lammens EELV
40 Margaux Zekri SE
41 François Nicolas EELV
42 Mireille Alphonse EELV
43 Jérôme Orvain EELV
44 Marie-Neige Houchard EELV
45 Bernard Leterrier EELV
46 Brigitte Fournié-Turquin EELV
47 Mathieu Theurier EELV
48 Sylvie Fare EELV
49 Théo Garcia-Badin JE
50 Christine Arrighi EELV
51 Olivier Longeon EELV
52 Marie-Agnès Peltier EELV
53 Vincent Talmot EELV
54 Daphné Raveneau EELV
55 Farid Djabali EELV
56 Mélanie Vogel EELV
57 Nelson Palis-Niermann EELV
58 Florence Cerbaï EELV
59 Antoine Tifine JE
60 Morgan-Stanisława Briand EELV
61 Jean-François Blanco EELV
62 Anne-Marie Hautant R&PS
63 Nicolas Bonnet EELV
64 Jeannie Tremblay-Guettet EELV
65 Aurélien Boulé R&PS
66 Sybille Jannekeyn EELV
67 François Desriaux EELV
68 Mathilde Tessier JE
69 François Dufour EELV
70 Françoise Coutant EELV
71 Claude Boulanger SE
72 Sophie Börner EELV
73 Jean-Yves Grandidier SE
74 Marine Tondelier EELV
75 Dany Karcher SE
76 Éva Sas EELV
77 Lucien Betbeder [eu] R&PS
78 Eva Joly EELV
79 Julien Durand EELV

On 27 February 2018, MEP Yannick Jadot stated that EELV would seek to present an independent list in 2019.[137] Both Jadot and fellow MEP Michèle Rivasi opposed a rapprochement with Hamon like that in the 2017 presidential election. Among outgoing MEPs, José Bové, Eva Joly, and Pascal Durand did not intend to seek a third mandate.[138][139] Durand, a supporter of Nicolas Hulot, was seen as open to working with La République En Marche!, as was Karima Delli, despite her denial of any such intentions,[138] and on 13 April, she expressed her desire to lead the EELV list.[140] Durand, on the other hand, ultimately joined the La République En Marche list.[45] Other candidates reportedly included David Cormand, Julien Bayou, Marie Toussaint, and Mounir Satouri.[139] On 19 December, Ségolène Royal offered to join the EELV list in second position,[141] but was rejected the following day.[142]

Ordered lists (11 Jun 2018)[143]
# Scenario 1 Scenario 2
(passed)
1 Michèle Rivasi Yannick Jadot
2 Yannick Jadot Michèle Rivasi
3 Marie Toussaint David Cormand
4 David Cormand Marie Toussaint
5 Karima Delli Mounir Satouri
6 Mounir Satouri Karima Delli
7 Gwendoline Delbos-Corfield François Thiollet
8 François Thiollet Gwendoline Delbos-Corfield
9 Julie Laernoes Jean-Laurent Félizia
10 Jean-Laurent Félizia Julie Laernoes
11 Sophie Bussière Guillaume Cros
12 Guillaume Cros Sophie Bussière
13 Catherine Hervieu [fr] Abdallah Benbetka
14 Abdallah Benbetka Catherine Hervieu [fr]
15 Leyla Binici William Lajeanne
16 William Lajeanne Leyla Binici

Given the difficulty in finding a potential list leader, Noël Mamère was named a possible "consensus candidate" in an alliance with Hamon,[87] but later declined on 25 June.[88] On 9 and 10 June, the federal council of the party agreed to put forth provisional lists to be submitted to a membership vote from 11 to 16 July,[144][145] and the outlines of the party's plans for the 2019 elections were presented from 23 to 25 August.[139] Two possible lists were created – one led by Jadot and the other by Rivasi – with the names of Damien Carême and Julien Bayou removed after later revisions.[143] On 16 July, the party announced that Jadot won the vote with 58.69% of votes against 35.59% for Rivasi,[146] and subsequently reaffirmed that he would not ally with Hamon again in the European elections.[147] On 23 September, the EELV federal council agreed to place Damien Carême, mayor of Grande-Synthe, 3rd on the EELV list,[148] and Alexis Tiouka, a former representative to the UN for the rights of indigenous peoples, later joined the list, becoming the first-ever Native American on a European electoral list.[149] In an interview on 25 February 2019, Jadot announced the addition of regional councilor Benoît Biteau to the list in 11th position.[150][151]

Régions et Peuples Solidaires planned to contest the elections but left open the possibility of allying with the Greens,[152] and on 16 February 2019 announced it was an alliance, with former MEP François Alfonsi as well as Lydie Massard and Anne-Marie Hautant joining the list.[153] On 23 February, the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI) duly announced that it reached an agreement with the EELV, with Caroline Roose and Salima Yenbou within the top 10 electable places on the list.[154]

The Greens intend to target both ex-Socialists and disappointed Macron voters who view his government's policies as too right-wing.[155] Jadot has sought to portray the EELV as neither left nor right but "central", attempting to represent a "pragmatic" German-style ecology and create an "ecologist pole" as opposed to the "productivist" and "populist" poles, saying that "ecology is not the left".[156] The Greens, led by Jadot, also unveiled their plans for a "Green New Deal", a name borrowed from the American left, proposing dedicating 100 billion euros to investments in renewable energy and home insulation to achieve 100% electricity generation from renewables within 20 years.[157]

La République En Marche and allies

[edit]
Logo of the Renaissance list of LaREM, MoDem and other liberal parties.
Final list[158]
# Candidate Party
1 Nathalie Loiseau LREM
2 Pascal Canfin Ex-EELV
3 Marie-Pierre Vedrenne MoDem
4 Jérémy Decerle SE
5 Catherine Chabaud MoDem
6 Stéphane Séjourné LREM
7 Fabienne Keller Agir
8 Bernard Guetta SE
9 Irène Tolleret DVG
10 Stéphane Bijoux SE
11 Sylvie Brunet MoDem
12 Gilles Boyer Ex-LR
13 Stéphanie Yon-Courtin Ex-LR
14 Pierre Karleskind LREM
15 Laurence Despaux-Farreng MoDem
16 Dominique Riquet MR
17 Véronique Trillet-Lenoir LREM
18 Pascal Durand Ex-EELV
19 Valérie Hayer LREM
20 Christophe Grudler MoDem
21 Chrysoula Zacharopoulou SE (Greece)
22 Sandro Gozi PD (Italy)
23 Ilana Cicurel LREM
24 Max Orville MoDem
25 Catherine Amalric MR
26 Guy Lavocat LREM
27 Charline Mathiaut MoDem
28 Xavier Fournier Agir
29 Nawel Rafik-Elmrini LREM
30 Mao Péninou LREM
31 Guilmine Eygun LREM
32 Dominique Despras MoDem
33 Henriette Diadio-Dasylva MR
34 Tearii Alpha Tapura
35 Gwendoline Chaudoir Agir
36 Louis de Redon MoDem
37 Sarah Cabarrus Déroche LREM
38 Édouard Détrez SE
39 Marthe Marti MoDem
40 Pierre Marc LREM
41 Stéphanie Villemin LREM
42 Pascal Martin Agir
43 Sophie Segond LREM
44 Pierre-Jean Baty MoDem
45 Najat Akodad LREM
46 Patrick Debruyne MoDem
47 Sophie Tubiana MR
48 Didier Medori MoDem
49 Irène Eulriet Agir
50 David Vaillant LREM
51 Anne Terlez MoDem
52 Harald Bock SE
53 Claire Robert SE
54 Michel Cegielski MR
55 Jacqueline Ferrari UDE
56 Christophe Steger MoDem
57 France Mochel LREM
58 Pascal Henriat MoDem
59 Kinga Igloi SE
60 Philippe Gudin LREM
61 Catherine Michaud MR/GayLib
62 Georges Pereira LREM
63 Marina Ferrari MoDem
64 Jérémy Haddad AC
65 Anne Macey LREM
66 Pierre-Olivier Carel MoDem
67 Julia Clavel LREM
68 Joseph Benedetto Agir
69 Clémence Rouvier LREM
70 Olivier Allain LREM
71 Danièle Noël MoDem
72 Ryan Lequien LREM
73 Nadia Chabal-Calvi LREM
74 Hussein Khairallah MoDem
75 Geneviève Machery Agir
76 Gaëtan Blaize MR
77 Édith Varet MoDem
78 Jean Veil SE
79 Paloma Moreno-Elgard SE

In March 2019, Les Échos reported that the choice of lead candidate was to be made internally between either health minister Agnès Buzyn or European affairs minister Nathalie Loiseau.[159] Loiseau officially announced she would seek the nomination for lead candidate following her debate with Marine Le Pen on the set of L'Émission politique on 14 March,[160] while Les Échos and Le Parisien later reported that Buzyn withdrew her name from consideration.[161] Loiseau was officially designated as lead candidate on 26 March as the list of the first 30 candidates was unveiled.[162] Alain Juppé was the subject of early speculation regarding his potential candidacy to lead the list,[2] though confirmed on 19 March 2018 that he would not stand,[163] and his appointment to the Constitutional Council precluded his participation in the campaign, but he indicated he would have supported Macron's list.[164]

Other speculated list leaders included Édouard Philippe, François Bayrou, Nicolas Hulot, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet,[1][165] Sylvie Goulard, Daniel Cohn-Bendit,[166] Arnaud Danjean,[167] and Michel Barnier. Pierre Moscovici ruled out the possibility,[168] as did Barnier,[169] Jean-Yves Le Drian,[170] Bayrou,[171] Danjean,[172] Daniel Cohn-Bendit,[173] and Thomas Pesquet.[174] Outgoing Green MEP Karima Delli, ministers Marlène Schiappa and Brune Poirson, deputy Amélie de Montchalin,[175] Pascal Canfin, head of the French section of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), and former France Inter journalist Bernard Guetta were also considered potential candidates.[176] Canfin declined to lead the list on 16 November,[177] and in late January 2019, Laurence Tubiana, president of the European Climate Foundation and former COP21 negotiator, was mentioned as a possibility,[178] as were Le Drian, sailor Maud Fontenoy,[179] justice minister Nicole Belloubet,[180] and Emmanuelle Wargon.[181]

On 17 December 2017, at the congress of the Democratic Movement (MoDem), Christophe Castaner said he supported an "enlarged list" for the European elections based on their alliance,[182] and on 26 September 2018, the movement officially announced the opening of applications for prospective candidates from civil society,[183] receiving 2,673 in total,[184] winnowed by an investiture committee chaired by Jean-Marc Borello.[185] Former Élysée advisor Stéphane Séjourné was designated campaign director on 29 October, tasked with creating a list alongside Agir,[176] and seeking a lead candidate with a "green profile".[186] For the MoDem, Bayrou selected Régis Lefebvre to serve as deputy campaign director.[187]

On 15 February, Challenges revealed that EELV MEP Pascal Durand would be on the list in an electable position and Séjourné in the top 25 places.[188] The centre-right party Agir proposed several candidates for the list, including two in electable position: Nicolas Barnier (the son of Michel Barnier and a parliamentary assistant), as well as Fabienne Keller, Gilles Boyer, Élisabeth Morin-Chartier, and Xavier Fournier.[189] In an interview published in Challenges on 6 February, Radical Movement co-president Laurent Hénart indicated that the movement would likely vote to join a common list,[190] sparking dissent among some ex-PRG members including co-president Sylvia Pinel, who announced her departure from the party to resurrect the PRG on two days later.[191] The candidates it proposed included outgoing MEP Dominique Riquet, Olga Johnson, and Mélanie Fortier.[192] One outgoing MEP, Jean Arthuis, announced that he would not seek to run again in 2019,[193] and Agir MEP Tokia Saïfi also retired,[194] as did the party's other MEP Élisabeth Morin-Chartier after learning she would not be in electable position on the list.[195] Foreign nationals were also on the list, including former Italian undersecretary for European affairs Sandro Gozi.[196] After declining to run as a lead candidate, Canfin ultimately appeared in second on the list.[197]

La République En Marche considered alliances with similar European political parties including Citizens in Spain and the Democratic Party in Italy, as well as parties outside of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE). Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade was delegated with the task of forming contacts with potential European partners.[198] On 9 September 2018, Guy Verhofstadt, leader of the ALDE group, claimed that La République En Marche would ally with ALDE, which Castaner denied.[199] Reports in October indicated Macron and Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte reached an agreement in principle for an alliance, though Anglade emphasized that ALDE parties would merely serve as the foundation, with EPP parties on the right such as Civic Platform in Poland and New Democracy in Greece as well as PES parties on the left including the Democratic Party in Italy and the Social Democratic Party of Austria in consideration. The party considered recruiting MEPs to form a group after the election.[200] Following the airing of a report on France 2 on 11 March about ALDE's financial backing from Monsanto, manufacturer of glyphosate, the party announced that it would not join the ALDE,[201] leading the latter to announce it would no longer accept corporate donations.[202] Verhofstadt later announced on 2 May that the ALDE group would be dissolved after the elections to ally and create a new group.[203]

Union of Democrats and Independents

[edit]
Final list[204]
# Candidate
1 Jean-Christophe Lagarde
2 Nora Berra
3 Louis Giscard d'Estaing
4 Josy Chambon
5 Olivier Mével
6 Juliette Aubert-Zocchetto
7 Florent Montillot
8 Frédérique Schultess
9 Mustapha Saadi
10 Anne-Sophie Taszarek
11 Arthur Khandjian
12 Sonia Zidate
13 Thomas Fabre
14 Christelle Favetta-Sieyes
15 Aurélien Sebton
16 Sophie Routier
17 Philippe Petit
18 Catherine Maudet
19 Romain Mifsud
20 Martine Guibert
21 Maurice Perrion
22 Brigitte Devésa
23 Lionel Boucher
24 Nathalie Lebas
25 Benoît Rolland
26 Michéle Corvaisier
27 Daniel Pigeon-Angelini
28 Nathalie Robcis
29 Didier Klein
30 Catherine Scibilia
31 Clément Stengel
32 Anne Claudius-Petit
33 Franck Sottou
34 Sophie Larrey-Lamant
35 Marcel Denieul
36 Jessica Compper
37 Gilles Cima
38 Patricia Suppi
39 Éric Delhaye
40 Nathalie Barde
41 Éric Touron
42 Catherine Comte-Deleuze
43 Bruno Drapron
44 Nathalie Collovati
45 Augustin Leclerc
46 Mathilde Wielgocki
47 Maurice Di Nocera
48 Martine Ollié
49 Yannick Lucot
50 Cécile Picq
51 Yannick Chartier
52 Joëlle Murré
53 Didier Reveau
54 Maria Morgado de Oliveira
55 Lionel Goiseau
56 Valérie Nahmias
57 Gérard Francalanci
58 Anne-Lucie Clausse
59 Nicolas Lebas
60 Caroline Duc
61 Étienne Robin
62 Lucie Miccoli
63 Henri Zeller
64 Marie-Noëlle Delaire
65 Julien Cazenave
66 Catherine Canivet
67 James Chéron
68 Évelyne Perrot
69 Romain Boulant
70 Anne-Sophie Pala-Massoni
71 Dimitri Oudin
72 Sophie Auconie
73 Nicolas Calluaud
74 Nathalie Goulet
75 Philippe Laurent
76 Brigitte Fouré
77 Michel Zumkeller
78 Valérie Létard
79 Jean-Marie Bockel

On 15 December 2018, Lagarde launched the party's campaign at its extraordinary congress,[205] hoping to gain the support of pro-European voters who were not necessarily in favor of Macron's ideas on Europe.[206] The party is also seeking to gain support from LR voters disillusioned by the hard-right political line of Wauquiez.[207] Former LR vice president Virginie Calmels as well as general Pierre de Villiers were approached as potential candidates.[208] However, Calmels later denied she was contacted and ruled out working with the UDI.[209] Xavier Bertrand planned to appear at the launch of the UDI congress remotely, but reiterated that he did not support a federal Europe did support the UDI list.[210] The UDI list includes former MEP Nora Berra, an Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes regional councilor elected on the LR list who later quit the party to protest its hard-right positioning, in second position,[211] as well as longtime centrist Louis Giscard d'Estaing, son of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, in third.[212] While the party's sole remaining MEP Patricia Lalonde initially supported the principle of an independent list, she later urged the party to join the LR list, expressing support for Bellamy and Wauquiez;[213] Lalonde did not seek another mandate in the elections.[45]

