Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2022 French presidential election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2022 French presidential election

← 201710 April 2022 (first round)
24 April 2022 (second round)
2027 →
Opinion polls
Turnout73.69% (first round)Decrease 4.08pp
71.99% (second round)Decrease 2.57pp
 
CandidateEmmanuel MacronMarine Le Pen
PartyLREMRN
Popular vote18,768,63913,288,686
Percentage58.55%41.45%

First round results by department and region
Second round results by department and region

President before election

Emmanuel Macron
LREM

Elected President

Emmanuel Macron
LREM

Presidential elections were held inFrance on 10 and 24 April 2022. As no candidate won amajority in the first round, arunoff was held, in whichEmmanuel Macron defeatedMarine Le Pen and was re-elected asPresident of France.[1] Macron, fromLa République En Marche! (LREM), had defeated Le Pen, leader of theNational Rally, once already in the2017 French presidential election, for the term which expired on 13 May 2022. Macron became the first president of France to win a re-election bid sinceJacques Chirac won in2002.[2]

In the first round Macron finished first with 28% of the vote, followed by Le Pen with 23%,Jean-Luc Mélenchon ofLa France Insoumise with 22% andÉric Zemmour ofReconquête with 7%.Valérie Pécresse ofthe Republicans received 5% of the vote andAnne Hidalgo,mayor of Paris andSocialist Party candidate, 2%. Both the Republicans and the Socialists, considered to be the dominant parties until 2017,[3] received their worst results in a presidential election.[4]

In the second round, Macron beat Le Pen with 59% of the vote to her 41%, a narrower margin than in the 2017 election. Turnout was 72%, the lowest in a presidential election run-off since1969.[5] Le Pen conceded defeat afterexit projections became available. The presidential election was followed by the2022 French legislative election, held on 12–19 June, to elect the 577members of theNational Assembly, the lower house of theFrench Parliament.

Electoral system

[edit]
Official logo of the election

Under Article 7 of theConstitution of France, thepresident iselected to a five-year term in atwo-round election.[6] If no candidate secures an absolute majority of votes in the first round, a second round is held two weeks later between the two candidates who received the most votes.[7] According to the Constitution of France, the first round of the presidential election must be held between 20 and 35 days before the transition of power at the end of the five-year term of the incumbent officeholder.[citation needed] AsEmmanuel Macron took office on 14 May 2017, the transition of power is expected to take place on 13 May 2022. Correspondingly, the first round of the presidential election was to be held between 8 and 23 April 2022, with the second round held two weeks after the first.[8] On 13 July 2021, Government SpokesmanGabriel Attal announced the dates for the election, respectively 10 April 2022 for the first round and 24 April 2022 for the eventual second round.[9]

To be listed on the first-round ballot, candidates needed to secure at least 500 signatures (often referred to asparrainages in French) from national or local elected officials from at least 30 differentdepartments oroverseas collectivities, with no more than a tenth of these signatories from any single department. The signatures were submitted to theConstitutional Council, which is the sole authority to designate participants.[10]

First round

[edit]

Campaign

[edit]

Following the 2017 presidential electionThe Republicans (LR) sent its members a questionnaire on the topic of the "re-foundation" of the party; of the 40,000 respondents, 70% voted against an open primary like that which was held in2016 to determine the party nominee.[11] In a document dated 17 October 2017, theSocialist Party (PS) wrote that the financing of the 2022 presidential campaign was not assured despite "economic restructuring" but still planned to spend €12,000,000, the maximum legally permitted before the first round. According to the report, the party's leadership had seriously considered the possibility of not presenting a PS candidate in 2022.[12]

Marine Le Pen, the president of theNational Rally (RN), announced on 16 January 2020 that she would be running in the election. She previously ran in the2012 and 2017 presidential elections as the party's candidate, then called the National Front (FN). She came third in 2012 with 17.9% of the vote in the first round and second in 2017 with 21.3% of the vote in the first round and 33.9% of the vote in the second round. Le Pen was elected to theNational Assembly in the2017 French legislative election.[13]

Jean Lassalle, who ran in the 2017 presidential election under the Résistons! banner, coming in seventh place with 1.2% of the vote, announced that he would run again.[14] In 2020, MPJoachim Son-Forget, a radiologist who was elected to the National Assembly forLa République En Marche! (LREM) in 2017, formed a new political party called Valeur Absolue and announced his intention to enter the race for the presidency. He had resigned from theLREM group after posting tweets in 2018 that were deemed sexist; he then joined theUDI and Independents group in 2019 before resigning his membership later that year.[15]

On 8 November 2020,Jean-Luc Mélenchon, founder ofLa France Insoumise (LFI), announced that he would be running in the election. He previously ran in the 2012 presidential election for theLeft Front (coming fourth with 11.1% of the vote in the first round) and in the 2017 presidential election for LFI (coming fourth again with 19.5% of the vote in the first round). Mélenchon was elected to the National Assembly in 2017.[16]

In November 2021,Ensemble Citoyens was founded. It is apolitical coalition composed of the presidential majority led underEmmanuel Macron.[17]

In January 2022,Éric Zemmour's partyReconquête, which was founded the month prior, gained a member of the National Assembly inGuillaume Peltier, previously elected as a member of LR,[18] as well as twoMembers of the European Parliament (MEPs) whenJérôme Rivière andGilbert Collard defected from Le Pen's RN.[19][20] Previously, Son-Forget, who had declared he would run for the presidency, rallied behind Zemmour's candidacy. In early February 2022, the party gained a third MEP whenMaxette Grisoni-Pirbakas defected from the RN.[21]Stéphane Ravier became Zemmour's first supporter in theSenate after he left the RN mid-February 2022.[22]

