Fourth French legislative constituency for citizens abroad
The fourth French legislative constituency for citizens abroad (quatrième circonscription des Français établis hors de France) is one of eleven constituencies each electing one representative of French people living outside France to the French National Assembly.
4th constituency for French residents overseas | |
---|---|
Constituency of the National Assembly of France | |
Deputy | |
Department | None (overseas residents) |
Cantons | None |
Registered voters | 158,035 |
Area
editIn terms of area, it is the second smallest of the eleven constituencies (after the sixth: Switzerland and Liechtenstein), covering the three Benelux countries: Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. In contrast, it is the second most populous (after the first: United States and Canada): as of New Year's Day 2011, it contained 150,965 registered French voters. The bulk of these, 101,236, were living in Belgium, the country with the fifth greatest number of registered French residents in the world.[1][2][3]
This constituency elected its first ever representative at the 2012 French legislative election.
Deputies
editElection | Member | Party | |
---|---|---|---|
2012 | Philip Cordery | PS | |
2017 | Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade | LREM | |
2022 | RE | ||
2024 |
Election results
edit2024
editCandidate | Party | Alliance | First round | Second round | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Votes | % | ||||
Cécilia Gondard | PS | NFP | 27,898 | 37.45 | 36,127 | 49.76 | |
Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade | RE | Ensemble | 26,410 | 35.46 | 36,476 | 50.24 | |
Charlotte Beaufils | RN | 6,736 | 9.04 | ||||
Geneviève Machicote | LR | UDC | 4,604 | 6.18 | |||
Juliette de Causans | ECO | 4,318 | 5.80 | ||||
Sacha Courtial | ECO | 1,563 | 2.10 | ||||
Patrick Brisset | DIV | 1,492 | 2.00 | ||||
Anne-Catherine Girard | REC | 1,001 | 1.34 | ||||
Aude Rossolini | DIV | 463 | 0.62 | ||||
Valid votes | 74,485 | 100.00 | 72,603 | 100.00 | |||
Blank votes | 713 | 0.95 | 3,609 | 4.73 | |||
Null votes | 99 | 0.13 | 153 | 0.20 | |||
Turnout | 75,297 | 47.64 | 76,365 | 48.32 | |||
Abstentions | 82,742 | 52.36 | 81,670 | 51.68 | |||
Registered voters | 158,039 | 158,035 | |||||
Source: [1][2] | |||||||
Result | RE HOLD |
2022
editParty | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LREM (Ensemble) | Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade | 16,597 | 38.93 | -13.34 | |||
PS (NUPÉS) | Cécilia Gondard | 13,842 | 32.47 | +5.46 | |||
LR (UDC) | Geneviève Machicote | 2,510 | 5.89 | −3.19 | |||
DVC | Marie-Josée Mabasi | 2,244 | 5.26 | N/A | |||
REC | Anne-Catherine Girard | 2,148 | 5.04 | N/A | |||
Volt | Cédric Deverchère | 1,600 | 3.75 | N/A | |||
RN | Emmanuelle Cuignet | 1,402 | 3.29 | +0.16 | |||
MRC (FGR) | Catherine Coutard | 1,021 | 2.39 | N/A | |||
Others | N/A | 1,272 | 2.99 | − | |||
Turnout | 42,636 | 29.06 | +6.40 | ||||
2nd round result | |||||||
LREM (Ensemble) | Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade | 25,694 | 55.15 | -18.58 | |||
PS (NUPÉS) | Cécilia Gondard | 20,893 | 44.85 | +18.58 | |||
Turnout | 46,587 | 32.58 | +11.81 | ||||
LREM hold |
2017
editCandidate | Label | First round | Second round | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Votes | % | |||
Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade | REM | 14,461 | 52.27 | 18,138 | 73.73 | |
Sophie Rauszer | FI | 3,030 | 10.95 | 6,464 | 26.27 | |
Perrine Ledan | ECO | 2,706 | 9.78 | |||
Valérie Bros | LR | 2,512 | 9.08 | |||
Philip Cordery | PS | 1,737 | 6.28 | |||
Soraya Lemaire | FN | 865 | 3.13 | |||
Caroline Laporte | UDI | 781 | 2.82 | |||
Muriel Réus | DVD | 395 | 1.43 | |||
Denys Dhiver | DVD | 380 | 1.37 | |||
Olivier Rasson | DIV | 161 | 0.58 | |||
Yves Gernigon | DIV | 148 | 0.53 | |||
Juliette Saumier | DIV | 126 | 0.46 | |||
Claire des Mesnards | DIV | 119 | 0.43 | |||
Yann Pereira | DIV | 83 | 0.30 | |||
Philippe Lanney | EXD | 81 | 0.29 | |||
Bertrand de Cordier | DVG | 41 | 0.15 | |||
