2002 French legislative election

2002 French legislative election

9 June 2002 (first round)
16 June 2002 (second round)

All 577 seats in the National Assembly
289 seats needed for a majority
Turnout 64.42% (first round)
60.32% (second round)
Party Leader % Seats +/–
UMP Jean-Pierre Raffarin 33.30 357 +218
PS François Hollande 24.11 140 −115
UDF François Bayrou 4.86 29 −83
PCF Marie-George Buffet 4.82 21 −14
LV Dominique Voynet 4.51 3 −4
DVD 3.65 8 +8
PRG Jean-Michel Baylet 1.54 7 −5
DVG 1.09 6 −5
MPF Philippe de Villiers 0.80 1 −1
DIV 0.77 1 −2
DL Alain Madelin 0.41 2 New
RPF Charles Pasqua 0.37 2 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by constituency
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Jean-Pierre Raffarin
UMP
Jean-Pierre Raffarin
UMP

Legislative elections were held in France on 9 and 16 June 2002, to elect the 12th National Assembly of the Fifth Republic, in a context of political crisis.

The Socialist Prime Minister Lionel Jospin announced his political retirement after his elimination at the first round of the 2002 presidential elections. President Jacques Chirac was easily reelected, all the Republican parties having called to block far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen. Chirac's conservative supporters created the Union for the Presidential Majority (Union pour la majorité présidentielle or UMP) to prepare for the legislative elections.

The first round of the presidential election was a shock for the two main coalitions. The candidates of the parliamentary right obtained 32% of votes, and the candidates of the "Plural Left" only 27%. In the first polls, for the legislative elections, they were equal.

The UMP campaigned against "cohabitation", which is blamed for causing confusion profitable to the far-right and far-left. Jean-Pierre Raffarin, a relatively low-profile politician who said he would listen to "France at the bottom", was chosen as the party's candidate for Prime Minister.

Without a real leader, and staggered by the results of 21 April, the left was in difficulty. The Socialist chairman François Hollande tried to revive the "Plural Left" under the name of "United Left"; but the effort was undermined by the fact that it did not have a sufficiently concrete programme. Furthermore, the left-wing parties could not motivate their voters against an unrecognized and apparently uncontroversial politician like Raffarin. In addition part of the left-wing electorate did not want a new "cohabitation". Finally, the polls indicated a growing advantage for the Presidential Majority.

The right won the elections and the UMP obtained a large parliamentary majority of 394 seats. For the third time under the Fifth Republic, a party acquired an absolute majority (the "blue surge"). Five months later, it became the Union for a Popular Movement.

On the left, the Socialist Party achieved a better result than at the winning 1997 elections, but its allies were crushed. The far-left returned towards its usual level. In far-right, the National Front lost the half of its 5 May voters.

Opinion polls

Results

Party First round Second round Total
seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Union for a Popular Movement 8,408,023 33.30 48 10,029,669 47.26 309 357
Socialist Party 6,086,599 24.11 1 7,482,169 35.26 139 140
National Front 2,862,960 11.34 0 393,205 1.85 0 0
Union for French Democracy 1,226,462 4.86 6 832,785 3.92 23 29
French Communist Party 1,216,178 4.82 0 690,807 3.26 21 21
The Greens 1,138,222 4.51 0 677,933 3.19 3 3
Miscellaneous right 921,973 3.65 3 274,374 1.29 5 8
Hunting, Fishing, Nature, Traditions 422,448 1.67 0 0
Radical Party of the Left 388,891 1.54 0 455,360 2.15 7 7
Revolutionary Communist League 320,467 1.27 0 0
Lutte Ouvrière 301,984 1.20 0 0
Republican Pole 299,897 1.19 0 12,679 0.06 0 0
Ecologists 295,899 1.17 0 0
National Republican Movement 276,376 1.09 0 0
Miscellaneous left 275,553 1.09 0 268,715 1.27 6 6
Movement for France 202,831 0.80 1 1 1
Miscellaneous 194,946 0.77 0 13,036 0.06 1 1
Liberal Democracy 104,767 0.41 1 1 2
Rally for France 94,222 0.37 0 61,605 0.29 2 2
Far-left 81,558 0.32 0 0
Regionalists and separatists 66,240 0.26 0 28,689 0.14 0 0
Far-right 59,549 0.24 0 0
Total 25,246,045 100.00 60 21,221,026 100.00 518 577
Valid votes 25,246,045 95.67 21,221,026 95.65
Invalid/blank votes 1,143,830 4.33 965,139 4.35
Total votes 26,389,875 100.00 22,186,165 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 40,968,484 64.42 36,783,746 60.32
Source: National Assembly

Parliamentary groups in the National Assembly

Group Members
  UMP Group 364
  Socialist Group 149
  UDF Group 30
  Communist Group 22
  Non-Inscrits 12
Total 577

See also