In February 2022, a wave of defections hitValérie Pécresse, candidate put forward by LR, in favour of Macron.[23] She was accused by members of the party's centrist wing of trying to pander to the voters of Zemmour,[24] whose sharp rise in the polls has been qualified as "meteoric".[25] During a rally in February 2022, Pécresse said "in ten years time ... will we be a sovereign nation, a US satellite or a Chinese trading post? Will we be unified or divided? Nothing is written, whether it is loss of economic status, or theGreat Replacement." She was criticised for referring to the Great Replacement; she later said that her mention was not an endorsement of what she considered to be a "theory of hate".[26][27][28][29]

The2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine that began on 24 February had significant implications for the campaign. As media coverage switched to covering the war, Macron's polling improved significantly during the crisis.[30] Le Pen and Zemmour were made to explain historic statements of praise forVladimir Putin.[31][32][33] In a 14 March 2022 interview with newspaperLe Figaro,Gérard Larcher,Senate President and a supporter of Pécresse, put into question the legitimacy of a possible second Macron term, stating: "If there is no campaign, the question of the legitimacy of the winner will arise."[34] Those comments echoed Macron's refusal to participate in any debate with the other candidates prior to the election's first round.[35]

Macron formally announced his candidacy for re-election on 3 March 2022, by which time he had already received well more than thesponsorships from elected officials to qualify for the ballot.

Marion Maréchal of theLe Pen family, granddaughter of FN founderJean-Marie Le Pen and niece of its current leader Marine Le Pen, formalised her support for Zemmour at a large rally inToulon on 6 March 2022.[36][37] In the final days before the first round of voting, Le Pen's polling numbers improved to within the margin of error of defeating Macron in the second round, while those of Pécresse and Zemmour fell.[38][39][40]

Mélenchon's polling numbers also surged in the final days of campaigning.[41][42][43] Left-leaning independent candidateChristiane Taubira, formerMinister of Justice (2012–2014) under PresidentFrançois Hollande and winner of the2022 People's Primary vote, withdrew her candidacy on 2 March 2022, endorsing Mélenchon.[44]

Primaries and congresses

[edit]

Ecologist primary

[edit]
Main article:2021 French Green Party presidential primary

In September 2021, the Ecology Pole organised apresidential primary to determine their candidate. The following candidates participated in this primary:[45]

Nominee
Eliminated

Socialist primary

[edit]

In October 2021, theSocialist Party had its primary.Mayor of ParisAnne Hidalgo won with 72% of the vote.[49][50]

Nominee
Eliminated

People's Primary

[edit]
Main article:2022 French People's Primary

Independent activists launched a primary with the intention of nominating a unity left-wing candidate. The voting took place online from 27 to 30 January 2022. Of the seven candidates listed in the primary, three declined to participate.[51] The primary was conducted according to amajority judgment voting system, in which all voters are to rate all candidates, with the candidate with the highest median rating winning.[52]

Nominee
Eliminated

The Republicans congress

[edit]
Main article:2021 The Republicans congress

The Republicans selected their candidate via a congress of party members. On 4 December 2021,Valérie Pécresse won the nomination with 60.95% of the votes againstÉric Ciotti.[53][54]

Nominee
Eliminated

Candidates

[edit]

On 7 March 2022, theConstitutional Council published names of the 12 candidates who received 500 valid sponsorships, with the order determined by drawing lots.[55]

Sponsorships

[edit]

A candidate must have secured 500Présentation signatures from elected officials in order to appear on the first-round ballot. The signature collection period ended on 4 March.[56] The table below lists sponsorships received by the Constitutional Council by candidate.[57] On the form, this is named aprésentation but is more widely known asparrainage.[58] There were 46 individuals who received at least 1 sponsorship as of the closing date deadline of 4 March 2022. Some of them received sponsorships without being candidates, and one sponsored himself. Candidates labeled SE (sans etiquette) do not belong to any political party.