The Republicans

[edit]
Final list[45]
# Candidate Party
1 François-Xavier Bellamy LR
2 Agnès Evren LR
3 Arnaud Danjean LR
4 Nadine Morano LR
5 Brice Hortefeux LR
6 Nathalie Colin-Oesterlé LC
7 Geoffroy Didier LR
8 Anne Sander LR
9 Frédéric Péchenard LR
10 Laurence Sailliet LR
11 Franck Proust LR
12 Cristina Storoni LR
13 Alain Cadec LR
14 Lydia Guirous LR
15 Bernard Asso LR
16 Angélique Delahaye LR
17 Guillaume Guérin LR
18 Anne Brissaud LC
19 Patrick Boré LR
20 Sonia Petro LR
21 Philippe Meunier LR
22 Françoise Guégot LR
23 Bernard Carayon LR
24 Faustine Maliar LR
25 Sébastien Pilard LR
26 Livia Graziani-Sanciu LR
27 Xavier Wiik LR
28 Sandrine Chaix LC
29 David Labiche LR
30 Isabelle Froment-Meurice LR
31 Pascal Marie CPNT
32 Karine Charbonnier LR
33 Didier Irigoin LR
34 Laëtitia Quilici LR
35 Lewis Marchand LR
36 Marie-Laure Dalphin LR
37 Guillaume Arquer LR
38 Léa Boyer LR
39 Fadi Dahdouh LR
40 Aurélie Troubat LC
41 Philippe Vitel LR
42 Stéphanie Ficarella LR
43 Sacha Benisti LR
44 Lauriane Josende LR
45 Kévin Para LR
46 Véronique Martinez LR
47 Gérald Henrion LR
48 Martine Aury CPNT
49 Patrick Brisset LC
50 Sandrine Dauchelle LR
51 Guillaume Michaux unknown
52 Marie-Dominique Aubry LR
53 Romain Bonnet LR
54 Sarah Boualem LR
55 Maxime Vergnault LR
56 Anaïs Jéhanno LR
57 Abdoul Doukaïni LR
58 Stéphanie Jankiewicz unknown
59 Antoine Carré LC
60 Hortense Chartier LR
61 Laurent Hamon LR
62 Anne-Cécile Suzanne unknown
63 Gaëtan Juillat unknown
64 Brigitte Fischer-Patriat LR
65 Marc Langé LR
66 Nathalie Béranger LR
67 Gabriel Melaïmi LR
68 Brigitte Rivière LR
69 Philippe Moreau LR
70 Sylvie Trautmann LC
71 Philippe Monnet LR
72 Fabienne Le Ridou LR
73 Bernard Faureau LR
74 Amanda Guénard LR
75 Sébastien Weil LR
76 Valérie Lecerf-Livet LR
77 Pierre Maurin LC
78 Nathalie Roussel LR
79 Michel Dantin LR

On 18 November, Le Journal du Dimanche reported that LR leader Laurent Wauquiez was considering 33-year-old Catholic philosopher François-Xavier Bellamy as a candidate to lead the LR list in 2019,[214] though his political inexperience and conservative profile initially raised concerns.[215] Wauquiez decided to submit three names to the CNI on 29 January, naming not only Bellamy but Agnès Evren and Arnaud Danjean as top candidates for the list,[216] balancing the various strands of the party, with Evren close to Valérie Pécresse and Danjean a committed pro-European close to Alain Juppé.[217] On 29 January, the CNI validated the nominations of Bellamy, Evren, and Danjean with 38 out of 40 votes.[218] Other potential list leaders included Laurent Wauquiez, who declined,[219] Virginie Calmels, Damien Abad,[168] Nadine Morano,[165] Jean Leonetti, Arnaud Danjean,[220] Luc Ferry,[167] Brice Hortefeux,[221] Pierre de Villiers,[222] Éric Woerth, Christian Jacob,[223] Geoffroy Didier, Philippe Juvin, Michel Dantin,[224] and Arnaud Danjean,[225] though Leonetti declined,[226] Ferry was uninterested,[221] and Dantin decided instead to seek another term as mayor of Chambéry in 2020.[227] Pécresse,[228] Rachida Dati,[229] and Michel Barnier also declined to lead the LR list.[169]

In an interview published on 10 March 2018 in Le Journal du Dimanche, Thierry Mariani militated for an alliance with Le Pen,[230] and was subsequently threatened with expulsion from the party;[231] he ultimately joined the RN list.[45] On 9 October, Wauquiez ruled out the possibility of alliances with Debout la France, La République En Marche!, or the National Rally in a letter addressed to Nicolas Dupont-Aignan.[232] On 12 February 2019, Hervé Morin of The Centrists met with Wauquiez about a possible alliance for two out of the top 20 places on the list.[233] On 6 March, the LR national investiture committee designated the first 26 candidates on the list.[234] Alexandre Vergnes, general secretary of Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions (CPNT), was initially slated to appear in 13th – and later 15th – position, but was later demoted to 30th;[235] ultimately, the party announced on 11 April that its candidates would be Martine Aury in 48th and Pascal Marie in 31st.[236] Geoffroy Didier was appointed campaign director in March.[237] Despite pressure from La République En Marche to support their list ahead of the 2020 municipal elections and implied threats not to support them in case of their refusal denounced by some as "blackmail", "Macron-compatible" mayors (including Arnaud Robinet and Christian Estrosi) largely backed Bellamy's list.[238]

Among outgoing MEPs, Nadine Morano, Brice Hortefeux, Alain Cadec, Franck Proust, Geoffroy Didier,[221] and Angélique Delahaye sought to stand as candidates, while Françoise Grossetête, Élisabeth Morin-Chartier, Michèle Alliot-Marie, Alain Lamassoure, Jérôme Lavrilleux, Renaud Muselier, and Maurice Ponga did not seek the party's investiture,[239] with Rachida Dati also opting out in view of the 2020 municipal elections in Paris.[240] Marc Joulaud and Philippe Juvin are also not running for another term.[45]

Debout la France

[edit]
Final list[241]
# Candidate Party
1 Nicolas Dupont-Aignan DLF
2 Stéphanie Gibaud SE
3 Jean-Philippe Tanguy DLF
4 Marie-Jo Zimmermann Ex-LR
5 Bruno North CNIP
6 Cécile Bayle de Jessé DLF
7 Damien Lempereur DLF
8 Nadejda Silanina DLF
9 Benjamin Cauchy DLF
10 Anne-Sophie Frigout DLF
11 Gerbert Rambaud DLF
12 Florence Italiani DLF
13 Patrick Mignon DLF
14 Florence Bernard DLF
15 Yvon Setze DLF
16 Nathalie Raoul DLF
17 Nicolas Calbrix DLF
18 Josette Brosse SE
19 Philippe Torre DLF
20 Huguette Layet CNIP
21 Noël Chuisano DLF
22 Daniela Matthes DLF
23 François de Grailly DLF
24 Dominique Mahé DLF
25 Thierry Gourlot CNIP
26 Sonia Colemyn DLF
27 Christophe Tavernier DLF
28 Marie-Dominique Bagur DLF
29 Marc Mantovani DLF
30 Françoise Bernalès DLF
31 Pierre-Jean Robinot DLF
32 Marie-Anne Baudoui-Maurel DLF
33 Damien Bouticourt DLF
34 Véronique Seguin DLF
35 Jean-Michel Drevet DLF
36 Annick Leveau CNIP
37 Philippe Morenvillier DLF
38 Marie Durand DLF
39 Pascal Lesellier DLF
40 Véronique Pagand DLF
41 Lilian Noirot DLF
42 Annie Berthault-Korzhyk DLF
43 Patrick Bucourt DLF
44 Véronique Loir DLF
45 Jacques-Frédéric Sauvage CNIP
46 Armelle Guénolé DLF
47 Olivier Pjanic DLF
48 Sylvaine Lacan DLF
49 Luc Bucheton DLF
50 Valérie Caudron DLF
51 Michel Lévesque DLF
52 Sophie Lavier DLF
53 Pascal Tschaen DLF
54 Corinne Kaufmann CNIP
55 Daniel Degrima DLF
56 Dominique Carrotte DLF
57 Jacques Armando DLF
58 Marie Goncalves DLF
59 Fabien Hurel DLF
60 Véronique Delicourt DLF
61 Yves Chantereau DLF
62 Marie José Abenoza DLF
63 Maurice Montangon DLF
64 Annick Veillerot DLF
65 Henri Roure CNIP
66 Nastasia Dufresne DLF
67 Thierry Spahn DLF
68 Marie Roux DLF
69 Vivien Gosset DLF
70 Marie France Lacoste DLF
71 Enguerrand Cambier DLF
72 Christine-Théodora Boone CNIP
73 Benoît Pouthier DLF
74 Anna-Rita Marinelli DLF
75 François Encrenaz DLF
76 Marie-Thérèse Lefeuvre DLF
77 Richard Trinquier DLF
78 Anne Boissel DLF
79 Jean-Louis Masson DVD

On 19 January 2018, Europe 1 revealed that Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, leader of Debout la France, appeared to close the door to an alliance with the National Rally (RN) while still appealing for a "union of patriots" that could yet include members of the National Rally.[242] On 20 March, the National Centre of Independents and Peasants (CNIP) voted unanimously to join Dupont-Aignan's "The Lovers of France" (Les Amoureux de la France),[243][244] a political formation including the Christian Democratic Party of Jean-Frédéric Poisson and mayor of Béziers Robert Ménard.[245] On 31 May, the three figures of "The Lovers of France" presented a "common program" with president of the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group Ryszard Legutko in attendance,[246] coinciding with the defection of FN MEP Bernard Monot to join DLF and the publication of an open letter from Le Pen inviting Dupont-Aignan to form a common list,[247] which the latter subsequently rejected publicly.[248] On 23 September, Dupont-Aignan officially announced that he intended to lead a "union list" of the right in the 2019 European elections,[249] and DLF officially concluded its alliance with the ECR on 21 December.[250]

RN MEP Sylvie Goddyn, who was expelled from the party on 19 October 2018 after indicating her support for Dupont-Aignan's initiative for a union list,[251] initially planned to appear on the party's list,[252] as did Poisson.[253] According to a report in Le Figaro, Dupont-Aignan also sought to invite Jean Lassalle to lead his list but was rebuffed,[254] as was the case with Thierry Mariani,[255] who chose to join the RN list.[256] Jeannette Bougrab also refused to join the list, while both Dupont-Aignan and Le Pen failed to recruit LR member Erik Tegnér. DLF attempted to draft another LR figure, Malika Sorel,[257] while UBS whistleblower Stéphanie Gibaud became a candidate on the DLF list.[258] On 11 February, L'Opinion reported that wealthy financier and writer Charles Gave would appear on the DLF list and provide the party with nearly 2 million euros in funding, while his daughter Emmanuelle Gave would also be on the list in an electable position.[259] After Quotidien revealed the younger Gave's history of controversial tweets, DLF announced on 20 February that she would not be nominated, thus losing the elder Gave's guarantee of funding.[260] Following the departure of the Gaves and denial of loans, the party relied on 1.2 million in funding via a "people's loan" from supporters, in addition to around 1 million euros provided by candidates on the list.[261]

On 28 March 2019, Dupont-Aignan unveiled the first 23 candidates on the list, excluding Poisson because of his alleged refusal to embrace a collective approach, with outgoing MEPs Monot and Goddyn also absent "by mutual agreement".[262] Poisson reportedly threatened to launch his own list with Gave after being told he would appear in fifth position, rather than third as originally planned.[263] Despite their participation in Les Amoureux de la France, Ménard and Nicolas Dhuicq ultimately supported the list of the RN.[264]

National Rally

[edit]
Final list[265]
# Candidate
1 Jordan Bardella
2 Hélène Laporte
3 Thierry Mariani
4 Dominique Bilde
5 Hervé Juvin
6 Joëlle Mélin
7 Nicolas Bay
8 Virginie Joron
9 Jean-Paul Garraud
10 Catherine Griset
11 Gilles Lebreton
12 Maxette Grisoni-Pirbakas
13 Jean-François Jalkh
14 Aurélia Beigneux
15 Gilbert Collard
16 Julie Lechanteux
17 Philippe Olivier
18 Annika Bruna
19 Jérôme Rivière
20 France Jamet
21 André Rougé
22 Mathilde Androuët
23 Jean-Lin Lacapelle
24 Marie Dauchy
25 Éric Minardi
26 Patricia Chagnon
27 Gilles Pennelle
28 Mylène Troszczynski
29 Kévin Pfeffer
30 Edwige Diaz
31 Julien Odoul
32 Audrey Guibert
33 Philippe Vardon [fr]
34 Mathilde Paris
35 Thibaut de La Tocnaye [fr]
36 Éléonore Revel
37 Franck Allisio
38 Sophie Blanc
39 Paul-Henry Hansen-Catta
40 Alexandra Maïnetti
41 Julien Leonardelli
42 Éléonore Bez
43 Philippe Eymery
44 Huguette Fatna
45 Christophe Barthès
46 Odile de Mellon
47 Laurent Jacobelli
48 Hombeline du Parc
49 Jacques Ricciardetti
50 Anne-Sophie Rigault
51 Aleksandar Nikolic
52 Sophie Robert
53 Frédéric Fabre
54 Françoise Grolet
55 Gilles Lacroix
56 Mélanie Disdier
57 Jean-Guillaume Remise
58 Agnès Marion
59 Yves Villeneuve
60 Marie-Luce Brasier-Clain
61 Jérôme Harbourg
62 Florence Joubert
63 Nicolas Bertin
64 Claudie Cheyroux
65 Philippe Lottiaux
66 Renée Thomaïdis
67 Christian Houdet [fr]
68 Mylène Wunsch
69 Cyril Nauth
70 Séverine Werbrouck
71 Jean-Michel Cadenas
72 Cindy Demange
73 Wallerand de Saint-Just
74 Sandrine D'Angio
75 Philippe Loiseau
76 Régine Andris
77 Dominique Martin
78 Marine Le Pen
79 Julien Sanchez

According to a report in L'Obs on 22 November 2018, Jordan Bardella, the 23-year-old head of the party's youth wing Génération Nation, was favored by Le Pen to lead the list.[266] and on 7 January 2019, Louis Aliot confirmed that Bardella would lead the party's list in the European elections after being confirmed unanimously by the members of the RN's leadership.[267] Two LR members, former minister Thierry Mariani and Jean-Paul Garraud, as well as economist Hervé Juvin, appeared on the party's list.[268] In addition, André Rougé, who advised Le Pen during the presidential campaign and another ex-UMP member, employed in the mayoral office of Jacques Chirac until 1995, was also on the list.[269] A number of other lead candidates were considered but did not ultimately run. On 1 December 2017, Nicolas Bay announced that Marine Le Pen would not lead the party's list in 2019.[270] Juvin was also considered a possibility,[271] and on 12 October 2018, Aliot confirmed said he would seek to become lead candidate,[272] but announced on 20 November that he would instead seek the mayoralty of Perpignan in the 2020 municipal elections.[273]

On 13 December 2017, Le Pen claimed that she wanted an alliance with Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, president of Debout la France,[274] and met with Dupont-Aignan the same day to discuss "a possible partnership",[275] but was rebuked a month later,[242] and subsequently published an open letter seeking an alliance on 31 May 2018,[247] only to receive his rejection again on 3 June.[248] RN MEP Sylvie Goddyn was expelled from the party on 19 October 2018 after indicating her openness to Dupont-Aignan's initiative for a union list on the right.[251]

Le Pen campaigned with Bardella at public meetings on Saturday afternoons in 20 small communes over the course of a campaign, the cost of which is anticipated to be around 4 million euros, in addition to a single major campaign event in a regional capital on 1 May,[276] with Hénin-Beaumont mayor Steeve Briois appointed campaign director.[277] Like La France Insoumise, the party launched an appeal for a "popular loan", soliciting donations from supporters in order to finance its campaign after being denied loans by French banks,[278] and on 23 April announced that it raised 4 million euros using this scheme, which promised to repay lenders with 5% interest.[279] Le Pen and Matteo Salvini plan to hold a joint campaign meeting in Italy in mid-May, likely in Milan on 18 May.[280]

