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1827 French legislative election

← 1824 17 November 1827 (first round)
24 November 1827 (second round)
1830 →

All 430 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
216 seats needed for a majority

Prime Minister before election

Jean-Baptiste de Villèle
Ultra-royalist

Elected Prime Minister

The Viscount of Martignac
Doctrinaire

Legislative elections were held in France on 17 and 24 November 1827. The Ultra-royalists loyal to Charles X of France lost the elections, with Villèle meeting the King on the 5th of December to offer their resignation.[1] [citation needed][citation needed][2] [citation needed]

195 seats one by those favourable to Villele govt

199 won by candidates of the left center and left (but how may are doctrinares)

Seats won by candidates of the counter opposition - 31

Unknown affiliaton - 5 (bit from appendix)[3]

"In sum, on a vote of confidence Villele seemingly could not win." p 161


(page 162 breaks it up further, but could be rolled up in existing sources without quotation)

- The ultra royalists of counter oppostion - or "pointus" as villele referred to them.

de Bertier de Sauvigny estimates 60 to 80, (de Bertier de Sauvigny, La Restauration, p. 392)

- some fo them made an alliance de convenance with the left opposition

p 163 stuff

- 2nd subfaction of the counter opposition - comte François Régis de La Bourdonnaye.

- Villele group, he says contemporary critics usually called them "ministerials".. To a man, they were royalists

- compared to those on left, they kept trying to expand and guard the royal prerogative. p 164 somethign about Jules de Polignac

-

ANd finally, for the leftists (kinda, leftists)

- large left center, loyal opp. Similar to right of center in many ways (rather than just being "the leftists" (so maybe shade of blue fits)) p165.

- With villele gone and the quite different martignac in his place, "the fence between left ad right center was a single strand affair".

- One even asked they be so termed "constitutional royalists"

- Meanwhile leftward fringe (eg 166)

They have a methodology for getting national vote shares, but eh. Trying to get a total would probably result in WP:SYNTH, checking Wikipedia:What SYNTH is not and Wikipedia:No original research#Synthesis of published material

Arrondissemental Colleges Special Colleges Departmental Colleges Total
Total inscribed electorate 88000 1670 21600
Total voting 75000 1430 17800
Total "ballots" cast 75000 3500 44450
Votes received by winning candidates of the left center and left (including Doctrinaires) 34500 1000 13100
Votes received by winning candidates of the counter-opposition 1500 0 2900
Votes received by the principal losing candidates of the left center and left 4650 460 4650
Votes received by the principal losing candidates of the counter-opposition 90 170 750

Electoral system

[edit]

The electoral system was a two round system. Only citizens paying taxes were eligible to vote.[citation needed]

--

Parties were less formalised, but alliances existed where newspapers would endorse sets of candidates that supported their ideology.

Results

[edit]
PartySeats
Left-wing opposition199
Supporters of de Villèle ("Ministerials")195
Right-wing opposition31
Independents5
Total430
Source: Kent[4]

Aftermath

[edit]

Charles X of France dissolved the elected Assembly in 1830 and called fresh elections.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Kent, Sherman (1975). "The Outcome of the Election of November 1827". The Election of 1827 in France. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 160. Retrieved 5 June 2023. 5 Dec. - Met with the council chez moi where it was decided to offer the king our resignation...
  2. ^ Kent, Sherman (1975). "The Outcome of the Election of November 1827". The Election of 1827 in France. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 161. Retrieved 5 June 2023.
  3. ^ Kent, Sherman (1975). "Appendix III / Some statistics of the general election of 1827". The Election of 1827 in France. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 197, 199–200. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  4. ^ Kent, Sherman (1975). The Election of 1827 in France. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 161. Retrieved 5 June 2023.