Colour legend
1–5051–100101–150151–200201–250251–300301–350351–400401–450451–500500+
Signatures received by the Constitutional Council as of 7 March[57]
CandidateParty1 Feb3 Feb8 Feb10 Feb15 Feb17 Feb22 Feb24 Feb1 Mar3 Mar4 MarTotalNotes
Christian-Jacques ArnalSE000000000101Not a candidate
Nathalie ArthaudLO12126230519020303626576500 signatures validated by 15 February
François AsselineauUPR104611522177246161614293
Michel BarnierLR010000000001Not the nominee of LR
Corinne BekaertSE001020011016
Christophe BlanchetLREM000000001001Not a candidate
Jean-Louis BorlooUDI[a]000000010001Not a candidate
Thierry CahezSE000000100001
Marie CauSE001011011218
Bernard CazeneuvePS000000000011
Michel ChaudotSE000000000011
Arnaud ChicheSE0131301034521
Patrick CojanSE000010000001Not a candidate
Vincent DelabySE000000000011
Carole DelgaPS000001000001Not a candidate
Nicolas Dupont-AignanDLF10671554880194335755018600500 signatures validated by 1 March
Clara EggerSE0331636246236
Bertrand Fessard de FoucaultSE000100000001
Éric Régis FiorileSE000001000102
Jean-Marc FortanéSE0001002042312
Jean Baptiste GiffonSE000000000101
Raphaël GlucksmannPP000000000101Not a candidate
Cédric HerrouSE000000000011
Anne HidalgoPS4821838613821767103499269431,440500 signatures validated by 8 February
François HollandePS000010000001Not a candidate
Yannick JadotEELV116918857125407550542023712500 signatures validated by 22 February
Alexandre Juving-BrunetSE000000002002
Anasse KazibRP12063151766214511155
Gaspard KoenigS0221413711231916107
Georges KuzmanovicRS18162832231348
Nicolas LacroixLR000000002002Not a candidate
Yaya LamSE000010000001
Jean LassalleRES151091926689325818231822642500 signatures validated by 17 February
Christian LaurutSE000000011002
Marine Le PenRN233104135573527218910019622500 signatures validated by 1 March
Emmanuel MacronLREM10542439712421085118812411891242,098500 signatures validated by 3 February
Philippe Célestin MarechalSE001000000001Self-sponsored
Antoine MartinezVPF0050221111013
Philippe MazuelPACE001000000001
Jean-Luc MélenchonLFI148612434743872982686533906500 signatures validated by 24 February
Emmanuelle MénardEXD000010000001Not a candidate
Guillaume MeuriceSE000010011306Not a candidate
Nicolas MiguetRCF0270300698540
Arnaud MontebourgDVG000000010001Withdrew candidacy on 19 January
Paul MontserratSE000000001001
Valérie PécresseLR3429061531057512119812818699802,636500 signatures validated by 8 February
Thomas PesquetSE000000001001Not a candidate
Édouard PhilippeHorizons000000000101Not a candidate
Florian PhilippotLP000100000001Withdrew candidacy on 18 February
Philippe PoutouNPA4507319421125199997157596500 signatures validated by 4 March
Stéphanie RivoalSE000110000002
Martin RoccaSE001110005109
Antoine RocquemontSE000000100001
Fabien RousselPCF30129167551113753112067626500 signatures validated by 17 February
François RuffinPD000000000101Not a candidate
Laëtitia Saint-PaulLREM000000000001Not a candidate
Josef SchovanecSE001000000001Not a candidate
Rafik SmatiOF0020321010110
Christiane TaubiraWalwari08281126131824536033274Withdrew candidacy on 2 March
Hélène ThouyPA220268144158171015139
Gildas VieiraLaFRA000100010002
Antoine WaechterMEI000011110307
Stéphane WendlingerSE000010000001
Éric ZemmourREC144491326941596520510120741500 signatures validated by 1 March
Total3131,7563,0171,1391,8515939486481,52396312,751
‹ Thetemplate below (Graph:Chart) is being considered for deletion. Seetemplates for discussion to help reach a consensus. ›
This graph was using thelegacy Graph extension, which is no longer supported. It needs to be converted to thenew Chart extension.

Electorate

[edit]
Sociology of the electorate
DemographicArthaud/
Poutou
MélenchonRousselJadotHidalgoMacronPécresseLassalleDupont-AignanLe PenZemmourTurnout
Total vote1.5%20.3%2.6%4.3%2.0%28.5%4.8%3.2%2.2%23.7%7.0%73.7%
First-round vote in2017
Jean-Luc Mélenchon2%66%8%3%2%6%1%3%1%7%1%81%
Benoit Hamon2%42%6%18%12%13%0%2%0%4%1%80%
Emmanuel Macron1%7%1%5%3%74%2%1%0%4%2%84%
Francois Fillon0%2%0%3%0%39%21%2%3%18%12%78%
Marine Le Pen0%2%0%1%0%3%1%0%1%78%14%79%
Political party
LFI1%94%1%0%0%1%0%0%0%3%0%78%
PS1%33%6%4%21%29%0%1%0%5%0%76%
EELV0%29%2%49%2%14%1%1%0%2%0%79%
LREM-MoDem1%3%1%0%0%91%1%1%0%2%0%82%
LR-UDI0%1%0%0%1%25%37%4%2%21%9%79%
FN0%1%0%0%0%1%0%1%2%93%2%80%
REC0%0%0%0%0%0%0%3%0%7%90%77%
None3%19%2%3%1%30%3%8%2%25%4%64%
Sex
Men1%21%2%4%2%27%5%4%2%23%9%73%
Women2%20%3%5%2%29%4%3%3%24%5%75%
Age
18–24 years old1%31%3%6%1%20%2%2%0%21%8%58%
25–34 years old3%34%0%4%1%23%3%2%0%25%5%54%
35–49 years old3%22%3%5%2%24%2%4%3%28%4%78%
50–59 years old0%22%2%4%1%24%3%4%3%30%7%80%
60–69 years old1%17%4%5%2%30%4%4%2%22%9%88%
70 or older1%9%3%4%3%41%12%2%3%13%9%77%
Socio-occupational classification
Manager/Professional1%25%1%5%4%35%6%4%2%12%5%74%
Intermediate occupation2%25%4%4%2%28%3%4%1%24%3%73%
White-collar worker3%25%1%4%2%17%2%2%2%36%9%73%
Blue-collar worker2%23%3%1%0%18%2%2%3%36%9%67%
Retired1%11%3%4%3%38%9%3%3%17%8%81%
Employment status
Employee2%24%2%4%2%25%3%3%2%26%5%71%
Private employee2%23%2%2%2%26%4%3%2%28%6%69%
Public employee2%25%3%7%2%22%2%4%2%27%4%75%
Self-employed2%25%0%8%0%26%3%4%4%18%10%76%
Unemployed3%34%1%2%2%12%1%3%6%29%7%65%
Education
Less than baccalauréat2%14%3%3%2%23%5%3%3%35%7%76%
Baccalauréat0%22%3%3%1%26%4%4%2%27%8%72%
Bac +20%17%3%5%2%31%6%4%1%23%8%75%
At least bac +32%26%2%6%3%33%5%3%2%13%5%73%
Monthly household income
Less than €1,2501%28%1%5%2%14%2%2%4%31%10%66%
€1,250 to €2,0003%25%4%4%1%23%3%3%1%26%7%71%
€2,000 to €3,0001%19%3%4%1%27%5%3%3%27%7%75%
More than €3,0001%18%2%4%3%35%6%4%2%19%6%77%
Moment of choice of vote
Several months ago1%15%2%3%1%36%5%2%2%24%9%N/A
A few weeks ago2%27%4%5%3%23%3%3%3%24%3%N/A
In the last few days/Final Moment3%30%4%6%3%13%6%7%4%20%4%N/A
Agglomeration
Less than 2,000 inhabitants3%20%2%4%3%25%3%4%3%27%6%76%
2,000 to 9,999 inhabitants1%18%3%5%2%23%2%6%3%28%9%76%
10,000 to 49,000 inhabitants1%17%3%4%2%31%7%4%1%24%6%76%
50,000 to 199,999 inhabitants1%16%2%4%2%36%6%1%2%24%6%74%
More than 200,000 inhabitants1%23%3%4%1%29%6%3%2%20%8%71%
Religion
Catholic1%11%2%4%1%32%7%3%3%27%9%N/A
Regular practitioner1%6%2%4%3%35%13%3%6%9%18%N/A
Occasional practitioner0%14%2%6%0%30%9%3%3%20%13%N/A
Non-practitioner1%10%2%3%2%32%6%4%2%30%8%N/A
Others1%36%1%6%3%22%7%2%5%13%4%N/A
None2%30%3%5%2%25%2%3%2%21%5%N/A
DemographicTurnout
Arthaud/
Poutou
MélenchonRousselJadotHidalgoMacronPécresseLassalleDupont-AignanLe PenZemmour
Sociology of the electorate
Source: Ipsos France[59]