Frédérique Plaisant | PRG | 26 | 0.09 | |||
Sylvain Bleubar | DIV | 12 | 0.04 | |||
Votes | 27,664 | 100.00 | 24,602 | 100.00 | ||
Valid votes | 27,664 | 99.43 | 24,602 | 96.50 | ||
Blank votes | 68 | 0.24 | 710 | 2.78 | ||
Null votes | 90 | 0.32 | 182 | 0.71 | ||
Turnout | 27,822 | 22.66 | 25,494 | 20.77 | ||
Abstentions | 94,943 | 77.34 | 97,262 | 79.23 | ||
Registered voters | 122,765 | 122,756 | ||||
Source: Ministry of the Interior |
2012
editCandidates
editThe list of candidates was officially finalised on 14 May. There were sixteen candidates:[5][6]
The Union for a Popular Movement initially chose Pascale Andréani, former permanent representative of France to NATO, as its candidate.[7] When Andréani became France's permanent representative to the OECD, the party named Marie-Anne Montchamp, the then-Secretary of State on Solidarity, as candidate in her place. Jeremy Michel was her deputy (suppléant).[8]
The Socialist Party chose Philip Cordery, a resident of Brussels. His deputy (suppléante) was Hélène Le Moing, a resident of The Hague.[9]
Europe Écologie–The Greens chose Perrine Ledan, with Édouard Gaudot as her deputy (suppléant).[10] Ledan, a journalist, is a resident of Brussels.[11]
The Left Front, which included the French Communist Party, chose Charlotte Balavoine, with Patrick Cavaglieri as her deputy (suppléant). Balavoine was a member of the Communist Party.[6][12]
The Democratic Movement chose Tanguy Le Breton, with Raphael Lederer as his deputy.[6]
The National Front chose Sophie Duval. Martine Masse was her deputy.[6]
The Radical Party of the Left chose Nadia Bourahla, with Philippe Loopuyt as her deputy.[6]
The Christian Democratic Party (an associate party of the UMP) chose Stéphane Buffetaut, with Isabelle Soibinet as his deputy. Buffetaut was also endorsed by the National Centre of Independents and Peasants.[13]
The Pirate Party chose Pablo Martin, with Alix Guillard as his deputy.[6]
Solidarity and Progress, the French branch of the LaRouche movement, was represented by Guillaume Dubost, a 32-year-old electrical engineer and long-term resident of Brussels. He was a presiding member of Agora Erasmus, the Benelux branch of the LaRouche movement. Romain Drouillon was his deputy.[14]
Dominique Paillé, a former spokesman for the Union for a Popular Movement, sought to be the candidate for that party. When he was not chosen, he stated that he would "definitely" be a candidate all the same, standing against Andréani if she did not desist.[7] He eventually became the candidate of the centre-right Radical Party and the centrist Republican, Ecologist and Social Alliance. A resident of Brussels, he was a lawyer in Paris.[15] His deputy (suppléante) was Anne Monseu Ducarme.[6]
Virginie Taittinger stood as an independent right-wing candidate. Describing herself as close to the UMP, she presented herself as the "candidate of (Nicolas Sarkozy's) presidential majority", although she ran against the UMP-endorsed candidate. A resident of Brussels, she described herself officially as the candidate of the Union of the Centre and the Right of the French in Benelux. Gaël du Bouëtiez was her deputy.[16][17]
Georges-Francis Seingry, a resident of Brussels who described himself as non-partisan, stood for the Gathering of French Residents Overseas (Rassemblement des Français de l'étranger), a political movement related to the Union for a Popular Movement. Éric Krebs was his deputy.[18]
Ruben Mohedano-Brèthes had been a French expatriate in Belgium since 1996. He was an official of the European Union (in charge of information and communication since 1996: Eurobarometer opinion polls, audio-visual strategy and youth information) and a trade-unionist. He presented himself as an "independent centrist humanist" candidate, under the Force of Freedom banner. He was endorsed by the Centrist Alliance.[19] He was also endorsed by the Liberal Democratic Party.[20]
There were two independent candidates: Elisabeth Valenti (with Jean-Marie Soja as her deputy); and Elisabeth Chevalier (with Jeannine Porte as her deputy).[6]
