General election in France 1997

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1993General election in France 19972002
First ballot
 %
30th
20th
10
0
23.49
15.65
14.94
14.22
9.92
6.83
4.22
2.80
7.93
UDF
Otherwise.
Gains and losses
compared to 1993
 % p
   6th
   4th
   2
   0
  -2
  -4
  -6
+5.88
-4.43
+2.36
-4.49
+0.62
-4.01
-0.24
+0.03
+4.28
UDF
Otherwise.
Template: election chart / maintenance / notes
Remarks:
f 1993: sum of the results of Les Verts (4.0%) and other ecological groups.

The 1997 parliamentary elections in France took place on May 25 and June 1, 1997. The occasion was the premature dissolution of the 11th French National Assembly by President Jacques Chirac . The election ended with a victory for the left parties of the gauche plurielle under Lionel Jospin .

background

The civil rights of the Union pour la France, supported primarily by the RPR and the UDF , won the parliamentary elections in 1993 - still under President François Mitterrand - with an overwhelming majority of the seats. Overall, the Union held almost 80 percent of the seats in the National Assembly.

After his election as president, Jacques Chirac had appointed a new prime minister, Alain Juppé ; he replaced Édouard Balladur . However, Chirac did not dissolve parliament like his predecessor did. Juppé's government ( Juppé I cabinet ) lost popularity; Juppé has been described by the media as "the most unpopular prime minister of all time".

On April 21, 1997, Jacques Chirac announced the premature dissolution of the National Assembly. He justified this with the fact that his government needed new legitimacy for extensive reform projects. The media suspected that Chirac wanted to avoid the premature dissolution of the election coinciding with the decision on France's euro membership, as would have been the case at the regular election date in March 1998. He feared that the measures necessary to meet the convergence criteria would further damage the already low popularity of his government and that the left and the extreme right could score points with a campaign against the introduction of the euro. At the time of the dissolution, polls predicted a victory for the civil right.

On the left, Lionel Jospin, the first secretary of the Parti Socialiste , managed to conclude an electoral alliance, the gauche plurielle (“diverse left”) , with other left parties, especially the Communists and the Greens . On the right, the "Union pour la France" was broken after the 1995 presidential election.

Results

35
255
12
11
7th
3
112
139
2
1
35 255 12 11 7th 112 139 
A total of 577 seats

In the first ballot, the gauche plural won around 44 percent of the vote, with the socialists being the strongest force with 23.5 percent. The civil rights came to a good 36 percent. A problem for them was the strong performance of the Front National , which reached almost 15 percent and was represented in a series of runoff elections with its own candidate. In these constituencies there were usually three-way runoff elections, in which the common gauche plural candidate had an advantage over the two right-wing candidates.

In the second ballot, the gauche plurielle was able to increase its share of the vote to 48 percent and the civil rights to 46.1 percent. Thanks to the majority vote, the left won a clear majority of 320 of the 577 seats, with socialists, communists and the Greens alone already having an absolute majority and not depending on the support of smaller left parties.

As a result of the election, the socialist Lionel Jospin was tasked with forming a government, which led to the third cohabitation . The Jospin government held office until the 2002 French presidential election , which took place a few weeks before the 2002 general election .

political
parties
Votes
(first ballot)
Votes
(second ballot)
Seats
absolutely in % absolutely in % Elected
MPs
in %
Extreme left 638.710 2.5 - - 0 0.0
Parti communiste français (PCF) 2,519,281 9.9 982.990 3.8 35 6.1
Parti socialiste (PS) 5,961,612 23.5 9,751,423 38.1 255 44.2
Parti radical-socialiste (PRS) 366.067 1.4 562.031 2.2 12 2.1
Various lefts ( Divers gauche ) 708.605 2.8 652,882 2.5 11 1.9
Green parties 1,726,018 6.8 414.871 1.6 7th 1.2
Other 351.503 1.4 28,916 0.1 3 0.5
Union for French Democracy (UDF) 3,601,279 14.2 5,323,177 20.8 112 19.4
Rassemblement pour la République (RPR) 3,977,964 15.7 5,846,717 22.8 139 24.1
Various rights ( Divers droite ) 1,671,626 6.6 628.468 2.5 2 0.3
Front National (FN) 3,785,383 14.9 1,434,854 5.6 1 0.2
Extreme rights 26,438 0.1 - - 0 0.0
Registered voters 39.217.241 100.0 38.487.205 100.0
Non-voters 12,581,299 32.1 11.133.207 28.9
Voting total 26,635,942 67.9 27,353,998 71.1
Invalid votes and blank ballot papers 1,301,456 3.3 1,727,669 4.5
Valid votes 25,334,486 64.6 25,626,329 66.6
  1. a b These 3 MPs cannot be clearly assigned to a camp from the available figures. It may also be DVG or DVD.

Source: Assemblée nationale

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Manfred Weber-Lamberdière, Ursula Langmann: Escape to the front. Focus, April 28, 1997, accessed July 1, 2012 .
  2. a b Lutz Krusche: Chirac mainly plays banque. Der Spiegel, April 28, 1997, accessed July 1, 2012 .