Second round

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Arthaud and Lassalle both said they would vote blank, with Lassalle saying that he trusted the French people to do what is right.[60] Mélenchon and Poutou[61] stated their opposition to Le Pen but did not endorse Macron.[62][63][64] Hidalgo, Jadot, Pécresse and Roussel all supported Macron.

CandidateEndorsement
Anne HidalgoEmmanuel Macron[62]
Yannick JadotEmmanuel Macron[62][65]
Valérie PécresseEmmanuel Macron[62][66]
Fabien RousselEmmanuel Macron[63][64]
Nicolas Dupont-AignanMarine Le Pen[67]
Éric ZemmourMarine Le Pen[62]
Nathalie ArthaudNo endorsement[68][69]
Jean LassalleNo endorsement[60][70]
Jean-Luc MélenchonAgainstLe Pen[62]
Philippe PoutouAgainstLe Pen[61]

Campaign

[edit]

On 14 April 2022, Le Pen said if elected she would hold areferendum on whether to reinstatecapital punishment in France, if such a proposal garnered enough signatures under the citizens' initiative referendum system she wants to implement.[71][72] Le Pen had also campaigned for a ban on wearingMuslim headscarves in public.[73][74]

On 20 April, the only election debate of the campaign (moderated byLéa Salamé andGilles Bouleau) to feature both major candidates was held. Polls conducted after the debate to ascertain which candidate performed best, showed that 59% of viewers thought that Macron had performed better, compared to 39% for Le Pen.[75][76] The election brought together new alliances of protest movements, concerned with issues such as police brutality, racism, feminism and climate change, which held a large demonstration before the poll.[77]

Candidates

[edit]
Candidates in the second round
Emmanuel MacronMarine Le Pen
La République En Marche!National Rally
Incumbent
President of France
(2017–present)
Member of the National Assembly
forPas-de-Calais
(2017–present)

Opinion polls

[edit]
See also:Opinion polling for the 2022 French presidential election andOpinion polling on the Emmanuel Macron presidency

The trendlines below are constructed usinglocal regressions.[78]

First round

[edit]

Second round

[edit]

Results

[edit]

Macron was re-elected with 58.55% of the vote to 41.45% for Le Pen in the second round of the election.[79]Exit poll projections byIpsos andSopra Steria forFrance Télévisions andRadio France, released as voting closed, estimated that Macron defeated Le Pen with 58.2% of the vote to 41.8%.[80] He became the first French president to win re-election sinceJacques Chirac in2002.[81][82][83] The projections, based on actual ballot papers, also showed that 28% of registered voters did not show up to the second round,[84] making it the lowest turnout since1969.[85] Official results showed that the turnout was 71.99%, with over 13 million abstentions in the second round, in addition to over 8.6% of ballots cast being blank or invalid (a marked increase over the first round).[79]

CandidatePartyFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Emmanuel MacronLa République En Marche!9,783,05827.8518,768,63958.55
Marine Le PenNational Rally8,133,82823.1513,288,68641.45
Jean-Luc MélenchonLa France Insoumise7,712,52021.95
Éric ZemmourReconquête2,485,2267.07
Valérie PécresseThe Republicans1,679,0014.78
Yannick JadotEurope Ecology – The Greens1,627,8534.63
Jean LassalleRésistons!1,101,3873.13
Fabien RousselFrench Communist Party802,4222.28
Nicolas Dupont-AignanDebout la France725,1762.06
Anne HidalgoSocialist Party616,4781.75
Philippe PoutouNew Anticapitalist Party268,9040.77
Nathalie ArthaudLutte Ouvrière197,0940.56
Total35,132,947100.0032,057,325100.00
Valid votes35,132,94797.8032,057,32591.34
Invalid votes247,1510.69805,2492.29
Blank votes543,6091.512,233,9046.37
Total votes35,923,707100.0035,096,478100.00
Registered voters/turnout48,747,87673.6948,752,33971.99
Source: Minister of the Interior[86]

First round

[edit]