The Patriots

[edit]
Final list[45]
# Candidate
1 Florian Philippot
2 Mireille d'Ornano
3 Joffrey Bollée
4 Paulette Roure
5 Thomas Laval
6 Amélie de la Rochère
7 Franck de Lapersonne
8 Véronique Thisse
9 Jean-François Barnaba
10 Nathalie Reinert
11 Pascal Bauche
12 Eliane Klein
13 Geoffrey Denis
14 Hélène Cachera
15 Alain Avello
16 Patricia Bruckmann
17 Gilbert Biasoli
18 Martine Raimbault
19 Jean-Luc Touly
20 Carole Aranda
21 Dietrich Braun
22 Astrid Leplat
23 Christian Blanchon
24 Nathalie Desseigne
25 Éric Vilain
26 Nicole Buriller
27 Jean-Marie Verani
28 Corinne Bobard-De Miranda
29 Éric Richermoz
30 Marine Berrabeh
31 Olivier Fostier
32 Honorine Laurent
33 Dominique Bourse-Provence
34 Marie-Christine Bocquet
35 Antoine Renault-Zielinski
36 Leslie Dehaese
37 Sylvain Marcelli
38 Nathalie Robert
39 Geoffray Gourré
40 Karine Haverlant
41 Thibaud Lonjon
42 Jeannine Douzon
43 Pierrick Dennequin
44 Virginie Rosez
45 David Ponsard Vidal
46 Marguerite Bernier
47 Jean-Paul Valour
48 Angélique Le Corre
49 Victor Catteau
50 Corinne Malitte
51 Nicolas Bedel
52 Laura Gavilan
53 Jean-Bernard Formé
54 Sandrine Bessonnier
55 Johan Delplanque
56 Manon Princet
57 Kerrian Blaise
58 Nathalie Szych
59 Christian Escoin
60 Françoise Bouis
61 Aymeric Mongelous
62 Mélanie Bertrand
63 Jean-Claude Galea
64 Denise Cornet
65 Bernard Janvier
66 Nathalie Bienaime
67 Olivier Pittoni
68 Michèle Labrosse
69 Éric Fordos
70 Sylviane Alim-Munier
71 Bastien Regnier
72 Aurélie Le Gourlay
73 Alain Roudergues
74 Anne-Marie Le Calvez
75 Xavier-Laurent Kurczoba
76 Lydie Lenglet
77 Cyril Martinez
78 Kelly Betesh
79 Gérard Marchand

On 23 November 2017, Florian Philippot announced that his movement, The Patriots (Les Patriotes), would present candidates in the 2019 European elections, fighting for the French exit from the European Union.[281] The party had three MEPs, including Sophie Montel and Mireille d'Ornano,[44] though Montel quit the party on 5 July 2018.[282] Philippot launched the party's campaign for the European elections with the publication of his book Frexit, setting out his vision of Europe, in September 2018. Despite his hopes to build a cross-party list, his appeals to Henri Guaino, François Asselineau, and Jean Lassalle went unreciprocated.[283] Lacking public financing, Philippot called for donations to help fund the party's campaign.[284] As with other parties, the movement sought to recruit gilets jaunes onto its list, with Philippot seeking to register the name with the National Institute of Industrial Property (INPI) as well.[285] Philippot confirmed on 22 February that his party would have the financial means to contest the elections, saying that he would lead the list, followed by d'Ornano in second place.[286] On 30 April, Philippot filed his list, which was joined by members of Jean-François Barnaba's list Jaunes et citoyens; Barnaba himself is ninth on the list.[287]

On April 24, close to the deadline for filing of lists, Philippot publicly called for a common list with Asselineau; according to L'Opinion, he delegated Thibaud Lonjon with the task of soliciting an alliance, offering 300,000 euros in additional financing for the list (which had then already raised around 1.2 million euros). In addition to Asselineau, Philippot sought a last-minute alliance with Dupont-Aignan, this time offering 400,000 euros for the third spot on the list, but was again rejected, with Bertrand Dutheil de La Rochère confirming these approaches.[288]

[edit]
Final list[45]
# Candidate
1 François Asselineau
2 Zamane Ziouane
3 Vincent Brousseau
4 Anne Limoge
5 Charles Gallois
6 Béatrice Henoux
7 David Pauchet
8 Isabelle Ninvirth
9 Pierre-Nicolas Terver
10 Christine Annoot
11 Philippe Conte
12 Martine Decius
13 Jean-Christophe Loutre
14 Sylvie Heyvaerts
15 Quentin Bourgeois
16 Nelly Paté
17 Jean de Rohan-Chabot
18 Muriel Hermier
19 Gérard Poulain
20 Lauriane Mollier
21 Éric Lemestre
22 Nadia Zidane
23 Benoît Matharan
24 Pascale Hirn
25 Jean-Baptiste Villemur
26 Julia Vincenzi
27 Kévin Miranda
28 Christine Agathon-Burton
29 Éric Noirez
30 Diane Lagrange
31 Lionel Kahan
32 Karima Rabouhi
33 Dimitri de Vismes
34 Alexandra Paraboschi
35 Sébastien Dubois
36 Laurie Bahl
37 Hugo Sonnier
38 Marie-Laure Yapi
39 Christophe Blanc
40 Audrey Cuny
41 Mimoun Ziani
42 Eva Di Battista
43 Olivier Loisel
44 Émilie Fauvel
45 Olivier Durnez
46 Sophie Sénac
47 Philippe Gombert
48 Nathalie Moquet
49 David Guillaume
50 Chrystel Carte
51 Simon Giessinger
52 Marianne Siv
53 Thierry Pons
54 Kenza Meyer
55 Guillaume Prin
56 Blandine Urbanski
57 Hugues Maintenay
58 Tiphaine Perrier
59 Alain Parisot
60 Marie-Françoise Le Ray
61 Suraj Sukhdeo
62 Marie Radosz
63 Christophe Nuret
64 Michèle Crogiez
65 Romain Rose
66 Sylvie Rousseric-Denax
67 Manuel de Lavallée
68 Anne Morel
69 Claude Macé
70 Pascale Henry
71 Jérôme Yanez
72 Lorine Mangattale
73 Gaëtan Ségalen
74 Véronique Barrow
75 Sébastien Lacroix
76 Frédérique Bisière
77 Guillaume Bétend
78 Anne-Rebecca Willing
79 Laurent Verdoux

On 18 November 2017, François Asselineau, founder of the Popular Republican Union (UPR), said at the party congress in Tours that he would "probably" be a candidate on the party's list in the 2019 European elections.[289] Asselineau intends to leverage the party's online presence to help raise funds from its 32,000 members.[290]

Gilets jaunes

[edit]

Present lists

[edit]

In a press release on 29 April, Francis Lalanne announced that he would present a list under the banner of Alliance jaune on 30 April, having allied with the abortive RIC list now led by Jérémy Clément,[291] with a financial guarantee of 800,000 euros from Jean-Marc Governatori, co-secretary of the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI) – allied with the Greens – in order to ensure the list would be able to contest the elections. The list was led by Lalanne, with Sophia Albert-Salmeron in second and Clément in third position.[292] This effort began following the publication of an open letter signed by Lalanne and Governatori, co-secretary of the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI), on 7 December 2018 supporting the principle of a gilets jaunes list.[293] On 17 December, Lalanne announced the launch of the Rassemblement gilet jaune citoyen list,[294] though was opposed by many gilets jaunes who felt that he did not represent them.[295] According to Le Figaro, Jean-François Barnaba was expected to be chosen as the lead candidate for this list, despite having once considered launching his own list,[296] but on 22 March instead announced that he wanted to lead his own list, Jaunes et citoyens,[297] which later allied with Philippot's list, The Patriots, with ten candidates in non-electable positions.[298]

On 3 March, Christophe Chalençon announced the creation of the Évolution Citoyenne (Citizen Evolution) list for the European elections.[299] Though Chalençon is a notable figure of the movement, he says the list is not a list of "yellow vests", even if most of its candidates are, but consists of members of civil society representing "citizens of the left and right".[300][301]

Another list, Mouvement pour l'Initiative Citoyenne, which supports implementing the RIC at the national and European level, was selected by drawing lots,[302] though it existed long before the movement, with its foundation in 2006 and presence in the 2009 elections.[298] Yvan Bachaud [fr], spokesman for the list (led by Gilles Helgen), reiterated on 6 May that the list has no connection to the gilets jaunes movement, and is only focused on supporting the RIC.[303]

Other parties ultimately included gilets jaunes on their lists, including the French Communist Party (PCF) with three, two present on the pro-Frexit Popular Republican Union (UPR) list led by François Asselineau, and right-wing activist Benjamin Cauchy in 9th position for Debout la France (DLF), of which he was already a member and spokesperson.[298]

Abortive lists

[edit]

On 4 December 2018, amid the gilets jaunes protests, Jean-François Barnaba announced that he intended to prepare a list of gilets jaunes to contest the European elections in 2019.[305] On 10 December, Hayk Shahinyan announced that he would also attempt to constitute a list.[306] Christophe Chalençon, one of the leaders of the "free" gilets jaunes, also supported the ambition of presenting a list in the European elections.[307] Shahinyan's association, Gilets Jaunes, le mouvement, was the best-organized group, with 85,000 euros and 14,000 members.[308]

On 23 January, the group announced in a press release that they would present a list called Ralliement d'initiative citoyenne (RIC, or Citizens' Initiative Rally, referencing the acronym of the proposed referendum desired by many gilets jaunes) led by Ingrid Levavasseur, a 31-year-old nurse assistant, and also revealed the first 10 names on the list, with the remaining spots open to applications.[304] Shahinyan was chosen as campaign director. The announcement of a list provoked largely negative reactions among other gilets jaunes, many of whom were skeptical and considered them opportunists. Marc Doyer, eighth on the list, was revealed to have previously supported Macron,[309] and withdrew from the list on 28 January. Shahinyan also stepped down as campaign director, citing doubts.[310] On 31 January, Brigitte Lapeyronie, ex-UDI member and trade unionist, also announced that she would not stand as a candidate for personal reasons.[311] Barnaba, who hoped to lead his own list, also quit.[312] On 13 February, Levavasseur announced that she would quit the RIC list, a week after a controversial meeting with Luigi Di Maio,[313] and announced on RTL on 11 March that she would not attempt to present a list.[314] Two others on the list, Côme Dunis and Ayouba Sow, confirmed their departure from the initiative on 26 February.[315] Jérémy Clément said that he would be ready to be lead candidate for the list unless a "more legitimate" candidate emerged.[316] On 5 April, Frédéric Mestdjian, spokesman for the RIC list, said that he expected to arrive at an alliance with "two or three" other lists of yellow vests within weeks, working with Lalanne's list.[317]

On 29 January, a gilet jaune leader from Nice, Patrick Cribouw, announced his intention to present a list in the European elections under the banner of Union jaune.[318] Spokesman Fréderic Ibanez claimed the list already had around 40 candidates and would attempt to remain apolitical in terms of its composition.[319] Appearing on BFM TV on 2 March, Cribouw claimed the list was complete and called for alliances with Mouraud, Levavasseur, and Valette.[320] On 1 February, Thierry Paul Valette announced the creation of a European election list under the banner of the Rassemblement des Gilets jaunes citoyens, claiming to have already chosen 10 candidates,[321] after having quit Lalanne's initiative,[322] but subsequently announced on 26 April that he would not present a list.[323] Shahinyan and Chalençon announced their intention to create the mouvement alternatif citoyen (MAC) and hold a member vote in March to decide whether to present a list.[324] For her part, Jacline Mouraud launched a party, Les Émergents, on 27 January, and reiterated her intention not to present a list in the European elections but the 2020 municipal elections.[325]

Many of Macron's supporters considered gilets jaunes lists desirable, given that an internal poll suggested that such a list would siphon votes from the opposition and increase turnout by engaging traditional abstentionists,[326] paradoxically strengthening Macron as a result.[327] Others, however, warned that an electoral transformation of the movement could result in a French Five Star Movement.[328]

Absent lists

[edit]

New Anticapitalist Party

[edit]

While the New Anticapitalist Party (NPA) initially sought to ally with Lutte Ouvrière (LO), with its national political council of 6 and 7 October 2018 approving of the principle of an alliance by a 37–22 vote (with 5 abstentions and 10 non-participants),[47] talks broke down in November 2018.[48] On 28 January, the NPA indicated that it would attempt to present a list despite its serious financial difficulties,[329] soliciting donations from its members, with its leadership deciding on 24 March whether to contest the European elections.[330] On 18 February, the party reiterated its desire to be present in the elections, requiring a million euros to ensure its ability to do so.[331] The NPA ultimately announced on 25 March that it would not present a list in 2019, lacking the financial means to do so, and called on its supporters to vote for Lutte Ouvrière.[332]

Résistons!

[edit]

In an interview published in Valeurs actuelles on 3 May 2018, former presidential candidate Jean Lassalle announced his intention to present a list under the banner of his movement Résistons! in the European elections, hoping to defend the "territories and rurality" from the "European supranationalism, globalization and hypercapitalism". He voted "no" in the 1992 Maastricht Treaty referendum as well as the 2005 referendum on the European Constitution and opposed the Treaty of Lisbon in 2008. He intended to create a list composed of local mayors, farmers, business executives, and professionals inadequately represented in politics.[333] On 6 March 2019, Lassalle indicated he had about a "quarter" of the 800,000 to 1 million euros needed to finance the campaign,[334] and ultimately announced on 11 April 2019 that he would not present a list in the European elections,[335] lacking sufficient funding.[336]

Other electoral lists

[edit]

On 23 November 2018, Delphine Batho of Ecology Generation confirmed that she intended to present a list,[337] and on 18 March 2019, she confirmed alongside Antoine Waechter of the Independent Ecological Movement (MEI) that Dominique Bourg would lead their Urgence Écologie list,[338] also supported by the Movement of Progressives (MdP),[339] as well as a significant contingent of the Union of Democrats and Ecologists (UDE).[340]

The Animalist Party presented a list in the elections led by Hélène Thouy, with several notable candidates including journalist Henry-Jean Servat and Sylvie Rocard, wife of the late former prime minister Michel Rocard, as well as backing from numerous film and television personalities,[341] and former MEP Michèle Striffler in 11th position.[45]

Other lists include the monarchist and anti-EU Alliance Royale list led by Robert de Prévoisin; La ligne claire, a far-right identitarian list led by Renaud Camus, known for promoting the Great Replacement conspiracy theory, with Karim Ouchikh, president of Sovereignty, Identity and Freedoms (SIEL), in third position; the list of the Pirate Party, a pro-transparency pirate party led by Florie Marie; Démocratie représentative, a far-left list led by Hadama Traoré emanating from the citizen collective La révolution est en marche; Parti des citoyens européens (PACE), led by Audric Alexandre, which calls for a federal Europe; the Liste de la reconquête, the list of the extreme-right party Dissidence française (DF) led by the 30-year-old Vincent Vauclin, which includes a number of ex-RN candidates; the European Federalist Party (PFE), a federalist party led by its president Yves Gernigon; Allons Enfants, a pro-European "party of youth" consisting entirely of candidates under 30 and led by 22-year-old Sciences Po graduate Sophie Caillaud; Décroissance 2019, a pro-degrowth and radical ecologist list led by Thérèse Delfel; À voix égales, a feminist list led by Nathalie Tomasini, former lawyer for Jacqueline Sauvage; Neutre et actif, a list led by Cathy Denise Ginette Corbet to "fight against abstention" in the elections; the far-left Communist Revolutionary Party, a split from the PCF, led by national secretary Antonio Sanchez; Espéranto - langue commune équitable pour l'Europe, the list of Europe Démocratie Espéranto (EDE), led by Pierre Dieumegard, which calls for the designation of Esperanto as an official language; Les Oubliés de l'Europe, a list led by Olivier Bidou to defend the interests of "artisans, tradespeople, liberal professions, and the self-employed"; the Union Démocratique Pour La Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité (UDLEF), a centre-right federalist list consisting mostly of African immigrants led by business leader Christian Luc Person;[300][301] and Une Europe au service des peuples, the list of the Union of French Muslim Democrats (UDMF) led by Najib Azergui, which was validated after a delay due to incomplete paperwork.[342]

Election platforms

[edit]

The table below is a summary of the platforms of the principal electoral lists in the European elections.

