FR Parliamentary Elections
The winners will likely be projected before the official vote count is announced, based on early vote counts and exit polling;
- History
Expected Impact / Date | Description |
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Jul 7, 2024 | Voters will elect all 577 members to the French National Assembly; |
Jun 30, 2024 | Voters will elect all 577 members to the French National Assembly; |
Jun 19, 2022 | Voters will elect all 577 members to the French National Assembly; |
Jun 12, 2022 | Voters will elect all 577 members to the French National Assembly; |
Jun 19, 2017 | Voters will elect all 577 members to the French National Assembly; |
Jun 11, 2017 | Voters will elect all 577 members to the French National Assembly; |
Jun 17, 2012 | Voters will elect all 577 members to the French National Assembly; |
Jun 10, 2012 | Voters will elect all 577 members to the French National Assembly; |
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- FR Parliamentary Elections News
- From bbc.com|Jul 8, 2024
Nobody expected this. High drama, for sure, but this was a shock. When the graphics flashed up on all the big French channels, it was not the far right of Marine Le Pen and her young prime minister-in-waiting Jordan Bardella who were on course for victory. It was the left who had clinched it, and Emmanuel Macron's centrists had staged an unexpected comeback, pushing the far-right National Rally (RN) into third. Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the veteran left-wing firebrand seen by his critics as an extremist, wasted no time in proclaiming ...
- From cnn.com|Jul 7, 2024
video A left-wing alliance has won the most seats in the French parliament after tactical voting in Sunday’s second round election thwarted Marine Le Pen’s far-right party, but France will be left in political limbo after no party came close to winning an absolute majority. In a surprise result, the New Popular Front (NFP) – a cluster of several parties ranging from the far-left France Unbowed party to the more moderate Socialists and the Ecologists – won 182 seats in the National Assembly, making it the largest group but short of ...
- From politico.eu|Jul 7, 2024|14 comments
The leftwing alliance in France is on course to win the most seats in a dramatic parliamentary election, dealing a blow to the far-right party of Marine Le Pen, according to early estimates. Le Pen’s National Rally came top in the first round a week ago and was aiming to secure the most seats in France’s legislature for the first time in the party’s history. But tactical voting and collaboration between Le Pen’s opponents in an effort to keep her party out of power appeared to have paid off, the first indications from pollsters ...
- From cnbc.com|Jul 7, 2024
French voters are heading to the polls on Sunday for the second and final round of voting in a snap parliamentary election. After an initial ballot suggested the far-right National Rally (RN) group would become the biggest party in France’s National Assembly, parties on the center-right and left have joined forces to try to block RN’s advance. Both President Emmanuel Macron’s “Together” (Ensemble) alliance and the left-wing New Popular Front (NFP) have called on voters to reject the party in the second round, and have withdrawn ...
- From bnnbloomberg.ca|Jul 3, 2024|1 comment
Marine Le Pen’s National Rally is scrambling to get an absolute majority in the final round of France’s legislative election Sunday as rival parties are maneuvering to keep the far-right party out of power. President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist group and the broad, left-wing New Popular Front alliance have pulled their candidates out of 215 runoffs with more than two candidates to avoid splitting the vote against the far right, according to a count by Le Monde newspaper. In response, the National Rally has been seeking allies to help ...
- From invezz.com|Jul 2, 2024
Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally (NR) party has taken a commanding lead in the first round of the French parliamentary elections, securing 33.2% of the vote. This result marks a significant shift in France’s political landscape, with the NR eclipsing the left-wing New Popular Front’s 28% and President Emmanuel Macron’s Ensemble alliance’s 22.4%. Analysts are now speculating on potential implications for the cryptocurrency sector in France. Historically, the National Rally has maintained an ambiguous stance on ...
- From bnnbloomberg.ca|Jul 1, 2024|2 comments
French President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist alliance and the left-wing New Popular Front are weighing whether to pull candidates from the second round of the legislative election on Sunday to keep the ascendant far-right National Rally out of power. Marine Le Pen’s National Rally dominated the first round of voting Sunday, locking up 33.2% of the vote, according to interior ministry figures. The New Popular Front got 28% and Macron’s coalition got 20.8%. Winning an absolute majority of seats in the second round would hand the ...
- From invezz.com|Jul 2, 2024
Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally (NR) party has taken a commanding lead in the first round of the French parliamentary elections, securing 33.2% of the vote. This result marks a significant shift in France’s political landscape, with the NR eclipsing the left-wing New Popular Front’s 28% and President Emmanuel Macron’s Ensemble alliance’s 22.4%. Analysts are now speculating on potential implications for the cryptocurrency sector in France. Historically, the National Rally has maintained an ambiguous stance on ...
- From politico.eu|Jul 2, 2024
Financial markets went into France's Sunday election bracing for a good old-fashioned freakout — but the results from the first round of voting were too confusing to trigger a selloff. On the contrary, initial reactions on Monday suggested a measure of relief, with stocks jumping and the euro recovering as some of the nightmare scenarios contemplated ahead of the poll faded. On Sunday, as expected, the hard-right National Rally (RN) of Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella emerged as the strongest force from the first of two rounds of ...
Released on Jul 7, 2024 |
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Released on Jun 30, 2024 |
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