Tables

[edit]
Results bydepartment
DepartmentEmmanuel
Macron
Marine
Le Pen
Jean-Luc
Mélenchon
Éric
Zemmour
Valérie
Pécresse
Yannick
Jadot
Jean
Lassalle
Fabien
Roussel
Nicolas
Dupont-Aignan
Anne
Hidalgo
Philippe
Poutou
Nathalie
Arthaud
Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%
Ain92,20627.69%86,75526.05%57,83217.37%27,5308.27%17,5725.28%15,8434.76%10,8763.27%5,9381.78%8,9982.70%5,6441.69%2,1720.65%1,6580.50%
Aisne58,72122.09%104,34239.25%41,17215.49%18,2666.87%10,9204.11%7,0742.66%6,4682.43%5,9682.24%5,7902.18%2,9831.12%2,1180.80%2,0380.77%
Allier49,70626.73%50,31527.06%31,01316.68%12,3616.65%10,3195.55%5,9823.22%7,7824.18%8,1194.37%4,2162.27%3,2801.76%1,5030.81%1,3590.73%
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence20,80021.51%26,01026.90%21,85622.61%7,9268.20%3,8343.97%3,9574.09%4,3094.46%2,7212.81%2,5042.59%1,3961.44%8650.89%5050.52%
Hautes-Alpes20,50723.78%19,69622.84%19,71822.87%6,1647.15%4,5115.23%5,0135.81%3,8714.49%1,9252.23%2,1422.48%1,4591.69%8010.93%4280.50%
Alpes-Maritimes139,96624.99%149,21926.64%92,81516.57%78,32913.99%31,3045.59%23,4194.18%12,7842.28%8,8831.59%13,3262.38%5,4240.97%2,9940.53%1,6300.29%
Ardèche45,35323.03%49,59425.18%42,83721.75%14,1997.21%9,5534.85%8,5444.34%9,0334.59%5,7102.90%4,9272.50%4,1892.13%1,8170.92%1,2190.62%
Ardennes31,65623.64%48,24236.02%22,28116.64%8,7716.55%5,5564.15%3,4462.57%4,0843.06%3,0092.25%2,9572.21%1,7411.30%1,1120.83%1,0810.81%
Ariège18,07019.71%21,95823.94%23,90826.07%5,8206.35%2,7242.97%3,0203.29%7,5328.21%2,7012.95%1,6211.77%3,2083.50%7230.79%4170.45%
Aube38,32125.60%49,31632.95%22,48315.02%11,3747.60%8,9235.96%4,6193.09%3,7872.53%3,0942.07%3,9662.65%1,7201.15%1,0620.71%1,0050.67%
Aude43,10420.29%64,02730.14%42,03919.79%18,4348.68%7,3503.46%6,3222.98%12,3825.83%5,6222.65%4,2061.98%6,1662.90%1,7480.82%1,0260.48%
Aveyron47,43027.75%34,35720.10%32,73419.15%10,1125.92%9,9885.84%6,7463.95%14,8258.67%4,5152.64%3,4772.03%4,4702.62%1,3540.79%8940.52%
Bouches-du-Rhône229,03822.71%264,75426.25%237,97123.59%108,61710.77%36,2283.59%42,1094.17%24,2562.40%24,2952.41%20,0511.99%11,7601.17%5,9630.59%3,5780.35%
Calvados120,36631.16%91,77423.76%73,95019.15%22,2555.76%18,3834.76%19,6415.09%9,8162.54%8,7772.27%7,9202.05%6,8481.77%3,7640.97%2,7570.71%
Cantal25,03828.42%21,57024.48%12,94414.69%4,9065.57%6,9877.93%2,7513.12%6,8487.77%2,4962.83%1,5471.76%1,8102.05%6500.74%5550.63%
Charente53,12627.57%50,43026.18%37,30519.36%10,6175.51%8,3434.33%7,5573.92%8,4824.40%5,3742.79%4,3452.26%4,0032.08%1,7630.92%1,3190.68%
Charente-Maritime113,75328.87%99,79025.32%71,63318.18%24,3476.18%19,3164.90%19,0124.82%14,3353.6410,0022.54%9,2892.36%6,8571.74%3,4030.86%2,3300.59%
Cher43,49727.10%44,77227.89%27,90117.38%10,8226.74%8,1475.07%5,0283.13%5,4953.42%5,7493.58%3,7702.35%2,5851.61%1,4630.91%1,3040.82%
Corrèze33,12523.23%31,65822.20%27,73119.45%8,0125.62%12,2788.61%5,0403.53%10,1777.14%6,2924.41%2,6181.84%3,6052.53%1,1790.83%8850.62%
Corse-du-Sud13,02218.76%20,28529.22%9,41213.56%9,27913.37%3,8085.48%2,2813.29%6,8079.80%1,8662.69%1,2261.77%6300.91%6120.88%1980.29%
Haute-Corse13,77317.54%21,99828.02%10,36713.20%9,65712.30%5,5557.08%2,5203.21%8,60110.96%2,6873.42%1,3741.75%9591.22%7620.97%2570.33%
Côte-d'Or80,73428.55%69,11024.44%53,87519.05%21,6517.66%14,3445.07%13,4624.76%8,1832.89%5,7212.02%6,4782.29%5,1261.81%2,2860.81%1,7750.63%
Côtes-d'Armor113,65631.02%79,85021.79%74,22620.26%17,3194.73%17,2354.70%19,3495.28%11,9493.26%11,6283.17%6,4041.75%8,2792.26%3,8951.06%2,6030.71%
Creuse15,54223.25%16,77225.09%13,67920.46%3,5015.24%4,3916.57%1,9062.85%4,2756.40%2,4303.64%1,5562.33%1,6412.45%6650.99%4900.73%