Results
editAs in other constituencies, turnout in the first round was low: 24.4% in Belgium, 24.4% also in Luxembourg, and 22.1% in the Netherlands. Socialist candidate Philip Cordery finished first in all three countries.[21][22] He went on to win the second round by a fairly large margin.[23]
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PS | Philip Cordery | 13,089 | 53.16 | − | |
UMP | Marie-Anne Montchamp | 11,533 | 46.84 | − | |
Turnout | 25,242 | 26.03 | − | ||
PS win (new seat) |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PS | Philip Cordery | 7 024 | 30.38 | − | |
UMP | Marie-Anne Montchamp | 4 891 | 21.15 | − | |
EELV | Perrine Ledan | 2 356 | 10.19 | − | |
DVD | Virginie Taittinger | 1 756 | 7.59 | − | |
MoDem | Tanguy Le Breton | 1 554 | 6.72 | − | |
FN | Sophie Duval | 1 357 | 5.87 | − | |
DVD | Georges-Francis Seingry | 1 169 | 5.06 | − | |
FG | Charlotte Balavoine | 970 | 4.19 | − | |
Radical | Dominique Paillé | 645 | 2.79 | − | |
VIA | Stéphane Buffetaut | 453 | 1.96 | − | |
PP | Pablo Martin | 312 | 1.35 | − | |
AC | Ruben Mohedano-Brèthes | 296 | 1.28 | − | |
PRG | Nadia Bourahla | 181 | 0.78 | − | |
SP | Guillaume Dubost | 99 | 0.43 | − | |
Independent | Elisabeth Chevalier | 40 | 0.17 | − | |
Independent | Elisabeth Valentin | 21 | 0.09 | − | |
Turnout | 23 332 | 24.1 | − |
References
edit- ^ "Les élections en 2012 à l’étranger: Votre circonscription pour l’élection des députés" Archived July 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, French Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs
- ^ "Décret n° 2011-367 du 4 avril 2011 authentifiant la population des Français établis hors de France au 1er janvier 2011", Légifrance
- ^ "Français inscrits au registre mondial au 31/12/2010" Archived 2011-05-15 at the Wayback Machine, French Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs
- ^ l'Intérieur, Ministère de. "Résultats des élections législatives 2022" (in French). Retrieved 2022-12-17.
- ^ "Arrêté du 14 mai 2012 fixant la liste des candidats au premier tour de l'élection des députés élus par les Français établis hors de France ", Journal Officiel de la République Française, 15 May 2012
- ^ a b c d e f g h Candidates for the fourth constituency, in Le Petit Journal
- ^ a b "Législatives : l'UMP a désigné ses candidats pour l'étranger", Le Figaro, April 13, 2011
- ^ "Amérique du Nord : l'UMP désigne Lefebvre" Archived 2011-12-29 at the Wayback Machine, Journal du dimanche, 25 November 2011
- ^ "Elections législatives 2012 : nos candidates et candidats" Archived 2011-06-08 at the Wayback Machine, Parti Socialiste - Fédération des Français à l'Etranger
- ^ "Motion 13: Législatives 2012: Hors de France", Europe Écologie–The Greens
- ^ "Les 11 candidat-e-s EELV sur les circonscriptions législatives hors de France" Archived 2012-01-14 at the Wayback Machine, EELV, 12 November 2011
- ^ "LEGISLATIVES - Le Parti Communiste Français présente 7 candidats pour le Front de Gauche" Archived 2012-04-10 at the Wayback Machine, Le Petit Journal
- ^ "Présentation de Stéphane Buffetaut", Le Petit Journal
- ^ "Présentation de Guillaume Dubost", Le Petit Journal
- ^ "Présentation de Dominique Paillé", Le Petit Journal
- ^ "Les Français à la radioscopie", Le Soir, 7 October 2011
- ^ "4ème circonscription : Benelux", Le Petit Journal
- ^ "Présentation de Georges-Francis Seingry", Le Petit Journal
- ^ "Présentation de Ruben Mohedano-Brèthes", Le Petit Journal
- ^ Véron, Aurélien (20 May 2012). "Candidats soutenus par le Parti Libéral Démocrate aux législatives 2012" (in French). Liberal Democratic Party. Archived from the original on 24 May 2012. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
- ^ a b Official results of the first round Archived 2012-06-11 at the Wayback Machine, French Ministry for Foreign Affairs
- ^ "Législatives : tous les résultats des Français de l'étranger", Le Nouvel Observateur, 4 June 2012
- ^ a b "Résultats du 2nd tour - 17 juin 2012 dans la 4ème circonscription - Benelux", Le Monde