Socialist group in the Senate Groupe socialiste au Sénat | |
|---|---|
| Chamber | Senate |
| Previous name(s) | Socialist group (1959–2011) Groupe socialiste Socialist group, associated and attached Europe Ecology The Greens group (2011–12) Groupe socialiste, apparentés et groupe Europe Écologie Les Verts rattaché Socialist and associated group (2012–15) Groupe socialiste et apparentés |
| Member parties | PS PP DVG |
| President | Patrick Kanner |
| Constituency | Nord |
| Representation | 65 / 348 |
| Ideology | Social democracy |
| Website | www |
TheSocialist group in the Senate (French:Groupe socialiste au Sénat, SOC), currently theSocialist, Ecologist and Republican group (Groupe socialiste, écologiste et républicain, SER), is aparliamentary group in theFrench Senate including representatives of theSocialist Party (PS).
The firstparliamentary group of socialists in theSenate of theThird Republic was formed following the1927 senatorial elections with a total of 14 members, after the election of 2 socialists in the1921 renewal and the1924 renewal bringing the total to 6 senators.[1] Before the formal constitution of a group in the Senate, the elected socialists sat with the Democratic, Radical, and Radical-Socialist Left group.[2] Though initially disorganized, the senators of the group recognized themselves under the common label of "socialist".[3]Camille Reboul presided over the group from its foundation, and was later succeeded in this position byAndré Morizet.[1] Tensions within the group led to the dissent of seven "neo-socialists" in 1933, halving the size of the group;[2] however, the impact of this split was ultimately limited as theSFIO was able to ensure the survival of the socialist group in the Senate.[1] The group remained roughly the same in size through the end of the Third Republic, with 16 members after the renewals of both1929 and1932;[4][5] it subsequently adopted the appellation of the SFIO in 1934,[3] was reduced to 13 members after the1935 renewal,[6] and rebounded to 15 senators after the1938 renewal.[7]
During theFourth Republic, a socialist group was formed in theCouncil of the Republic, with 64 seats following senatorial elections on 8 December 1946,[8] and 62 seats following senatorial elections on 7 November 1948,[9] doing better than itstripartite partners as a result of its good local implantation.[3] The group subsequently maintained 56 seats following senatorial elections on 18 May 1952,[10] 56 seats following senatorial elections on 19 June 1955,[11] and 60 seats following senatorial elections on 8 June 1958.[12]
Antoine Courrière was the first president of the socialist group in theSenate of theFifth Republic, presiding until his death on 20 September 1974.[13] Following senatorial elections two days later,[14]Marcel Champeix was elected president of the group on 2 October.[15][16] After his defeat on 28 September 1980,[17] Champeix was replaced byAndré Méric, who was officially designated president of the group on 6 October; he led the group until 5 July 1988, resigning as a result of his appointment as aSecretary of State in the government,[18] and was succeeded byClaude Estier, who was elected president of the group on the same day.[19] After Estier decided not to represent himself in the2004 renewal,[20] he was succeeded byJean-Pierre Bel, elected by the socialists in a four-way contest on 28 September.[21][22]
Bel remained president of the group until 30 September 2011, after which he took office aspresident of the Senate on 1 October;[23] the left, long a minority a Senate,[3] took control of the high chamber for the first time in the history of the republic after the2011 renewal, with the number ofEurope Ecology – The Greens senators swinging from 4 to 10 and the continuation of thecommunist group.[24] With Bel at the perch,François Rebsamen was elected president of the group on 1 October,[25] and on 25 September, the group was reformed as the Socialist group, associated and attached Europe Ecology The Greens group (groupe socialiste, apparentés et groupe Europe Écologie Les Verts rattaché); after the formation of an independentecologist group on 11 January 2012, the socialist faction was renamed to the socialist and associated group (groupe socialiste et apparentés).[26] After Rebsamen was appointed to the government, he left his seat in the Senate on 14 April 2014,[27] and was succeeded byDidier Guillaume the following day.[28] The left's control of the Senate was ephemeral, with the chamber decisively returning to the control of the right after the2014 renewal.[29] Following the renaming of theUMP to asthe Republicans, its associated group in the Senate was also renamed on 2 June,[30] followed soon thereafter on 10 June by the renaming of the socialist group to the Socialist and Republican group (groupe socialiste et républicain).[31] On 27 June 2017, 23 socialists left for theLa République En Marche group on the day of its foundation.[32] After the retirement of Guillaume from politics,Patrick Kanner was elected president of the group with 47 votes, againstLaurence Rossignol with 25 votes, on 23 January 2018.[33]
| Name | Term start | Term end | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antoine Courrière | 26 April 1959 | 20 September 1974 | [34][13] |
| Marcel Champeix | 2 October 1974 | 28 September 1980 | [15] |
| André Méric | 6 October 1980 | 5 July 1988 | [18] |
| Claude Estier | 5 July 1988 | 28 September 2004 | [19][21][22] |
| Jean-Pierre Bel | 28 September 2004 | 30 September 2011 | [21][22][23] |
| François Rebsamen | 1 October 2011 | 14 April 2014 | [25][27] |
| Didier Guillaume | 15 April 2014 | 23 January 2018 | [28][33] |
| Patrick Kanner | 23 January 2018 | present | [33] |
| Year | Seats | Change | Series | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1959 | 51 / 307 | – | [34] | |
| 1962 | 52 / 274 | A | [35] | |
| 1965 | 52 / 274 | B | [36] | |
| 1968 | 52 / 283 | C | [37] | |
| 1971 | 49 / 283 | A | [38] | |
| 1974 | 52 / 283 | B | [14] | |
| 1977 | 62 / 295 | C | [39] | |
| 1980 | 69 / 305 | A | [40] | |
| 1983 | 70 / 317 | B | [41] | |
| 1986 | 64 / 319 | C | [42] | |
| 1989 | 66 / 321 | A | [43] | |
| 1992 | 70 / 321 | B | [44] | |
| 1995 | 75 / 321 | C | [45] | |
| 1998 | 78 / 321 | A | [46] | |
| 2001 | 83 / 321 | B | [47] | |
| 2004 | 97 / 331 | C | [48] | |
| 2008 | 116 / 343 | A | [49] | |
| 2011 | 141 / 348 | 1 | [50] | |
| 2014 | 112 / 348 | 2 | [51] | |
| 2017 | 78 / 348 | 1 | [52] | |
| 2020 | 65 / 348 | 2 |