Dordogne58,64823.74%63,49825.70%50,16420.30%15,8156.40%11,3004.57%8,5823.47%15,8856.43%8,8773.59%5,4282.20%5,3742.17%2,2240.90%1,2950.52%
Doubs76,33827.55%66,70324.07%55,58720.06%19,4867.03%15,1075.45%13,0964.72%8,6883.14%5,0011.80%7,7752.81%4,9021.77%2,3450.85%2,0690.75%
Drôme72,22824.78%70,57424.22%65,25822.39%22,0107.55%13,2044.53%14,2344.88%9,9453.41%6,7522.32%7,7582.66%5,3111.82%2,1090.72%2,0410.70%
Eure83,05826.05%102,95232.29%55,57117.43%20,9306.56%13,5524.25%11,4773.60%7,7682.44%7,0562.21%7,5632.37%4,0271.26%2,7100.85%2,1970.69%
Eure-et-Loir59,86927.21%61,96028.16%40,52918.42%14,8036.73%13,0035.91%7,9043.59%5,6942.59%4,2671.94%5,7312.60%3,0761.40%1,7660.80%1,4190.64%
Finistère174,89432.21%100,89018.58%116,59121.47%25,6074.72%26,5414.89%33,2006.12%18,3203.37%15,3402.83%8,5661.58%13,0772.41%6,2661.15%3,6270.67%
Gard88,27821.32%121,48029.34%88,82721.46%38,4799.29%15,4603.73%14,9743.62%15,1623.66%12,1232.93%8,1371.97%6,5851.59%2,7060.65%1,7680.43%
Haute-Garonne197,04926.90%133,41118.21%189,46225.87%50,6996.92%27,1953.71%42,7115.83%35,5174.85%16,3382.23%12,4601.70%19,7002.69%4,8990.67%3,0150.41%
Gers28,97024.89%26,01522.35%21,35318.35%8,3967.21%5,1264.40%4,0903.51%11,72010.07%3,1282.69%2,4182.08%3,8613.32%7930.68%5290.45%
Gironde256,17928.72%191,54221.47%194,77521.84%58,3216.54%37,5754.21%46,6775.23%37,7254.23%21,5222.41%15,6931.76%19,5982.20%8,7340.98%3,6790.41%
Hérault142,30622.28%165,73425.95%154,81924.24%57,7519.04%23,2303.64%28,0574.39%22,0683.45%14,1652.22%11,4751.80%12,1501.90%4,3930.69%2,5800.40%
Ille-et-Vilaine205,88234.50%101,79717.06%132,51022.20%27,4634.60%26,1944.39%42,6137.14%13,9852.34%12,6962.13%10,5601.77%13,9732.34%5,3760.90%3,7830.63%
Indre31,49826.03%34,51628.53%20,95417.32%7,4386.15%6,5895.45%3,7263.08%4,9844.12%3,7023.06%2,8862.39%2,4642.04%1,1550.95%1,0850.90%
Indre-et-Loire101,50330.99%70,55321.54%68,01220.77%19,9316.09%16,2794.97%16,2454.96%8,5202.60%7,8352.39%7,2712.22%6,2161.90%2,8820.88%2,2430.68%
Isère180,55326.85%154,88923.03%153,50622.83%47,4637.06%28,5814.25%40,3876.01%17,0312.53%14,6992.19%14,3322.13%12,7371.89%4,8310.72%3,4790.52%
Jura36,13824.88%38,17726.29%28,88119.89%9,6576.65%7,4235.11%6,3884.40%6,2184.28%3,1662.18%4,1432.85%2,6351.81%1,3420.92%1,0530.73%
Landes69,45926.92%58,64622.73%44,54817.26%16,8176.52%10,3934.03%8,6283.34%24,3089.42%8,1763.17%4,9141.90%9,0713.52%1,9750.77%1,1150.43%
Loir-et-Cher50,48027.92%50,21227.77%30,37716.80%12,7037.03%9,5865.30%7,0973.93%5,4833.03%4,5072.49%4,4272.45%3,1651.75%1,5270.84%1,2460.69%
Loire104,09626.95%97,84625.33%78,22220.25%28,7287.44%18,5584.80%16,6724.32%11,9443.09%9,0182.33%9,0432.34%6,9731.81%2,7760.72%2,3910.62%
Haute-Loire32,41723.21%38,62927.66%24,33217.42%9,5296.82%9,5606.85%5,7964.16%7,8175.60%3,4932.50%3,3662.41%2,4911.78%1,2050.86%1,0200.73%
Loire-Atlantique256,60931.98%135,70216.91%187,97723.43%42,7615.33%37,5414.68%60,0727.49%18,2982.28%18,3222.38%14,7791.84%18,3692.29%7,2800.91%4,7120.59%
Loiret97,00428.92%85,83225.59%63,48618.93%22,8786.82%18,0865.39%14,4014.29%8,4832.53%7,5302.24%7,6742.29%5,6561.69%2,4330.73%1,9590.58%
Lot27,31124.97%21,42219.58%25,93223.71%6,1235.60%5,6485.16%4,6034.21%8,0327.34%3,5593.25%2,4002.19%2,7662.53%9760.89%6180.56%
Lot-et-Garonne42,56823.12%50,29027.32%34,04418.49%15,6468.50%7,7034.18%5,6863.09%13,6007.38%4,9702.70%3,9122.12%3,3571.82%1,4370.78%8890.48%
Lozère10,73922.85%10,49722.34%9,15319.48%3,1486.70%3,0396.46%1,7363.69%4,72210.05%1,3432.86%9131.94%1,0452.22%4260.91%2350.50%
Maine-et-Loire157,06335.59%89,43320.26%80,61618.27%21,7044.92%21,5384.88%26,6346.03%11,0362.50%8,3621.89%9,4202.13%8,8011.99%3,6630.83%3,0710.70%