Party Summary of platform
Lutte Ouvrière (LO) The Trotskyst party describes its goal as a "socialist United States of Europe", advocating for universal freedom of movement for all in order to help those fleeing war and poverty, banning layoffs, increasing wages by at least 300 euros, indexing wages and pensions to inflation, and abolishing the EU's Directive on the Protection of Trade Secrets.[343]
French Communist Party (PCF) The PCF calls for a "European minimum wage system", banning offshoring, cracking down on tax evasion achieved through foreign domiciles, creating a form of public service dedicated to "energy renovation", developing an "ecologically sustainable industrial strategy", issuing "humanitarian visas" near sites of origin, revising the Dublin Regulation to end the "first safe country" requirement, and increasing the involvement of national parliaments in EU policymaking.[343]
La France Insoumise (FI) La France Insoumise advocates for exit from the European treaties, granting the European Parliament with the right of legislative initiative, making Strasbourg the sole meeting place of the European Parliament, ending French contributions to the EU budget unless it addresses its "policy of inequality", refusing cuts to the Common Agricultural Policy, ending the Posted Workers Directive, the introduction of a European minimum wage at "75% of the median wage" in each country, and refuses the privatization of public services. On ecology, it proposes the creation of a "green rule" (i.e., to never take from the ecosystem more than can be replenished), raising carbon dioxide emissions targets, banning endocrine disruptors, adopting a plan to exit from coal and nuclear at the European level, and implementing a carbon EU border tariff. Other proposals include the creation of a "European aid and rescue corps" in the Mediterranean to end migrant deaths at sea.[343]
Génération.s
Hamon's list calls for a "Green New Deal", providing 500 billion euros per year towards the ecological transition (including a shift to organic farming using Common Agricultural Policy funds and a border tax on non-organic imports), a European wealth tax and minimum wage, and "moving towards" a continental universal basic income through a robot tax. The movement, which also claims the helm of ecology, advocates for creating a European environmental court and outlawing endocrine disruptors and fracking. Like EELV, Génération.s and DiEM25 back a "European Constituent Assembly" to create a new European Constitution, universal legal recognition of same-sex marriage, an end to the repatriation of migrants, and the establishment of an "independent search and rescue agency" in the Mediterranean.[343]
Socialist Party (PS)
Proposals of the common list include a European Finance-Climate Pact with 400 billion euros per year in funding dedicated to the ecological transition, focused on renovating outdated buildings, expanding the use of renewable energy, and a kerosene tax on European aviation. The list will also seek to allow the abrogation of the Stability and Growth Pact's mandate to limit deficits to 3% of GDP for such environmental spending and to revisit a continental ban on glyphosate. With regard to immigration, the PS–Place Publique list plans include a "European version" of the Mediterranean rescue operation, abolishing the Dublin Regulation, and issuance of "humanitarian visas and legal channels for migration". It also calls for reducing barriers to the European Citizens' Initiative, empowering the European Parliament, and a European version of France's High Authority for Transparency in Public Life [fr] (HATVP).[343]
Europe Ecology – The Greens (EELV)
EELV aims to create a zero-carbon economy, end support for fossil fuels, eliminate free trade agreements (including CETA), implement a "green protectionism" including a "socio-environmental border tax", create of a European bank for "climate and diversity" with 100 billion euros per year in funding dedicated to "eco-sufficiency, energy efficiency, renewable energy, and sustainable transport", and develop a "social fund for the ecological transition" financed by a financial transaction tax. It also proposes environmental courts to prosecute environmental crimes, eliminating the usage of toxins (e.g., glyphosate and endocrine disruptors), targeting planned obsolescence, redistributing the power of European institutions to also better reflect "civil, social, and environmental" concerns, establishing an institution to focus on public transparency, and creating European referendums.[343]
La République En Marche! (LREM)
The Renaissance list calls for a European minimum wage corresponding to each country's relative purchasing power, reforming the Posted Workers Directive, creating a continental digital tax on large firms to clamp down on tax evasion within the EU, investing at least 1 trillion euros "to develop clean energy and transport, renovate housing and accompany the retraining of workers and sectors in transition", creating a "European climate bank" to direct funds towards "green growth" and carbon taxation of foreign products, the "harmonization of asylum criteria", increasing the number of border personnel, strengthening the Schengen Area, empowering the European Parliament with the right of legislative initiative, and reducing the number of European Commissioners.[343]
Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) The UDI supports "harmonization" of corporate taxation, reinforcing the Common Agricultural Policy by abolishing the UK rebate, creating a Livret E in the same vein as the Livret A to fund "major environmental projects", as well as identifying "alternatives" to glyphosate and copper sulphate, fighting terrorism by establishing a European FBI, migration agency, and "cyber army". With regard to institutional changes, the UDI proposes the end of unanimity requirements, requiring European Commissioners to receive the backing of at least 40 MEPs, the direct election of the president of the European Council, and creation of a "European citizens' referendum".[343]
The Republicans (LR)
Proposals of the LR list include creating a "European and French" preference over foreign products similar to the Buy American Act, ensuring reciprocal access to foreign public procurement markets, fully funding the Common Agricultural Policy budget, restoring community preference "in the agricultural sector", amending the Posted Workers Directive, imposing anti-pollution custom duties on countries that fail to meet environmental or social standards, modifying the Schengen Borders Code to account for the "restoration of internal border controls", processing asylum applications outside of the EU, ending new migrant reception structures, tripling the Frontex budget, returning migrant boats to ports of origin, and maintaining a common register of deportees. It also opposes the further expansion of the EU or Schengen, calls for making Strasbourg the sole seat of the European Parliament, and limiting the authority of the Commission and instead delegating its responsibilities to the European Parliament and Council of the European Union.[343]
Debout la France (DLF)
Les Amoureux de la France support ending the Posted Workers Directive, allocating 75% of public contracts to European firms, and to "immediately recuperate" 80% of France's contribution to the EU budget. The souverainist platform also calls for the restoration of national border controls with the abolition of the Schengen Area, deportation of "illegal immigrants and foreign criminals", and ending immigration via family reunification. Though it does not advocate for the departure of France from the EU, it does support the dissolution of the European Commission, granting veto power to any of the five most populous EU nations (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Poland), and to make French the official working language of the EU after Brexit.[343]
National Rally (RN) The RN advocates for "an economic patriotism", seeking to repeal the Posted Workers Directive, replace the Common Agricultural Policy with a "French agricultural policy", and changing the mandates of the European Central Bank (abandoning its past support of leaving the Eurozone). It also emphasizes the restoration of "national border controls", ending legal immigration, expelling sans-papiers and "foreign Islamists", and shutting down "radical mosques". The RN also proposes to abolish the European Commission, and granting legislative initiative to the Council of the European Union.[343]
The Patriots (LP) The Patriots, the party of ex-FN vice president Florian Philippot, is principally focused on Frexit to regain control over national borders; most of its proposals are concerned with national issues (e.g. increase of the minimum wage, pensions, and tax reform). It also backs the citizens' initiative referendum (RIC), a principal demand of the yellow vests movement, and proportional representation in all elections.[343]
Popular Republican Union (UPR) The UPR, which also advocates for the departure of France from the EU, which it argues would allow the country to end offshoring, target tax evasion, and improve export competitiveness, and also argues for the French departure from NATO to reassert the "military and diplomatic independence" of France and empowerment of voters through citizens' initiative referendums (RIC).[343]

Opinion polls

[edit]

Results

[edit]

On 4 May 2019, the names of 33 official electoral lists, validated by the Ministry of the Interior, were published in the Journal officiel de la République française, with their order determined by drawing lots.[45] A 34th list entitled Une Europe au service des peuples, representing the Union des démocrates musulmans français ('Union of French Muslim Democrats', UDMF) led by Najib Azergui, was later validated by the Ministry of the Interior after an initial delay,[344] due to a lack of written consent from several candidates on the list.[342] In all, a total of 2,686 candidates were represented on these 34 lists, the number of which surpasses the previous record of 20 at the national level in the 1999 elections and the average of 24 lists per constituency in the 2014 elections.[345] Lacking the financial means to do so, most minor electoral lists were unable to distribute ballot papers at every polling site, instead requiring voters to print their own ballots published online;[346] others, like the Pirate Party, only printed a fraction of ballots for each polling station, with those in particularly favorable areas targeted for ballots, to cut costs.[347] Due to the Article 50 extension granted to the United Kingdom, 79 MEPs were considered to have been officially elected, but only 74 took their seats initially, with the other 5 "virtual" MEPs taking their seats upon the departure of the UK from the EU.[12]

Comparisons for 2019 results for Europe Ecology – The Greens (EELV) are made with the combined score it received in 2014 of 8.95%, the Independent Ecological Alliance (AEI) with 1.12%, and Régions et Peuples Solidaires (R&PS) with 0.34% (representing 10.41% in total); for the Socialist Party (PS) common list including Place Publique and New Deal, with its score in 13.98% as well as that of New Deal with 2.90% (representing 16.88% in total); the score of the Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI) is compared to his number of seats in The Alternative in 2014; and for the French Communist Party (PCF), his number of seats within the Left Front electoral alliance (including the Union for the Overseas).

PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
National Rally5,286,93923.34–1.5223–1
La République En MarcheDemocratic Movement5,079,01522.42New23+19
Europe Ecology – The Greens3,055,02313.48+3.0813+7
The RepublicansThe Centrists1,920,4078.48–12.338–12
La France Insoumise1,428,5486.31New6+5
Socialist PartyPlace PubliqueNew Deal1,403,1706.19–10.696–7
Debout la FranceCNIP795,5083.51–0.3100
Génération.s741,7723.27New0New
Union of Democrats and Independents566,0572.50New0–3
French Communist Party564,9492.49New0–3
Animalist Party490,0742.16New0New
GEMEIMdP412,1361.82New0New
Popular Republican Union265,4691.17+0.7700
Lutte Ouvrière176,3390.78–0.4000
The Patriots147,1400.65New0New
Yellow Alliance121,2090.54New0New
National Coordination of Independents51,2400.23New0New
Pirate Party30,1050.13–0.0700
Union of French Muslim Democrats28,4690.13New0New
Europe–Democracy–Esperanto18,5870.08–0.0900
European Federalist Party12,1460.05–0.0400
Association of Objectors to Growth10,3520.050.0200
Let's Go Children8,0620.04New0New
Equal Voice7,8250.03New0New
European Citizens' Party6,6630.03New0New
Movement for the Citizen's Initiative5,8820.03New0New
Democratic Union for Liberty, Equality, Fraternity4,9120.02New0New
French Dissidence4,5690.02New0New
Alliance Royale3,1500.01–0.0000
La Révolution Est En Marche3,0840.01New0New
Citizen Evolution2,0610.01New0New
Sovereignty, Independence and Liberties–Innocence Party1,5780.01–0.0000
Revolutionary Communist Party1,4130.01–0.0200
Neutral and Active1,3210.01New0New
Total22,655,174100.0079+5
Valid votes22,655,17495.47
Invalid votes555,0332.34
Blank votes520,5332.19
Total votes23,730,740100.00
Registered voters/turnout47,345,32850.12
Source: Journal officiel de la République française

