National Assembly Assemblée nationale | |
|---|---|
| 1st,2nd and3rd legislatures of theFrench Fourth Republic | |
| Type | |
| Type | of theFrench Parliament |
| History | |
| Founded | 28 November 1946 (1946-11-28) |
| Disbanded | 8 December 1958 (1958-12-08) |
| Preceded by | Constituent Assembly (Provisional Government) |
| Succeeded by | National Assembly (Fifth Republic) |
| Leadership | |
| Structure | |
| Seats | 626 |
Political groups | Filled (594)[a]
Vacant (32)
|
Length of term | 4 years |
| Elections | |
| Party-list proportional representation | |
First election | 10 November 1946 (1946-11-10) |
Last election | 2 January 1956 (1956-01-02) |
| Meeting place | |
| Salle des Séances Palais Bourbon Paris,French Republic | |
| Website | |
| Archives | |
TheNational Assembly (French:Assemblée nationale,[asɑ̃blenɑsjɔnal]ⓘ) was thelower house of theFrench Parliament under theFourth Republic, with theCouncil of the Republic being theupper house. It was established by the post-war Constitution of 1946, dissolved by theConstitution of 1958 and replaced with anew chamber bearing the same name.
The institutional nature of the parliamentarian Fourth Republic has been described as a source of political instability by historians and jurists.[1][2] The proportional voting system of the1946 legislative election led to a "tripartisme" dominated by theCommunists, theSocialists and thePopular Republican Movement, that ended up with the step down of communist ministers from the government in 1947.[3]
The electoral law of 9 May 1951 introduced a voting system based on affiliations: it combined proportional representation with the possibility for the ballots to join forces in the counting and distribution of votes. This system was intended to give a stable majority to the government, as well as to reduce the influence of the Communist Party and theRally of the French People in the parliament.[3]
By creating theFrench Union, the 1946 constitution allowed a rising number of black deputies fromFrench West Africa,French Equatorial Africa andFrench West Indies to be elected in the Assembly: from only oneSenegalese representative in theThird Republic, black deputies were 21 in 1946 and 30 in 1958, the year of the founding of the Fifth Republic.[4]
The Constitution of 1946, adopted by the Constituent Assembly on 29 September 1946 and approved by referendum on 13 October 1946,[5] led to the creation of a new bicameral parliament. The lower house, named Chamber of Deputies under theThird Republic, became the National Assembly.
| Term | Composition |
|---|---|
| I (1946 election) | |
| II (1951 election) | |
| III (1956 election) |