Manche92,64232.57%69,77024.53%46,94016.50%13,9904.92%14,7465.18%11,8734.17%9,4213.31%7,3682.59%6,8862.42%5,8532.06%2,7200.96%2,2490.79%
Marne78,47228.63%83,75630.56%42,85815.64%19,5017.11%14,3575.24%9,5613.49%6,9212.52%5,3071.94%6,1592.25%3,5421.29%1,8940.69%1,7780.65%
Haute-Marne21,88623.33%34,33136.60%13,22814.10%6,4506.88%4,8415.16%2,5802.75%3,3273.55%1,8331.95%2,5842.75%1,3051.39%7470.80%6960.74%
Mayenne60,75536.40%37,37622.39%25,60815.34%8,0424.82%9,2365.53%7,9344.75%4,6732.80%3,3131.98%3,8582.31%3,4682.08%1,3720.82%1,2730.76%
Meurthe-et-Moselle95,25226.92%97,24327.49%73,89220.89%23,5186.65%13,3873.78%14,5884.12%8,7392.47%7,9612.25%7,2712.06%6,3621.80%3,2140.912,3730.67%
Meuse24,53924.91%34,58835.11%13,55913.76%7,3477.46%4,4034.47%3,1303.18%3,5003.55%1,9571.99%2,4222.46%1,4831.51%8830.90%7020.71%
Morbihan152,74032.68%102,85622.01%84,20018.02%26,5955.69%22,8384.89%27,0365.78%14,3993.08%11,5292.47%9,5862.05%8,2671.77%4,3760.94%2,9520.63%
Moselle136,36626.01%159,25430.37%100,15919.10%39,3697.51%19,3003.68%18,9313.61%14,1632.70%8,7501.67%12,6512.41%7,5341.44%4,3430.83%3,4990.67%
Nièvre28,68625.51%32,83829.20%19,93017.72%7,3786.56%5,1724.60%3,5523.16%4,1063.65%4,2813.81%2,4952.22%2,1601.92%1,0100.90%8330.74%
Nord336,13826.37%373,12729.27%279,78521.95%73,1685.74%42,4703.33%46,9623.68%22,4591.76%45,9023.60%20,6171.62%18,2151.43%8,2650.65%7,6730.60%
Oise100,38824.30%133,44932.30%79,64819.28%30,4487.37%17,5084.24%13,8363.35%9,2052.23%9,0762.20%9,4202.28%4,2741.03%3,0600.74%2,8690.69%
Orne46,00530.48%41,80427.69%22,99315.23%8,9105.90%8,8385.85%5,5133.65%4,8953.24%3,2612.16%3,8262.53%2,3681.57%1,3340.88%1,2030.80%
Pas-de-Calais194,64924.61%305,90038.68%124,75915.77%40,7765.16%25,3203.20%19,3022.44%17,0192.15%26,1523.31%13,9751.77%11,6191.47%5,4910.69%5,8910.74%
Puy-de-Dôme100,13428.00%78,18221.86%74,53420.84%20,6245.77%17,3524.85%17,0294.76%16,1364.51%12,7133.56%6,9221.94%8,2162.30%3,1890.89%2,5560.71%
Pyrénées-Atlantiques111,61027.80%69,76817.38%76,03018.94%25,8776.45%17,1664.28%19,9674.97%48,24612.02%10,1702.53%6,7211.67%9,2762.31%4,9821.24%1,6770.42%
Hautes-Pyrénées33,69224.98%29,93822.19%26,44919.61%8,7146.46%4,5603.38%4,8723.61%14,76110.94%4,5393.37%2,4091.79%3,3152.46%1,0030.74%6360.47%
Pyrénées-Orientales55,16920.54%87,93032.74%51,55619.20%24,7829.23%8,8153.28%8,5883.20%11,6904.35%6,5092.42%5,2091.94%5,0131.87%1,9950.74%1,3120.49%
Bas-Rhin177,06930.70%145,88325.30%105,05518.22%40,4597.02%24,8124.30%28,5734.95%14,6552.54%7,0151.22%17,0092.95%8,3481.45%4,1580.72%3,6870.64%
Haut-Rhin107,24427.85%106,93027.77%66,23417.20%30,2827.86%15,9934.15%18,9634.92%11,0592.87%4,6491.21%13,7443.57%4,8811.27%2,8420.74%2,2650.59%
Rhône278,24330.61%150,46316.55%229,03525.20%74,1688.16%50,2635.53%51,9075.71%17,5721.93%15,9381.75%16,4871.81%15,8951.75%5,2670.58%3,7740.42%
Haute-Saône30,20422.42%46,61834.60%21,08915.65%9,6757.18%6,7545.01%4,2923.18%4,8203.58%2,8362.10%3,6402.70%2,3451.74%1,2950.96%1,1710.87%
Saône-et-Loire82,63327.61%81,97027.39%52,33617.49%20,6866.91%15,2105.08%10,7303.59%10,1863.40%7,4192.48%7,7452.59%6,0372.02%2,3690.79%1,9790.66%
Sarthe83,87628.24%82,23427.68%54,24418.26%16,2185.46%15,9375.36%13,5414.56%7,5462.54%6,9082.33%6,4942.19%5,4091.82%2,5050.84%2,1500.72%
Savoie64,68926.26%56,73323.03%49,85820.24%18,0457.32%13,6085.52%15,6426.35%8,0813.28%5,5362.25%6,6942.72%4,4181.79%1,8490.75%1,2050.49%
Haute-Savoie130,42230.53%87,74420.54%78,06218.28%33,3537.81%22,3495.23%29,9487.01%13,3713.13%5,9971.40%14,1753.32%6,6061.55%3,2320.76%1,8800.44%