By department

[edit]
Department RN LREMMoDem EELV LRLC FI PSPPND DLFCNIP G.s UDI PCF PA GEMEIMdP UPR LO LP AJ Others T/o
# % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # %
Ain 48,406 24.31 44,525 22.36 27,494 13.81 21,179 10.64 9,586 4.81 10,199 5.12 8,483 4.26 5,236 2.63 5,570 2.80 3,208 1.61 4,075 2.05 3,779 1.90 2,306 1.16 1,182 0.59 1,548 0.78 965 0.48 1,384 0.70 49.77
Aisne 74,089 39.88 29,069 15.65 14,555 7.83 13,349 7.19 11,663 6.28 7,415 3.99 8,455 4.55 4,364 2.35 4,028 2.17 3,828 2.06 4,801 2.58 2,352 1.27 1,884 1.01 1,762 0.95 1,862 1.00 1,212 0.65 1,096 0.59 52.59
Allier 32,042 25.44 24,629 19.55 11,403 9.05 14,023 11.13 8,452 6.71 7,215 5.73 4,328 3.44 4,209 3.34 3,785 3.00 6,225 4.94 2,992 2.38 1,769 1.40 1,123 0.89 1,188 0.94 1,013 0.80 853 0.68 716 0.57 54.39
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence 18,008 27.16 13,222 19.94 8,750 13.19 4,314 6.51 5,359 8.08 3,390 5.11 2,606 3.93 1,880 2.83 1,130 1.70 2,136 3.22 1,468 2.21 1,207 1.82 900 1.36 446 0.67 513 0.77 461 0.70 525 0.79 55.16
Hautes-Alpes 13,507 23.49 12,022 20.91 9,239 16.07 4,415 7.68 3,871 6.73 3,331 5.79 2,259 3.93 1,754 3.05 1,300 2.26 1,417 2.46 1,191 2.07 1,158 2.01 736 1.28 430 0.75 156 0.27 308 0.54 407 0.71 54.96
Alpes-Maritimes 108,551 29.81 78,647 21.59 43,340 11.90 41,657 11.44 15,261 4.19 14,027 3.85 13,225 3.63 6,165 1.69 6,843 1.88 6,905 1.90 9,957 2.73 6,574 1.81 4,925 1.35 1,087 0.30 2,125 0.58 1,517 0.42 3,393 0.93 49.84
Ardèche 30,694 23.49 24,843 19.01 18,125 13.87 13,525 10.35 9,604 7.35 7,884 6.03 4,651 3.56 4,462 3.41 2,364 1.81 4,396 3.36 2,414 1.85 2,205 1.69 1,750 1.34 1,124 0.86 1,007 0.77 754 0.58 879 0.67 55.31
Ardennes 33,207 35.92 15,604 16.88 7,789 8.43 7,528 8.14 6,017 6.51 4,129 4.47 3,576 3.87 2,593 2.81 2,173 2.35 1,857 2.01 2,667 2.89 1,278 1.38 864 0.93 967 1.05 1,118 1.21 574 0.62 501 0.54 50.90
Ariège 15,567 24.71 10,529 16.72 7,791 12.37 3,273 5.20 6,772 10.75 6,141 9.75 1,877 2.98 2,707 4.30 972 1.54 2,156 3.42 1,301 2.07 1,054 1.67 854 1.36 577 0.92 589 0.94 370 0.59 457 0.73 56.80
Aube 34,267 33.43 18,803 18.35 8,955 8.74 11,076 10.81 4,802 4.69 3,938 3.84 5,380 5.25 2,315 2.26 2,889 2.82 1,922 1.88 2,410 2.35 1,753 1.71 1,100 1.07 748 0.73 939 0.92 612 0.60 581 0.57 53.24
Aude 44,997 31.24 24,430 16.96 14,618 10.15 8,478 5.89 11,244 7.81 13,745 9.54 4,658 3.23 4,166 2.89 2,102 1.46 4,373 3.04 3,123 2.17 2,348 1.63 1,709 1.19 945 0.66 1,179 0.82 1,044 0.72 873 0.61 56.37
Aveyron 22,071 19.08 27,751 24.00 14,445 12.49 11,226 9.71 8,324 7.20 8,793 7.60 4,398 3.80 3,820 3.30 3,479 3.01 2,739 2.37 1,764 1.53 2,150 1.86 1,283 1.11 982 0.85 905 0.78 731 0.63 789 0.68 57.53
Bouches-du-Rhône 188,056 29.46 125,754 19.70 81,860 12.82 48,907 7.66 44,873 7.03 30,153 4.72 20,098 3.15 15,289 2.40 10,645 1.67 24,135 3.78 11,273 1.77 12,081 1.89 8,081 1.27 2,962 0.46 4,647 0.73 3,777 0.59 5,723 0.90 48.34
Calvados 60,139 23.02 59,070 22.61 33,996 13.01 21,423 8.20 14,958 5.73 17,006 6.51 10,151 3.89 10,384 3.98 6,653 2.55 5,181 1.98 6,658 2.55 4,785 1.83 2,376 0.91 2,365 0.91 2,255 0.86 1,717 0.66 2,113 0.81 55.05
Cantal 11,738 20.88 12,303 21.88 5,129 9.12 9,434 16.78 3,238 5.76 3,728 6.63 1,690 3.01 1,732 3.08 2,033 3.62 1,474 2.62 938 1.67 775 1.38 506 0.90 473 0.84 372 0.66 267 0.47 392 0.70 52.85
Charente 32,520 25.56 27,332 21.48 15,559 12.23 9,123 7.17 9,686 7.61 8,344 6.56 4,594 3.61 4,502 3.54 3,048 2.40 2,990 2.35 2,652 2.08 2,210 1.74 1,267 1.00 1,353 1.06 481 0.38 858 0.67 711 0.56 52.54
Charente-Maritime 64,431 25.26 57,695 22.62 33,147 13.00 19,580 7.68 16,835 6.60 16,196 6.35 9,319 3.65 7,095 2.78 6,688 2.62 4,838 1.90 5,853 2.29 4,765 1.87 2,605 1.02 1,942 0.76 887 0.35 1,479 0.58 1,705 0.67 54.02
Cher 30,128 27.43 22,221 20.23 10,803 9.84 9,317 8.48 7,521 6.85 5,936 5.41 4,465 4.07 2,855 2.60 3,133 2.85 4,690 4.27 2,586 2.35 1,510 1.37 1,206 1.10 646 0.59 972 0.89 836 0.76 998 0.91 51.97
Corrèze 20,364 21.35 18,651 19.56 10,404 10.91 9,368 9.82 7,532 7.90 8,611 9.03 3,144 3.30 3,402 3.57 2,167 2.27 4,681 4.91 2,316 2.43 1,449 1.52 885 0.93 904 0.95 351 0.37 593 0.62 542 0.57 55.73
Corse-du-Sud 11,821 29.75 6,313 15.89 8,390 21.11 4,391 11.05 1,218 3.07 1,189 2.99 911 2.29 558 1.40 371 0.93 1,340 3.37 1,345 3.38 634 1.60 373 0.94 152 0.38 231 0.58 257 0.65 244 0.61 37.62
Haute-Corse 12,242 26.52 6,608 14.31 10,554 22.86 6,060 13.13 1,489 3.23 1,815 3.93 925 2.00 630 1.36 380 0.82 1,984 4.30 1,706 3.70 646 1.40 309 0.67 202 0.44 255 0.55 193 0.42 164 0.36 38.35
Côte-d'Or 44,405 23.91 41,710 22.46 23,845 12.84 17,452 9.40 10,944 5.89 11,003 5.93 7,168 3.86 5,785 3.12 4,712 2.54 3,129 1.69 4,919 2.65 3,596 1.94 2,064 1.11 1,452 0.78 1,233 0.66 876 0.47 1,401 0.75 54.11
Côtes-d'Armor 46,874 19.06 59,525 24.21 35,297 14.36 20,423 8.31 15,321 6.23 17,603 7.16 7,855 3.19 12,563 5.11 5,269 2.14 7,569 3.08 4,239 1.72 4,487 1.82 2,190 0.89 2,524 1.03 852 0.35 1,275 0.52 2,020 0.82 57.16
Creuse 11,041 24.38 8,348 18.43 4,451 9.83 4,383 9.68 4,026 8.89 3,164 6.99 1,603 3.54 1,909 4.22 1,066 2.35 1,648 3.64 972 2.15 624 1.38 498 1.10 504 1.11 378 0.83 299 0.66 371 0.82 53.33
Dordogne 43,022 25.30 32,898 19.34 19,430 11.42 12,040 7.08 14,631 8.60 12,718 7.48 5,981 3.52 6,177 3.63 3,513 2.07 6,268 3.69 3,706 2.18 2,761 1.62 1,934 1.14 1,334 0.78 1,277 0.75 1,118 0.66 1,266 0.74 58.27
Doubs 40,321 22.54 38,615 21.59 24,750 13.84 18,565 10.38 11,121 6.22 10,341 5.78 7,407 4.14 5,110 2.86 4,444 2.48 2,955 1.65 3,831 2.14 3,749 2.10 2,189 1.22 1,628 0.91 1,439 0.80 1,031 0.58 1,379 0.77 51.79
Drôme 43,529 23.40 38,188 20.52 29,454 15.83 16,836 9.05 12,049 6.48 10,605 5.70 6,979 3.75 5,612 3.02 3,754 2.02 4,421 2.38 3,695 1.99 3,457 1.86 2,328 1.25 1,472 0.79 1,405 0.76 1,084 0.58 1,189 0.64 52.93
Eure 68,485 31.64 41,135 19.00 22,389 10.34 16,413 7.58 12,801 5.91 9,998 4.62 10,490 4.85 5,688 2.63 5,391 2.49 4,461 2.06 6,268 2.90 3,459 1.60 2,421 1.12 2,098 0.97 1,950 0.90 1,415 0.65 1,597 0.74 53.41
Eure-et-Loir 40,712 27.88 30,020 20.56 14,729 10.09 14,231 9.75 7,744 5.30 7,380 5.05 7,358 5.04 4,091 2.80 4,399 3.01 2,362 1.62 4,190 2.87 2,489 1.70 1,975 1.35 1,134 0.78 1,280 0.88 1,054 0.72 881 0.60 51.50
Finistère 58,835 16.48 89,902 25.18 58,810 16.47 27,398 7.67 21,913 6.14 29,161 8.17 9,372 2.62 21,559 6.04 8,109 2.27 8,068 2.26 6,061 1.70 4,982 1.40 3,416 0.96 3,218 0.90 1,036 0.29 1,677 0.47 3,568 1.00 54.23
Gard 86,747 32.11 50,017 18.51 30,575 11.32 19,502 7.22 19,181 7.10 14,600 5.40 8,169 3.02 6,709 2.48 4,138 1.53 9,625 3.56 5,347 1.98 4,670 1.73 3,480 1.29 1,590 0.59 2,127 0.79 1,988 0.74 1,679 0.62 52.21
Haute-Garonne 89,523 18.71 109,568 22.90 80,449 16.81 30,877 6.45 35,116 7.34 43,135 9.02 12,615 2.64 19,234 4.02 9,670 2.02 11,139 2.33 9,157 1.91 10,798 2.26 5,291 1.11 3,309 0.69 1,573 0.33 2,749 0.57 4,252 0.89 55.94
Gers 17,885 22.65 16,372 20.73 9,469 11.99 6,233 7.89 5,201 6.59 7,531 9.54 3,110 3.94 3,120 3.95 1,884 2.39 2,171 2.75 1,560 1.98 1,345 1.70 1,051 1.33 651 0.82 297 0.38 506 0.64 581 0.74 58.43
Gironde 120,031 21.18 132,369 23.36 86,684 15.30 38,588 6.81 38,921 6.87 44,135 7.79 15,589 2.75 20,587 3.63 11,760 2.08 12,616 2.23 11,483 2.03 11,747 2.07 6,428 1.13 4,082 0.72 4,018 0.71 3,723 0.66 3,883 0.69 53.87
Hérault 116,950 28.58 80,687 19.72 58,140 14.21 27,037 6.61 30,543 7.46 26,566 6.49 11,852 2.90 11,990 2.93 6,291 1.54 11,063 2.70 7,020 1.72 5,267 1.29 5,376 1.31 2,295 0.56 3,025 0.74 2,736 0.67 2,411 0.59 52.66
Ille-et-Vilaine 55,919 14.74 102,334 26.97 68,529 18.06 28,394 7.48 19,239 5.07 30,709 8.09 11,136 2.93 18,510 4.88 11,583 3.05 6,916 1.82 5,720 1.51 7,848 2.07 3,368 0.89 3,536 0.93 1,166 0.31 1,452 0.38 3,116 0.82 54.30
Indre 23,654 28.42 16,009 19.23 8,197 9.85 7,519 9.03 5,688 6.83 4,922 5.91 3,471 4.17 2,859 3.43 2,247 2.70 2,494 3.00 1,785 2.14 989 1.19 785 0.94 853 1.02 707 0.85 590 0.71 464 0.56 54.01
Indre-et-Loire 44,652 20.79 50,150 23.34 30,357 14.13 19,267 8.97 12,511 5.82 14,324 6.67 8,174 3.80 7,357 3.42 6,233 2.90 4,441 2.07 4,367 2.03 4,455 2.07 2,305 1.07 1,844 0.86 1,440 0.67 1,128 0.53 1,822 0.85 52.63
Isère 92,631 21.90 94,393 22.31 68,413 16.17 33,599 7.94 25,782 6.09 28,048 6.63 14,694 3.47 14,386 3.40 8,744 2.07 9,904 2.34 7,911 1.87 8,306 1.96 4,677 1.11 2,836 0.67 2,647 0.63 2,009 0.47 4,056 0.96 51.27
Jura 23,784 24.55 19,662 20.29 12,604 13.01 8,955 9.24 7,084 7.31 5,025 5.19 4,217 4.35 2,776 2.86 2,480 2.56 1,986 2.05 2,043 2.11 2,082 2.15 1,125 1.16 892 0.92 899 0.93 648 0.67 633 0.65 54.89
Landes 34,812 21.29 37,517 22.95 17,655 10.80 11,368 6.95 11,254 6.88 17,126 10.47 5,364 3.28 6,911 4.23 3,441 2.10 4,798 2.93 3,106 1.90 2,966 1.81 1,898 1.16 1,313 0.80 1,433 0.88 1,314 0.80 1,226 0.75 55.76
Loir-et-Cher 33,918 27.15 25,583 20.48 13,948 11.16 11,359 9.09 6,617 5.30 7,027 5.62 6,664 5.33 3,630 2.91 4,262 3.41 2,660 2.13 2,783 2.23 1,606 1.29 1,134 0.91 1,057 0.85 999 0.80 829 0.66 853 0.68 55.16
Loire 59,952 24.60 52,433 21.51 30,722 12.61 25,699 10.54 14,325 5.88 12,872 5.28 9,376 3.85 7,954 3.26 5,705 2.34 6,541 2.68 4,325 1.77 4,393 1.80 2,481 1.02 1,826 0.75 1,773 0.73 1,328 0.54 2,021 0.83 50.33
Haute-Loire 20,515 22.48 15,479 16.96 10,194 11.17 17,855 19.56 5,469 5.99 4,549 4.98 3,034 3.32 2,891 3.17 2,172 2.38 1,952 2.14 1,723 1.89 1,509 1.65 812 0.89 792 0.87 800 0.88 961 1.05 561 0.61 54.89
Loire-Atlantique 74,118 14.75 128,788 25.63 95,070 18.92 38,481 7.66 29,615 5.89 40,974 8.15 14,519 2.89 20,502 4.08 14,029 2.79 9,865 1.96 8,092 1.61 10,747 2.14 4,765 0.95 4,537 0.90 1,556 0.31 2,197 0.44 4,681 0.93 52.20
Loiret 56,495 25.26 50,621 22.63 25,606 11.45 20,739 9.27 10,830 4.84 12,467 5.57 9,937 4.44 6,129 2.74 7,063 3.16 4,991 2.23 5,789 2.59 4,115 1.84 2,507 1.12 1,607 0.72 1,400 0.63 1,413 0.63 1,942 0.87 51.99
Lot 14,692 19.43 16,747 22.15 10,234 13.54 5,656 7.48 6,481 8.57 6,831 9.04 2,476 3.28 2,992 3.96 1,610 2.13 2,485 3.29 1,465 1.94 1,311 1.73 837 1.11 616 0.81 242 0.32 428 0.57 493 0.65 59.21
Lot-et-Garonne 36,323 29.45 23,707 19.22 12,722 10.31 9,108 7.38 8,271 6.71 7,542 6.11 5,490 4.45 3,751 3.04 2,942 2.39 3,162 2.56 2,567 2.08 2,054 1.67 1,546 1.25 898 0.73 1,043 0.85 966 0.78 1,262 1.02 54.97
Lozère 6,918 22.03 5,973 19.02 3,809 12.13 4,174 13.29 2,137 6.81 2,270 7.23 1,108 3.53 998 3.18 862 2.75 947 3.02 498 1.59 542 1.73 289 0.92 231 0.74 239 0.76 183 0.58 218 0.69 56.65
Maine-et-Loire 51,213 18.32 75,076 26.85 43,236 15.46 24,927 8.92 13,151 4.70 18,260 6.53 10,543 3.77 9,725 3.48 9,452 3.38 4,520 1.62 4,569 1.63 5,238 1.87 2,681 0.96 2,840 1.02 918 0.33 1,264 0.45 1,967 0.70 52.15
Manche 43,304 23.30 43,876 23.61 21,629 11.64 16,281 8.76 10,052 5.41 12,760 6.87 7,988 4.30 7,199 3.87 4,962 2.67 3,624 1.95 3,739 2.01 2,742 1.48 1,799 0.97 1,780 0.96 1,566 0.84 1,217 0.65 1,344 0.72 52.53
Marne 55,454 30.24 39,185 21.37 18,026 9.83 18,065 9.85 8,853 4.83 8,016 4.37 7,730 4.22 4,409 2.40 6,082 3.32 3,065 1.67 4,645 2.53 2,838 1.55 1,918 1.05 1,446 0.79 1,515 0.83 891 0.49 1,233 0.67 51.14
Haute-Marne 23,908 36.12 11,184 16.90 5,163 7.80 6,104 9.22 3,519 5.32 2,813 4.25 3,041 4.59 1,408 2.13 1,501 2.27 1,062 1.60 2,626 3.97 824 1.25 713 1.08 576 0.87 962 1.45 440 0.66 340 0.51 54.10
Mayenne 20,538 19.60 27,116 25.88 13,747 13.12 9,773 9.33 4,671 4.46 7,068 6.75 4,459 4.26 3,279 3.13 5,637 5.38 1,503 1.43 1,476 1.41 1,899 1.81 894 0.85 1,014 0.97 419 0.40 521 0.50 769 0.73 51.61
Meurthe-et-Moselle 62,694 26.42 47,701 20.10 29,311 12.35 17,501 7.38 15,624 6.58 15,130 6.38 9,164 3.86 7,856 3.31 5,609 2.36 6,162 2.60 6,374 2.69 4,160 1.75 2,849 1.20 2,052 0.86 2,266 0.96 1,220 0.51 1,595 0.67 50.45
Meuse 23,652 34.09 12,950 18.67 6,359 9.17 5,416 7.81 3,734 5.38 3,338 4.81 3,399 4.90 1,659 2.39 1,740 2.51 1,050 1.51 1,909 2.75 976 1.41 739 1.07 646 0.93 869 1.25 484 0.70 461 0.66 54.16
Morbihan 61,286 20.13 78,195 25.69 45,909 15.08 24,624 8.09 15,077 4.95 19,845 6.52 10,388 3.41 12,298 4.04 8,113 2.66 6,070 1.99 5,334 1.75 5,749 1.89 3,029 0.99 2,810 0.92 988 0.32 1,499 0.49 3,221 1.06 54.95
Moselle 98,519 29.12 66,895 19.77 38,286 11.32 24,328 7.19 18,443 5.45 18,046 5.33 17,139 5.07 9,355 2.77 8,425 2.49 5,865 1.73 9,739 2.88 5,722 1.69 4,531 1.34 3,469 1.03 4,062 1.20 2,233 0.66 3,245 0.96 47.14
Nièvre 22,138 28.04 15,354 19.45 7,036 8.91 5,588 7.08 5,506 6.97 5,071 6.42 3,287 4.16 2,921 3.70 1,790 2.27 2,933 3.71 2,227 2.82 971 1.23 874 1.11 737 0.93 727 0.92 426 0.54 1,373 1.74 53.63
Nord 252,192 29.56 163,048 19.11 102,918 12.06 53,391 6.26 62,905 7.37 43,326 5.08 28,528 3.34 22,903 2.68 22,431 2.63 26,045 3.05 23,835 2.79 14,143 1.66 8,934 1.05 7,384 0.87 7,826 0.92 4,942 0.58 8,501 1.00 49.58
Oise 90,358 32.93 50,214 18.30 27,247 9.93 21,980 8.01 15,636 5.70 11,078 4.04 11,397 4.15 7,266 2.65 7,196 2.62 6,408 2.34 8,510 3.10 4,603 1.68 3,458 1.26 2,540 0.93 2,389 0.87 1,913 0.70 2,224 0.81 51.43
Orne 28,395 26.83 22,428 21.19 11,036 10.43 11,121 10.51 5,362 5.07 5,459 5.16 5,353 5.06 3,185 3.01 3,883 3.67 1,563 1.48 2,127 2.01 1,483 1.40 1,012 0.96 1,020 0.96 1,080 1.02 664 0.63 649 0.61 54.75
Pas-de-Calais 205,324 38.07 86,541 16.05 51,000 9.46 32,096 5.95 37,347 6.92 25,738 4.77 19,857 3.68 14,372 2.66 11,390 2.11 16,361 3.03 11,865 2.20 3,614 0.67 4,817 0.89 6,261 1.16 5,534 1.03 4,078 0.76 3,131 0.58 53.11
Puy-de-Dôme 45,391 19.22 50,032 21.18 29,635 12.55 21,897 9.27 16,221 6.87 18,224 7.72 6,059 2.57 9,352 3.96 10,355 4.38 10,430 4.42 5,412 2.29 3,903 1.65 2,217 0.94 2,112 0.89 1,568 0.66 1,448 0.61 1,918 0.81 54.49
Pyrénées-Atlantiques 43,115 16.96 64,000 25.17 39,320 15.47 20,479 8.06 15,821 6.22 22,405 8.81 7,356 2.89 10,145 3.99 5,644 2.22 5,949 2.34 4,617 1.82 4,947 1.95 2,771 1.09 2,333 0.92 1,900 0.75 1,711 0.67 1,719 0.68 53.56
Hautes-Pyrénées 20,124 22.18 19,157 21.12 10,687 11.78 5,769 6.36 7,443 8.20 7,805 8.60 3,425 3.78 3,458 3.81 1,712 1.89 4,035 4.45 1,834 2.02 1,757 1.94 974 1.07 875 0.96 378 0.42 659 0.73 634 0.70 54.95
Pyrénées-Orientales 58,645 33.14 30,002 16.95 18,940 10.70 12,474 7.05 12,356 6.98 9,958 5.63 5,500 3.11 5,114 2.89 2,721 1.54 5,691 3.22 4,415 2.49 3,519 1.99 2,220 1.25 1,247 0.70 1,734 0.98 1,192 0.67 1,230 0.70 52.93
Bas-Rhin 85,979 22.71 90,688 23.96 58,313 15.41 36,215 9.57 16,148 4.27 18,087 4.78 17,470 4.62 8,783 2.32 10,505 2.78 3,415 0.90 9,405 2.48 8,394 2.22 4,519 1.19 2,527 0.67 2,673 0.71 1,655 0.44 3,740 0.99 51.33
Haut-Rhin 64,195 25.84 53,623 21.58 34,700 13.97 21,094 8.49 10,324 4.16 11,473 4.62 13,456 5.42 4,718 1.90 7,398 2.98 2,454 0.99 7,092 2.85 6,224 2.51 3,591 1.45 1,738 0.70 2,088 0.84 1,379 0.56 2,908 1.17 49.58
Rhône 95,394 16.98 147,444 26.25 96,695 17.21 60,155 10.71 29,691 5.29 34,065 6.06 15,293 2.72 16,921 3.01 14,506 2.58 11,176 1.99 9,538 1.70 11,031 1.96 6,163 1.10 3,010 0.54 2,448 0.44 1,834 0.33 6,391 1.14 51.42
Haute-Saône 30,157 32.80 15,232 16.57 9,252 10.06 8,406 9.14 5,541 6.03 4,706 5.12 4,378 4.76 2,245 2.44 2,054 2.23 1,704 1.85 2,429 2.64 1,409 1.53 1,057 1.15 1,019 1.11 978 1.06 687 0.75 693 0.75 55.82
Saône-et-Loire 49,019 25.30 41,211 21.27 20,372 10.51 22,366 11.54 11,792 6.09 11,554 5.96 8,157 4.21 5,973 3.08 4,524 2.33 4,342 2.24 3,951 2.04 2,785 1.44 1,935 1.00 1,784 0.92 1,684 0.87 1,092 0.56 1,234 0.64 50.94
Sarthe 51,390 26.28 37,131 18.99 24,464 12.51 17,779 9.09 11,981 6.13 12,501 6.39 8,704 4.45 6,255 3.20 5,812 2.97 4,434 2.27 3,780 1.93 3,378 1.73 1,675 0.86 2,074 1.06 917 0.47 1,153 0.59 2,148 1.10 51.80
Savoie 32,473 21.14 34,277 22.31 25,107 16.34 15,223 9.91 8,405 5.47 9,053 5.89 5,830 3.80 4,123 2.68 3,779 2.46 3,606 2.35 2,787 1.81 3,053 1.99 2,022 1.32 943 0.61 1,042 0.68 662 0.43 1,224 0.80 51.81
Haute-Savoie 46,277 18.12 64,664 25.32 46,306 18.13 26,975 10.56 10,826 4.24 13,236 5.18 9,536 3.73 6,120 2.40 7,017 2.75 3,104 1.22 5,166 2.02 6,296 2.47 3,512 1.38 1,232 0.48 1,666 0.65 1,156 0.45 2,324 0.91 49.31
Paris 53,829 7.23 244,918 32.92 148,377 19.94 75,722 10.18 39,515 5.31 60,814 8.17 9,427 1.27 32,275 4.34 12,909 1.73 23,655 3.18 9,503 1.28 11,770 1.58 7,647 1.03 2,903 0.39 1,514 0.20 1,088 0.15 8,191 1.10 57.88
Seine-Maritime 122,058 27.61 87,194 19.72 48,275 10.92 30,042 6.80 32,492 7.35 26,536 6.00 15,966 3.61 13,775 3.12 10,800 2.44 16,981 3.84 11,284 2.55 6,891 1.56 4,386 0.99 4,167 0.94 4,079 0.92 2,792 0.63 4,331 0.98 53.30
Seine-et-Marne 98,286 24.40 82,572 20.50 50,232 12.47 31,713 7.87 26,124 6.49 22,401 5.56 18,216 4.52 12,579 3.12 11,793 2.93 8,635 2.14 13,126 3.26 8,871 2.20 6,115 1.52 2,619 0.65 2,822 0.70 2,275 0.56 4,446 1.10 47.54
Yvelines 71,757 14.36 149,669 29.96 73,511 14.71 62,209 12.45 20,506 4.10 27,278 5.46 14,107 2.82 17,895 3.58 15,755 3.15 8,049 1.61 11,645 2.33 9,968 2.00 6,044 1.21 2,361 0.47 1,239 0.25 1,618 0.32 6,009 1.20 53.92
Deux-Sèvres 27,355 20.64 31,365 23.66 18,677 14.09 9,973 7.52 8,168 6.16 9,334 7.04 4,687 3.54 4,811 3.63 3,821 2.88 2,261 1.71 2,377 1.79 4,617 3.48 1,156 0.87 1,590 1.20 519 0.39 831 0.63 1,001 0.76 52.22
Somme 69,408 33.37 40,958 19.69 16,771 8.06 13,682 6.58 17,709 8.51 8,444 4.06 9,390 4.51 5,499 2.64 5,510 2.65 4,646 2.23 5,476 2.63 2,362 1.14 1,770 0.85 1,917 0.92 1,741 0.84 1,099 0.53 1,601 0.77 54.76
Tarn 40,141 25.65 30,817 19.69 18,894 12.07 12,181 7.78 11,113 7.10 11,651 7.44 6,228 3.98 5,597 3.58 3,378 2.16 3,720 2.38 3,278 2.09 2,885 1.84 1,742 1.11 1,308 0.84 1,387 0.89 1,043 0.67 1,160 0.74 57.27
Tarn-et-Garonne 28,461 29.74 17,570 18.36 10,652 11.13 7,029 7.34 6,182 6.46 6,815 7.12 4,310 4.50 2,852 2.98 1,948 2.04 2,262 2.36 1,836 1.92 1,601 1.67 1,149 1.20 653 0.68 810 0.85 651 0.68 925 0.97 55.57
Var 129,700 33.54 80,803 20.89 32,766 8.47 37,159 9.61 19,124 4.94 16,748 4.33 15,239 3.94 6,782 1.75 8,089 2.09 7,608 1.97 10,875 2.81 8,066 2.09 5,157 1.33 1,499 0.39 2,945 0.76 2,019 0.52 2,156 0.56 50.56
Vaucluse 64,147 32.50 37,989 19.25 24,386 12.36 14,286 7.24 11,513 5.83 9,018 4.57 7,201 3.65 4,900 2.48 3,325 1.68 4,575 2.32 4,270 2.16 3,560 1.80 2,293 1.16 966 0.49 1,624 0.82 1,577 0.80 1,747 0.89 51.29
Vendée 55,289 21.30 69,568 26.81 32,510 12.53 26,178 10.09 11,955 4.61 14,505 5.59 11,407 4.40 6,909 2.66 8,364 3.22 3,788 1.46 4,522 1.74 4,721 1.82 2,321 0.89 2,175 0.84 1,060 0.41 1,913 0.74 2,347 0.90 53.43
Vienne 34,369 22.58 33,164 21.79 21,681 14.24 11,187 7.35 10,013 6.58 11,118 7.30 5,519 3.63 5,387 3.54 3,740 2.46 3,723 2.45 3,059 2.01 3,074 2.02 1,603 1.05 1,840 1.21 543 0.36 988 0.65 1,219 0.80 53.47
Haute-Vienne 29,379 21.37 28,546 20.76 15,819 11.51 11,308 8.23 11,184 8.14 12,081 8.79 3,993 2.90 6,124 4.45 2,931 2.13 5,258 3.82 3,271 2.38 2,353 1.71 1,219 0.89 1,366 0.99 849 0.62 854 0.62 940 0.68 56.48
Vosges 42,672 30.30 26,253 18.64 15,191 10.79 12,314 8.74 7,601 5.40 6,883 4.89 7,786 5.53 3,826 2.72 3,274 2.32 2,395 1.70 3,759 2.67 2,335 1.66 1,719 1.22 1,370 0.97 1,551 1.10 951 0.68 945 0.67 53.65
Yonne 38,355 31.85 22,028 18.29 11,841 9.83 10,443 8.67 7,221 6.00 5,450 4.53 6,082 5.05 3,057 2.54 3,389 2.81 2,500 2.08 3,208 2.66 1,806 1.50 1,511 1.25 933 0.77 1,119 0.93 734 0.61 740 0.61 53.34
Territoire de Belfort 12,450 27.11 8,764 19.08 5,610 12.22 4,231 9.21 3,028 6.59 2,278 4.96 1,724 3.75 1,260 2.74 1,379 3.00 890 1.94 1,312 2.86 865 1.88 668 1.45 473 1.03 436 0.95 267 0.58 291 0.63 52.00
Essonne 67,515 17.58 90,937 23.67 58,467 15.22 27,980 7.28 24,839 6.47 24,591 6.40 21,016 5.47 14,110 3.67 9,690 2.52 10,173 2.65 10,282 2.68 8,641 2.25 5,673 1.48 2,210 0.58 1,171 0.30 1,617 0.42 5,229 1.36 49.91
Hauts-de-Seine 49,793 9.45 176,869 33.57 82,636 15.68 62,403 11.84 25,197 4.78 31,505 5.98 9,355 1.78 17,749 3.37 15,347 2.91 12,952 2.46 10,595 2.01 11,487 2.18 6,376 1.21 2,123 0.40 1,222 0.23 1,249 0.24 10,016 1.90 55.18
Seine-Saint-Denis 47,347 16.27 51,605 17.74 42,828 14.72 14,608 5.02 32,119 11.04 20,361 7.00 7,468 2.57 15,714 5.40 11,952 4.11 16,948 5.83 6,672 2.29 5,665 1.95 5,610 1.93 2,932 1.01 1,261 0.43 1,376 0.47 6,458 2.22 39.41
Val-de-Marne 49,799 13.31 95,777 25.60 62,783 16.78 29,279 7.82 26,854 7.18 25,813 6.90 11,108 2.97 14,839 3.97 10,421 2.78 17,134 4.58 8,708 2.33 6,631 1.77 5,470 1.46 2,209 0.59 1,026 0.27 1,331 0.36 5,003 1.34 49.00
Val-d'Oise 61,263 19.53 71,713 22.86 43,134 13.75 24,324 7.75 23,424 7.47 18,877 6.02 10,650 3.40 12,769 4.07 9,141 2.91 7,329 2.34 8,822 2.81 7,298 2.33 5,034 1.60 2,231 0.71 1,961 0.63 1,638 0.52 4,079 1.30 44.97
Guadeloupe 9,072 23.71 6,913 18.07 4,081 10.67 2,169 5.67 4,957 12.96 3,445 9.01 978 2.56 1,566 4.09 713 1.86 488 1.28 36 0.09 844 2.21 841 2.20 1,714 4.48 315 0.82 6 0.02 118 0.31 14.37
Martinique 6,418 16.31 7,179 18.24 4,315 10.96 2,880 7.32 5,099 12.95 3,350 8.51 891 2.26 1,982 5.04 1,256 3.19 976 2.48 25 0.06 1,090 2.77 895 2.27 2,635 6.69 2 0.01 53 0.13 316 0.80 15.22
French Guiana 3,165 27.47 1,917 16.64 2,146 18.63 387 3.36 1,562 13.56 665 5.77 214 1.86 297 2.58 197 1.71 203 1.76 28 0.24 9 0.08 342 2.97 211 1.83 127 1.10 6 0.05 46 0.40 13.41
Réunion 56,143 31.24 18,869 10.50 15,412 8.58 10,745 5.98 34,192 19.03 10,086 5.61 4,357 2.42 6,630 3.69 3,421 1.90 4,360 2.43 2,573 1.43 3,359 1.87 5,002 2.78 2,101 1.17 1,977 1.10 91 0.05 400 0.22 30.66
Mayotte 9,717 46.12 1,868 8.87 918 4.36 3,582 17.00 1,932 9.17 499 2.37 578 2.74 445 2.11 314 1.49 200 0.95 16 0.08 6 0.03 491 2.33 130 0.62 289 1.37 20 0.09 66 0.31 28.64
New Caledonia 10,641 27.30 6,865 17.62 4,894 12.56 5,405 13.87 1,719 4.41 1,106 2.84 1,202 3.08 785 2.01 1,026 2.63 381 0.98 83 0.21 2,645 6.79 1,082 2.78 394 1.01 502 1.29 18 0.05 223 0.57 19.22
French Polynesia 6,173 16.99 15,757 43.37 4,025 11.08 3,447 9.49 1,498 4.12 870 2.39 947 2.61 306 0.84 588 1.62 535 1.47 89 0.24 13 0.04 650 1.79 560 1.54 793 2.18 11 0.03 71 0.20 22.17
Saint Pierre and Miquelon 313 24.02 238 18.27 189 14.50 91 6.98 155 11.90 143 10.97 0 0.00 70 5.37 25 1.92 20 1.53 7 0.54 2 0.15 20 1.53 17 1.30 0 0.00 0 0.00 13 1.00 28.80
Wallis and Futuna 397 13.33 1,106 37.13 9 0.30 572 19.20 229 7.69 147 4.93 0 0.00 111 3.73 163 5.47 59 1.98 0 0.00 0 0.00 122 4.10 62 2.08 0 0.00 0 0.00 2 0.07 34.63
Saint Martin/Saint Barthélemy 889 28.38 631 20.15 409 13.06 370 11.81 192 6.13 157 5.01 97 3.10 81 2.59 85 2.71 27 0.86 17 0.54 17 0.54 117 3.74 26 0.83 0 0.00 3 0.10 14 0.45 14.64
French nationals abroad 15,916 7.10 82,598 36.84 46,012 20.52 18,684 8.33 11,583 5.17 15,375 6.86 3,527 1.57 7,850 3.50 7,549 3.37 2,535 1.13 1,807 0.81 4,190 1.87 4,128 1.84 609 0.27 420 0.19 315 0.14 1,081 0.48 18.36

By region

[edit]
Region RN LREMMoDem EELV LRLC FI PSPPND DLFCNIP G.s UDI PCF PA GEMEIMdP UPR LO LP AJ Others T/o
# % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # %
Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 559,042 20.99 603,210 22.65 398,677 14.97 276,400 10.38 153,648 5.77 159,678 6.00 89,953 3.38 82,998 3.12 69,784 2.62 66,437 2.49 50,976 1.91 50,476 1.90 29,897 1.12 18,190 0.68 17,289 0.65 13,321 0.50 23,055 0.87 51.80
Bourgogne-Franche-Comté 260,629 26.26 202,576 20.41 115,310 11.62 96,006 9.67 62,237 6.27 55,428 5.58 42,420 4.27 29,127 2.93 24,772 2.50 20,439 2.06 23,920 2.41 17,263 1.74 11,423 1.15 8,918 0.90 8,515 0.86 5,761 0.58 7,744 0.78 53.04
Brittany 222,914 17.32 329,956 25.64 208,545 16.21 100,839 7.84 71,550 5.56 97,318 7.56 38,751 3.01 64,930 5.05 33,074 2.57 28,623 2.22 21,354 1.66 23,066 1.79 12,003 0.93 12,088 0.94 4,042 0.31 5,903 0.46 11,925 0.93 54.97
Centre-Val de Loire 229,559 25.44 194,604 21.56 103,640 11.48 82,432 9.13 50,911 5.64 52,056 5.77 40,069 4.44 26,921 2.98 27,337 3.03 21,638 2.40 21,500 2.38 15,164 1.68 9,912 1.10 7,141 0.79 6,798 0.75 5,850 0.65 6,960 0.77 52.67
Corsica 24,063 28.01 12,921 15.04 18,944 22.05 10,451 12.17 2,707 3.15 3,004 3.50 1,836 2.14 1,188 1.38 751 0.87 3,324 3.87 3,051 3.55 1,280 1.49 682 0.79 354 0.41 486 0.57 450 0.52 408 0.47 38.01
Grand Est 524,547 28.24 382,886 20.62 222,093 11.96 159,641 8.60 95,065 5.12 91,853 4.95 88,141 4.75 46,922 2.53 49,596 2.67 29,247 1.57 50,626 2.73 34,504 1.86 22,543 1.21 15,539 0.84 18,043 0.97 10,439 0.56 15,549 0.84 50.59
Hauts-de-France 691,371 33.55 369,830 17.95 212,491 10.31 134,498 6.53 145,260 7.05 96,001 4.66 77,627 3.77 54,404 2.64 50,555 2.45 57,288 2.78 54,487 2.64 27,074 1.31 20,863 1.01 19,864 0.96 19,352 0.94 13,244 0.64 16,553 0.80 51.49
Île-de-France 499,589 14.13 964,060 27.26 561,968 15.89 328,238 9.28 218,578 6.18 231,640 6.55 101,347 2.87 137,930 3.90 97,008 2.74 104,875 2.97 79,353 2.24 70,331 1.99 47,969 1.36 19,588 0.55 12,216 0.35 12,192 0.34 49,431 1.40 50.60
Normandy 322,381 26.61 253,703 20.94 137,325 11.34 95,280 7.87 75,665 6.25 71,759 5.92 49,948 4.12 40,231 3.32 31,689 2.62 31,810 2.63 30,076 2.48 19,360 1.60 11,994 0.99 11,430 0.94 10,930 0.90 7,805 0.64 10,034 0.83 53.69
Nouvelle-Aquitaine 496,762 22.35 495,592 22.29 295,549 13.30 166,505 7.49 156,342 7.03 172,774 7.77 72,639 3.27 80,801 3.63 50,761 2.28 58,192 2.62 45,979 2.07 43,567 1.96 23,810 1.07 19,459 0.88 13,679 0.62 14,734 0.66 15,845 0.71 54.39
Occitanie 562,721 25.74 439,620 20.11 288,703 13.20 153,909 7.04 162,093 7.41 165,841 7.59 69,726 3.19 72,757 3.33 40,767 1.86 62,406 2.85 42,598 1.95 39,247 1.80 26,255 1.20 15,279 0.70 14,485 0.66 14,280 0.65 15,702 0.72 54.95
Pays de la Loire 252,548 18.82 337,679 25.16 209,027 15.58 117,138 8.73 71,373 5.32 93,308 6.95 49,632 3.70 46,670 3.48 43,294 3.23 24,110 1.80 22,439 1.67 25,983 1.94 12,336 0.92 12,640 0.94 4,870 0.36 7,048 0.53 11,912 0.89 52.32
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 521,969 30.52 348,437 20.37 200,341 11.71 150,738 8.81 100,001 5.85 76,667 4.48 60,628 3.54 36,770 2.15 31,332 1.83 46,776 2.73 39,034 2.28 32,646 1.91 22,092 1.29 7,390 0.43 12,010 0.70 9,659 0.56 13,951 0.82 49.93
Guadeloupe 9,072 23.71 6,913 18.07 4,081 10.67 2,169 5.67 4,957 12.96 3,445 9.01 978 2.56 1,566 4.09 713 1.86 488 1.28 36 0.09 844 2.21 841 2.20 1,714 4.48 315 0.82 6 0.02 118 0.31 14.37
Martinique 6,418 16.31 7,179 18.24 4,315 10.96 2,880 7.32 5,099 12.95 3,350 8.51 891 2.26 1,982 5.04 1,256 3.19 976 2.48 25 0.06 1,090 2.77 895 2.27 2,635 6.69 2 0.01 53 0.13 316 0.80 15.22
French Guiana 3,165 27.47 1,917 16.64 2,146 18.63 387 3.36 1,562 13.56 665 5.77 214 1.86 297 2.58 197 1.71 203 1.76 28 0.24 9 0.08 342 2.97 211 1.83 127 1.10 6 0.05 46 0.40 13.41
Réunion 56,143 31.24 18,869 10.50 15,412 8.58 10,745 5.98 34,192 19.03 10,086 5.61 4,357 2.42 6,630 3.69 3,421 1.90 4,360 2.43 2,573 1.43 3,359 1.87 5,002 2.78 2,101 1.17 1,977 1.10 91 0.05 400 0.22 30.66
Mayotte 9,717 46.12 1,868 8.87 918 4.36 3,582 17.00 1,932 9.17 499 2.37 578 2.74 445 2.11 314 1.49 200 0.95 16 0.08 6 0.03 491 2.33 130 0.62 289 1.37 20 0.09 66 0.31 28.64

Communes with at least 100,000 inhabitants

[edit]
Commune Mayor RN LREMMoDem EELV LRLC FI PSPPND DLFCNIP G.s UDI PCF PA GEMEIMdP UPR LO LP AJ Others T/o
# % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # %
Aix-en-Provence LR 7,644 17.64 12,605 29.10 7,311 16.88 4,396 10.15 2,420 5.59 2,505 5.78 899 2.08 1,080 2.49 893 2.06 769 1.78 669 1.54 754 1.74 523 1.21 137 0.32 154 0.36 156 0.36 407 0.94 49.78
Amiens UDI 6,647 20.48 8,296 25.56 4,116 12.68 1,799 5.54 3,410 10.51 1,676 5.16 829 2.55 1,229 3.79 848 2.61 878 2.71 852 2.63 651 2.01 341 1.05 230 0.71 187 0.58 118 0.36 346 1.07 46.92
Angers DVD 5,217 11.95 12,299 28.16 8,243 18.88 4,293 9.83 2,176 4.98 3,565 8.16 879 2.01 1,961 4.49 1,117 2.56 815 1.87 765 1.75 912 2.09 439 1.01 318 0.73 68 0.16 161 0.37 441 1.01 50.29
Annecy UDI 5,663 14.13 11,670 29.11 7,719 19.25 3,969 9.90 1,677 4.18 2,592 6.47 1,083 2.70 1,066 2.66 999 2.49 540 1.35 672 1.68 920 2.29 443 1.10 196 0.49 178 0.44 149 0.37 555 1.38 51.22
Argenteuil LR 3,393 18.34 3,822 20.66 2,192 11.85 949 5.13 2,254 12.18 1,087 5.88 494 2.67 1,159 6.27 425 2.30 727 3.93 426 2.30 419 2.26 354 1.91 222 1.20 141 0.76 94 0.51 341 1.84 36.19
Besançon REM 4,551 14.39 7,594 24.02 5,892 18.63 2,600 8.22 2,565 8.11 2,433 7.69 663 2.10 1,288 4.07 600 1.90 907 2.87 622 1.97 722 2.28 350 1.11 236 0.75 169 0.53 120 0.38 308 0.97 48.65
Bordeaux LR 7,167 9.40 22,476 29.47 16,434 21.55 6,879 9.02 4,725 6.20 6,481 8.50 1,017 1.33 3,214 4.21 1,363 1.79 1,617 2.12 1,064 1.40 1,501 1.97 832 1.09 335 0.44 236 0.31 209 0.27 714 0.94 51.90
Boulogne-Billancourt LR 3,094 7.54 16,760 40.86 5,485 13.37 6,622 16.14 1,134 2.76 2,039 4.97 592 1.44 925 2.26 1,060 2.58 407 0.99 702 1.71 665 1.62 412 1.00 82 0.20 53 0.13 88 0.21 899 2.19 58.90
Brest PS 5,931 14.83 9,297 23.24 7,370 18.43 2,534 6.34 2,927 7.32 3,591 8.98 728 1.82 2,507 6.27 767 1.92 926 2.32 621 1.55 669 1.67 468 1.17 283 0.71 102 0.26 102 0.26 1,173 2.93 49.36
Caen LR 3,808 12.56 8,128 26.80 5,708 18.82 2,458 8.10 1,985 6.54 2,587 8.53 594 1.96 1,509 4.98 647 2.13 636 2.10 570 1.88 604 1.99 312 1.03 216 0.71 151 0.50 118 0.39 299 0.99 55.39
Clermont-Ferrand PS 4,850 14.43 7,761 23.09 5,245 15.61 2,722 8.10 2,634 7.84 2,915 8.67 550 1.64 1,735 5.16 1,238 3.68 1,197 3.56 740 2.20 468 1.39 385 1.15 255 0.76 160 0.48 167 0.50 583 1.73 48.49
Dijon PS 6,575 15.43 10,893 25.56 7,127 16.72 3,866 9.07 2,756 6.47 3,209 7.53 1,103 2.59 1,593 3.74 959 2.25 840 1.97 1,135 2.66 966 2.27 505 1.18 291 0.68 213 0.50 150 0.35 436 1.02 52.96
Grenoble EELV 4,809 11.71 9,836 23.96 9,181 22.36 2,581 6.29 3,224 7.85 3,851 9.38 600 1.46 2,193 5.34 710 1.73 1,120 2.73 612 1.49 753 1.83 425 1.04 276 0.67 151 0.37 92 0.22 646 1.57 50.00
Le Havre LR 10,063 22.55 9,592 21.50 5,810 13.02 2,319 5.20 4,094 9.18 2,510 5.63 1,153 2.58 1,144 2.56 928 2.08 2,598 5.82 1,043 2.34 623 1.40 530 1.19 301 0.67 322 0.72 224 0.50 1,366 3.06 44.78
Le Mans PS 7,330 16.93 10,076 23.27 6,892 15.92 3,529 8.15 3,099 7.16 3,843 8.87 1,193 2.75 1,574 3.63 936 2.16 1,104 2.55 713 1.65 662 1.53 336 0.78 494 1.14 132 0.30 235 0.54 1,156 2.67 50.81
Lille PS 7,599 13.85 12,119 22.08 11,917 21.71 2,732 4.98 5,637 10.27 4,562 8.31 788 1.44 2,768 5.04 950 1.73 1,479 2.69 1,147 2.09 1,057 1.93 639 1.16 406 0.74 245 0.45 168 0.31 671 1.22 45.82
Limoges LR 6,586 17.53 8,548 22.75 4,816 12.82 3,537 9.41 2,839 7.56 3,701 9.85 868 2.31 1,801 4.79 698 1.86 1,276 3.40 936 2.49 632 1.68 372 0.99 328 0.87 158 0.42 211 0.56 270 0.72 52.36
Lyon REM 15,551 10.25 43,632 28.76 31,865 21.00 15,739 10.37 8,904 5.87 11,304 7.45 2,330 1.54 5,852 3.86 3,520 2.32 3,178 2.09 2,225 1.47 3,006 1.98 1,517 1.00 726 0.48 398 0.26 312 0.21 1,668 1.10 57.32
Marseille LR 55,974 26.31 43,803 20.59 29,120 13.69 17,583 8.26 17,521 8.23 10,993 5.17 5,161 2.43 6,452 3.03 3,041 1.43 7,285 3.42 3,141 1.48 3,644 1.71 2,819 1.32 1,005 0.47 1,314 0.62 1,008 0.47 2,920 1.37 43.79
Metz PS 5,983 20.08 7,376 24.75 4,504 15.12 2,364 7.93 1,470 4.93 2,227 7.47 922 3.09 1,074 3.60 656 2.20 647 2.17 727 2.44 482 1.62 345 1.16 234 0.79 171 0.57 115 0.39 501 1.68 44.06
Montpellier DVG 10,421 15.33 15,479 22.77 13,282 19.53 4,229 6.22 6,716 9.88 5,650 8.31 1,083 1.59 2,964 4.36 929 1.37 1,734 2.55 1,121 1.65 1,705 2.51 984 1.45 355 0.52 273 0.40 315 0.46 752 1.11 46.30
Montreuil PCF 2,383 8.97 4,291 16.16 6,454 24.31 754 2.84 3,384 12.74 2,229 8.39 386 1.45 1,890 7.12 361 1.36 2,293 8.64 481 1.81 530 2.00 347 1.31 261 0.98 60 0.23 88 0.33 361 1.36 47.30
Mulhouse LR 4,205 21.77 4,330 22.41 2,649 13.71 1,259 6.52 1,419 7.35 1,164 6.03 543 2.81 513 2.66 421 2.18 314 1.63 473 2.45 400 2.07 357 1.85 130 0.67 158 0.82 93 0.48 891 4.61 41.71
Nancy MR 3,017 11.85 7,196 28.27 4,552 17.88 2,279 8.95 1,462 5.74 2,320 9.11 580 2.28 1,046 4.11 632 2.48 557 2.19 524 2.06 385 1.51 302 1.19 150 0.59 138 0.54 56 0.22 258 1.01 52.21
Nantes PS 8,267 8.44 25,787 26.34 23,838 24.35 8,456 8.64 5,984 6.11 9,222 9.42 1,504 1.54 4,656 4.76 1,942 1.98 1,997 2.04 1,193 1.22 2,107 2.15 923 0.94 599 0.61 162 0.17 210 0.21 1,058 1.08 53.38
Nice LR 28,014 28.18 21,699 21.83 11,803 11.87 11,628 11.70 4,694 4.72 4,539 4.57 3,021 3.04 1,958 1.97 1,649 1.66 2,197 2.21 2,736 2.75 1,640 1.65 1,336 1.34 279 0.28 577 0.58 390 0.39 1,257 1.26 47.78
Nîmes LR 9,455 24.43 8,374 21.64 5,072 13.11 3,845 9.94 2,745 7.09 2,382 6.16 911 2.35 1,072 2.77 601 1.55 1,571 4.06 683 1.76 604 1.56 511 1.32 182 0.47 237 0.61 182 0.47 270 0.70 45.42
Orléans DVD 4,116 13.82 7,925 26.61 4,859 16.32 3,090 10.38 1,482 4.98 2,215 7.44 708 2.38 1,106 3.71 1,184 3.98 679 2.28 606 2.03 565 1.90 323 1.08 176 0.59 130 0.44 99 0.33 519 1.74 48.63
Paris PS 53,829 7.23 244,918 32.92 148,377 19.94 75,722 10.18 39,515 5.31 60,814 8.17 9,427 1.27 32,275 4.34 12,909 1.73 23,655 3.18 9,503 1.28 11,770 1.58 7,647 1.03 2,903 0.39 1,514 0.20 1,088 0.15 8,191 1.10 57.88
Perpignan LR 8,816 30.07 5,778 19.71 3,145 10.73 2,244 7.66 2,113 7.21 1,648 5.62 781 2.66 898 3.06 450 1.54 805 2.75 664 2.27 587 2.00 385 1.31 212 0.72 271 0.92 160 0.55 357 1.22 46.40
Reims LR 10,424 24.42 10,021 23.47 5,293 12.40 3,704 8.68 2,587 6.06 2,463 5.77 1,032 2.42 1,471 3.45 1,100 2.58 840 1.97 1,302 3.05 709 1.66 516 1.21 435 1.02 240 0.56 203 0.48 353 0.83 44.68
Rennes PS 4,771 7.89 15,836 26.19 14,713 24.33 3,962 6.55 3,838 6.35 6,594 10.91 764 1.26 3,644 6.03 1,149 1.90 1,736 2.87 634 1.05 1,094 1.81 505 0.84 423 0.70 82 0.14 133 0.22 583 0.96 54.25
Rouen PS 3,736 13.45 7,106 25.57 5,093 18.33 2,030 7.31 2,163 7.78 2,353 8.47 513 1.85 1,235 4.44 628 2.26 818 2.94 552 1.99 553 1.99 305 1.10 167 0.60 134 0.48 81 0.29 318 1.14 51.09
Saint-Denis (Réunion) PS 8,455 27.12 4,287 13.75 2,789 8.95 1,496 4.80 4,510 14.47 4,160 13.34 702 2.25 884 2.84 675 2.17 529 1.70 501 1.61 607 1.95 857 2.75 308 0.99 311 1.00 10 0.03 92 0.30 32.60
Saint-Denis (Seine-Saint-Denis) PCF 1,918 13.10 2,330 15.92 2,143 14.64 453 3.09 2,288 15.63 1,029 7.03 240 1.64 1,011 6.91 251 1.71 1,420 9.70 215 1.47 263 1.80 379 2.59 240 1.64 85 0.58 77 0.53 297 2.03 33.90
Saint-Étienne LR 7,846 19.54 9,022 22.46 5,869 14.61 3,794 9.45 3,096 7.71 2,510 6.25 1,006 2.50 1,889 4.70 820 2.04 1,328 3.31 721 1.80 793 1.97 462 1.15 278 0.69 183 0.46 207 0.52 338 0.84 46.30
Saint-Paul LR 5,902 28.07 2,834 13.48 2,414 11.48 1,024 4.87 4,047 19.25 984 4.68 509 2.42 492 2.34 409 1.95 380 1.81 405 1.93 467 2.22 647 3.08 227 1.08 208 0.99 22 0.10 52 0.25 28.46
Strasbourg PS 8,802 12.80 19,077 27.75 14,220 20.69 5,017 7.30 4,743 6.90 5,294 7.70 1,169 1.70 2,749 4.00 1,414 2.06 1,048 1.52 1,257 1.83 1,385 2.01 838 1.22 352 0.51 276 0.40 200 0.29 902 1.31 49.94
Toulon LR 14,870 30.71 10,207 21.08 4,460 9.21 5,158 10.65 2,770 5.72 2,210 4.56 1,580 3.26 1,008 2.08 1,016 2.10 1,036 2.14 1,329 2.74 926 1.91 671 1.39 208 0.43 350 0.72 251 0.52 367 0.76 48.38
Toulouse LR 14,253 11.43 30,704 24.62 26,539 21.28 9,262 7.43 10,942 8.77 11,532 9.25 1,924 1.54 5,993 4.81 2,058 1.65 3,429 2.75 1,887 1.51 1,940 1.56 1,438 1.15 699 0.56 314 0.25 510 0.41 1,291 1.04 52.39
Tours MR 5,294 14.26 9,522 25.66 6,746 18.18 3,395 9.15 2,312 6.23 2,944 7.93 934 2.52 1,503 4.05 838 2.26 785 2.12 696 1.88 770 2.07 408 1.10 270 0.73 136 0.37 139 0.37 421 1.13 48.23
Villeurbanne PS 5,223 14.57 8,198 22.87 7,253 20.23 2,373 6.62 2,704 7.54 2,921 8.15 764 2.13 1,464 4.08 806 2.25 879 2.45 692 1.93 779 2.17 462 1.29 246 0.69 131 0.37 99 0.28 858 2.39 44.25

Elected MEPs

[edit]

Five MEPs were formally considered to have been elected in the elections, but did not take their seats until the departure of the UK from the EU.[12]

# Name List Party
1 Jordan Bardella RN RN
2 Hélène Laporte RN RN
3 Thierry Mariani RN SE
4 Dominique Bilde RN RN
5 Hervé Juvin RN SE
6 Joëlle Mélin RN RN
7 Virginie Joron RN RN
8 Jean-Paul Garraud RN SE
9 Catherine Griset RN RN
10 Gilles Lebreton RN RN
11 Jean-François Jalkh RN RN
12 Aurélia Beigneux RN RN
13 Julie Lechanteux RN RN
14 Philippe Olivier RN RN
15 Annika Bruna RN RN
16 France Jamet RN RN
17 André Rougé RN RN
18 Mathilde Androuët RN RN
19 Jean-Lin Lacapelle RN RN
20 Marie Dauchy RN RN
21 Éric Minardi RN RN
22 Patricia Chagnon RN RN
1 Nathalie Loiseau REMoDem Horizons
2 Pascal Canfin REMoDem RE
3 Marie-Pierre Vedrenne REMoDem MoDem
4 Jérémy Decerle REMoDem SE
5 Catherine Chabaud REMoDem MoDem
6 Stéphane Séjourné REMoDem RE
7 Fabienne Keller REMoDem RE
8 Bernard Guetta REMoDem SE
9 Irène Tolleret REMoDem TDP
10 Stéphane Bijoux REMoDem RE
11 Sylvie Brunet REMoDem MoDem
12 Gilles Boyer REMoDem Horizons
13 Stéphanie Yon-Courtin REMoDem RE
14 Pierre Karleskind REMoDem RE
15 Laurence Despaux-Farreng REMoDem MoDem
16 Dominique Riquet REMoDem PR
17 Véronique Trillet-Lenoir REMoDem RE
18 Pascal Durand REMoDem SE
19 Valérie Hayer REMoDem RE
20 Christophe Grudler REMoDem MoDem
21 Chrysoula Zacharopoulou REMoDem RE
22 Sandro Gozi REMoDem Italia Viva (Italy)
23 Ilana Cicurel REMoDem RE
24 Salima Yenbou[348] REMoDem RE
25 Max Orville REMoDem MoDem
26 Catherine Amalric REMoDem PR
27 Guy Lavocat REMoDem RE
1 Yannick Jadot
2 Michèle Rivasi
3 Damien Carême
4 Marie Toussaint
5 David Cormand
6 Karima Delli
7 Mounir Satouri
8 Caroline Roose CE
9 François Alfonsi PNC
10 Benoît Biteau SE
11 Gwendoline Delbos-Corfield
12 Claude Gruffat
13 Lydie Massard UDB
14 François Thiollet
1 François-Xavier Bellamy LRLC LR
2 Agnès Evren LRLC LR
3 Arnaud Danjean LRLC LR
4 Nadine Morano LRLC LR
5 Brice Hortefeux LRLC LR
6 Nathalie Colin-Oesterlé LRLC LC
7 Geoffroy Didier LRLC LR
8 Anne Sander LRLC LR
9 Laurence Sailliet LRLC LR
1 Manon Aubry FI FI
2 Manuel Bompard FI FI
3 Leïla Chaibi FI FI
4 Younous Omarjee FI FI
5 Anne-Sophie Pelletier FI FI
6 Emmanuel Maurel FI GRS
7 Marina Mesure FI FI
1 Raphaël Glucksmann PSPPND PP
2 Sylvie Guillaume PSPPND PS
3 Éric Andrieu PSPPND PS
4 Aurore Lalucq PSPPND PP
5 Pierre Larrouturou PSPPND ND
6 Nora Mebarek PSPPND PS
7 Christophe Clergeau PSPPND PS
1 Nicolas Bay None R!
2 Gilbert Collard None R!
3 Maxette Grisoni-Pirbakas None R!
4 Jérôme Rivière None R!

Electorate

[edit]
Demographic PCF FI G.s PS/
PP/ND
EELV LREM/
MoDem
UDI LR/
LC
DLF RN Turnout
Total vote 2.49% 6.31% 3.27% 6.19% 13.48% 22.42% 2.50% 8.48% 3.51% 23.34% 50.12%
Sex
Men 2% 7% 3% 6% 9% 25% 3% 8% 3% 26% 54%
Women 2% 6% 4% 7% 17% 19% 3% 9% 4% 20% 49%
Age
18–24 years old 4% 9% 7% 5% 25% 12% 1% 8% 4% 15% 39%
25–34 years old 1% 6% 5% 5% 28% 17% 1% 4% 2% 20% 40%
35–49 years old 1% 10% 3% 7% 14% 16% 2% 6% 5% 26% 46%
50–59 years old 2% 8% 4% 6% 10% 21% 1% 6% 2% 30% 51%
60–69 years old 4% 6% 2% 8% 9% 24% 2% 9% 5% 23% 62%
70 and older 3% 2% 3% 8% 5% 33% 6% 15% 3% 20% 65%
Socio-occupational classification
Manager/professional 2% 6% 5% 7% 20% 28% 2% 6% 1% 13% 51%
Intermediate occupation 4% 10% 4% 7% 21% 19% 2% 4% 3% 19% 43%
White-collar worker 1% 11% 3% 3% 13% 15% 1% 8% 4% 27% 41%
Blue-collar worker 1% 7% 3% 8% 12% 12% 1% 3% 3% 40% 45%
Retired 4% 4% 2% 8% 6% 30% 4% 11% 4% 22% 65%
Employment status
Employee 2% 9% 3% 6% 17% 17% 2% 6% 3% 25% 45%
Private employee 1% 9% 3% 6% 16% 19% 2% 6% 4% 25% 45%
Public employee 4% 9% 4% 7% 19% 16% 1% 5% 3% 25% 45%
Self-employed 0% 9% 6% 5% 12% 19% 1% 13% 5% 14% 43%
Unemployed 2% 8% 3% 3% 13% 14% 0% 5% 1% 29% 47%
Education
Less than baccalauréat 3% 6% 3% 7% 6% 21% 2% 8% 4% 33% 50%
Baccalauréat 2% 8% 4% 6% 14% 20% 2% 8% 4% 24% 50%
Bac +2 1% 6% 3% 7% 15% 21% 3% 10% 4% 16% 52%
Bac +3 and higher 3% 8% 4% 7% 20% 25% 3% 8% 2% 12% 53%
Monthly household income
Less than €1,200 2% 12% 7% 5% 12% 11% 1% 5% 3% 30% 42%
€1,200 to €2,000 3% 8% 4% 6% 10% 17% 4% 9% 4% 26% 48%
€2,000 to €3,000 3% 5% 2% 6% 12% 24% 2% 7% 3% 27% 53%
More than €3,000 2% 6% 3% 7% 15% 26% 4% 10% 4% 18% 56%
First-round vote in the 2017 presidential election
Jean-Luc Mélenchon 11% 36% 6% 8% 19% 3% 1% 0% 3% 4% 45%
Benoît Hamon 3% 4% 23% 30% 24% 7% 0% 0% 0% 2% 62%
Emmanuel Macron 1% 1% 2% 11% 14% 57% 2% 3% 0% 4% 60%
François Fillon 0% 1% 0% 0% 4% 27% 9% 34% 3% 18% 56%
Nicolas Dupont-Aignan 0% 1% 0% 1% 9% 9% 2% 5% 37% 23% 52%
Marine Le Pen 0% 0% 0% 0% 5% 3% 0% 2% 4% 78% 57%
Political party
PCF 63% 2% 5% 2% 7% 3% 0% 6% 0% 0% 62%
FI 5% 67% 3% 5% 3% 0% 0% 0% 2% 3% 47%
PS 2% 4% 11% 44% 15% 15% 0% 0% 1% 4% 56%
EELV 0% 2% 3% 1% 78% 4% 0% 0% 1% 3% 54%
LREM 0% 0% 1% 0% 7% 88% 0% 1% 0% 2% 64%
MoDem 1% 0% 1% 4% 12% 45% 12% 3% 1% 4% 55%
UDI 0% 0% 0% 1% 5% 32% 42% 9% 0% 2% 62%
LR 0% 2% 0% 0% 2% 16% 4% 52% 1% 18% 52%
DLF 0% 3% 0% 0% 0% 2% 0% 2% 58% 29% 54%
RN 0% 0% 1% 0% 2% 1% 0% 0% 1% 91% 58%
Left subtotal 7% 19% 7% 18% 29% 7% 0% 1% 1% 3% 53%
Right subtotal 0% 2% 0% 0% 3% 16% 9% 38% 10% 17% 54%
No party 1% 3% 7% 4% 8% 11% 4% 4% 7% 26% 36%
Proximity to the gilets jaunes movement
Very close 4% 20% 1% 4% 5% 2% 1% 2% 5% 44% 58%
Rather close 3% 9% 6% 7% 13% 3% 2% 5% 6% 35% 47%
Not really close 3% 3% 3% 9% 18% 23% 4% 11% 3% 16% 49%
Not at all close 0% 2% 3% 5% 12% 47% 3% 12% 1% 9% 56%
Close subtotal 3% 13% 4% 6% 11% 3% 1% 4% 6% 38% 50%
Not close subtotal 2% 2% 3% 7% 15% 36% 4% 12% 2% 12% 52%
Source: Ipsos

Aftermath and analysis

[edit]
Top list in Paris by arrondissement
Top list in Marseille by sector
  LREM–MoDem
  RN
  EELV

Turnout, up by 7.7 points compared to the previous European elections, was the highest since the 1994 elections. The results of the election were a confirmation of the establishment of the National Rally and La Republique En Marche as the two strongest political forces, between them leading in every single department.[349] Although it fell relative to 2014, elevated turnout also meant the RN also attained a new record vote total in the European elections.[350] Pre-election polls failed to capture both the rise of the Greens and abysmal result of The Republicans. Even if surveys in the closing weeks uniformly reflected an increase in estimated turnout, that alone did not explain the discrepancy between polls and the final result. Frédéric Dabi [fr], deputy director general of the polling institute Ifop, admitted that pollsters missed the result, while Brice Teinturier [fr], deputy managing director at Ipsos, suggested that the LR vote was more fragile than immediately visible, with their electorate less firm and many placing Loiseau's list as their second choice; the same was true for La Republique En Marche, with 17% of its backers then considering a vote for the Greens. Teinturier suggested that there had been a "double transfer" in votes in the closing weekend during the polling ban, with LR supporters moving Loiseau's list to prevent the RN from a first-place finish, the Greens depriving votes from the En Marche list, and a porous Socialist electorate compatible with both.[351] Surveys indicated that nearly a quarter of voters made their choice only in the weekend before, with over half of EELV voters deciding within the last week alone, while retirees, who traditionally make up the LR vote, instead voted for the Renaissance list.[352]

The results of the European elections in France were also viewed with interest for their potential implications in the upcoming municipal elections in 2020. In Paris, the Renaissance list came first with 33% of the vote, followed by the Greens with just under 20%, LR with a catastrophic score of just 10%, the Socialists on 8%, RN on 7%, and Mélenchon's France Insoumise on only 5%.[353] Despite the overall vote share of the LREM list remaining relatively stable compared to Macron's result in 2017, the massive increase in support in the wealthier western arrondissements and decrease in support everywhere else in the city reflected the changing nature of its electoral base with the loss of its left flank.[354] Even in Marseille, a stronghold of the right, the LR list received only 8% of the vote, whereas the National Rally led with just over 26% and the list backed by Mélenchon with just over 8% in his electoral fief.[355]

In reaction to the results, the Élysée claimed that it perceived the outcome as a "disappointment", but "not a defeat", while pointing to EELV's strong showing as reflecting strong support for ecological issues which it had made central to the campaign, with no change in direction expected from the government.[356] Interpretations of the RN's score were also qualified, described as a "victory but not a triumph", falling short of the 25% mark in late polls, matching its usual electoral results and marking a slight decrease from its share of the vote from 2014.[357] Speaking after the RN's victory, Le Pen called for the immediate dissolution of the National Assembly after the "democratic rejection" of Macron with his list's second-place finish.[358] For his part, Benoît Hamon decided to take time to reflect upon his next steps and to try to assist in uniting the left after his movement, Génération.s, fell short and failed to secure any seats.[359] Despite implicit pressure on him to step down after overseeing the worst result for the right in its history, Laurent Wauquiez initially sought to remain at the helm of The Republicans, proposing an "Estates General" to update the party's strategy and propositions.[360][361] The results were also a major disappointment for Mélenchon's France Insoumise with a score just over 6%, only narrowly ahead of the PS/Place Publique list, cut in third compared to the 2017 presidential election; like LR, it was also potentially a victim of tactical voting, potentially due to a strategic failure in framing the election as an anti-Macron referendum.[362] Wauquiez ultimately announced his resignation as president of The Republicans a week later, on 2 June.[363]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ LREMMoDemAgirMR

References

[edit]
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