Paris372,82035.34%58,4295.54%317,47230.08%86,0888.16%69,5646.59%80,3747.61%12,1391.15%17,2671.64%9,5910.91%22,9012.17%5,7320.54%2,8910.27%
Seine-Maritime179,69827.95%177,80627.65%136,13621.17%33,3615.19%24,2813.78%24,7853.85%13,5882.11%19,8963.09%12,3651.92%11,1391.73%5,4770.85%4,4330.69%
Seine-et-Marne165,38625.00%155,89723.57%171,08025.86%47,9357.25%36,8675.57%26,7544.04%13,8132.09%12,8511.94%15,0612.28%7,8581.19%4,6080.70%3,4460.52%
Yvelines246,06233.41%101,39813.77%168,58522.89%64,4078.74%61,2968.32%40,4705.49%13,6871.86%11,7211.59%13,0971.78%9,0461.23%3,9630.54%2,7740.38%
Deux-Sèvres68,54032.93%47,97923.05%39,19718.83%8,8134.23%9,2624.45%10,0884.85%7,0263.38%4,5452.18%4,5362.18%4,3482.09%2,1361.03%1,6450.79%
Somme83,18527.79%98,20832.81%52,41517.51%16,9085.65%11,3973.81%8,0502.69%7,3762.46%7,7162.58%5,6231.88%3,7551.25%2,2070.74%2,5000.84%
Tarn53,92523.46%56,54324.60%48,43021.07%15,9826.95%10,0144.36%8,6803.78%17,0107.40%5,3132.31%5,1232.23%5,8182.53%1,8290.80%1,1750.51%
Tarn-et-Garonne31,73721.76%42,18328.93%27,88119.12%11,7728.07%5,9944.11%4,8353.32%9,5736.56%3,6282.49%3,4122.34%3,0692.10%1,0570.72%6790.47%
Var142,33523.77%183,28730.61%89,27214.91%79,32913.25%28,3424.73%21,0443.51%17,7842.97%10,6721.78%15,2862.55%5,7030.95%3,5780.60%2,0980.35%
Vaucluse66,88322.01%89,41129.43%63,04520.75%30,47310.03%11,9183.92%12,1283.99%9,8433.24%6,2342.05%6,8952.27%3,7691.24%2,0230.67%1,2340.41%
Vendée149,58735.64%97,28023.18%60,52414.42%25,6636.11%22,5345.37%19,7534.71%13,0393.11%8,1531.94%9,6642.30%7,2441.73%3,6210.86%2,6470.63%
Vienne67,83129.28%54,21623.40%49,16221.22%11,9395.15%9,9594.30%10,7274.63%7,7413.346,4122.77%5,0952.20%4,5421.96%2,3151.00%1,7150.74%
Haute-Vienne54,95127.19%45,35722.44%43,13721.34%10,7965.34%9,5444.72%7,8773.90%9,9734.93%8,0303.97%3,5551.76%5,6542.80%1,7870.88%1,4570.72%
Vosges51,47725.25%65,67632.22%32,69016.04%13,1956.47%9,3594.59%7,5693.71%7,2103.54%3,8501.89%6,1553.02%3,1151.53%1,9880.98%1,5720.77%
Yonne42,61624.14%55,16231.25%31,60017.90%12,9417.33%9,3225.28%5,9173.35%5,3563.03%4,0232.28%4,5942.60%2,2861.30%1,4870.84%1,2030.68%
Territoire de Belfort16,76824.07%19,06127.37%14,60120.96%5,5838.02%3,3224.77%2,7984.02%2,0002.87%1,4852.13%1,8212.61%1,0521.51%6030.87%5600.80%
Essonne164,50327.65%105,86217.79%167,31028.12%39,2846.60%33,0465.55%29,5624.97%11,6101.95%13,4802.27%15,2032.56%7,9441.34%4,3060.72%2,8310.48%
Hauts-de-Seine287,49437.11%64,8128.37%199,64025.77%62,7618.10%62,2318.03%47,1036.08%11,2601.45%13,1701.70%9,7461.26%10,5181.36%3,7040.48%2,3060.30%
Seine-Saint-Denis110,11720.27%64,54211.88%266,63049.09%27,9685.15%17,4793.22%19,3523.56%6,8051.25%11,6422.14%6,3001.16%5,8901.08%3,6620.67%2,7560.51%
Val-de-Marne171,40929.10%69,59911.82%192,42732.67%43,4307.37%32,5225.52%31,9045.42%8,9441.52%14,9542.54%9,3591.59%8,2761.40%3,7300.63%2,5040.43%
Val-d'Oise138,16626.09%91,08117.20%175,66633.17%37,5647.09%26,4034.99%20,7103.91%9,1011.72%10,0601.90%8,9961.70%6,0941.15%3,3520.63%2,3920.45%
Guadeloupe18,13713.43%24,20417.92%75,86256.16%3,0982.29%3,9792.95%1,9271.43%1,0330.76%6680.49%2,1141.56%2,2661.68%7130.53%1,0840.80%
Martinique20,04316.30%16,49513.42%65,29253.10%3,1532.56%4,7313.85%1,9781.61%1,1620.95%7470.61%2,9892.43%3,9353.20%9770.79%1,4471.18%
French Guiana5,10114.22%6,33417.66%18,14350.59%1,5734.39%9972.78%9402.62%5161.44%2460.69%7172.00%5351.49%4621.29%2970.83%
Réunion62,54218.04%85,77024.73%139,60440.26%13,0703.77%9,7382.81%7,9942.31%4,8441.40%3,0740.89%8,3382.40%5,5491.60%2,7050.78%3,5381.02%
Mayotte5,93616.94%14,95842.68%8,39823.96%4821.38%2,8108.02%2950.84%3591.02%2060.59%5301.51%3180.91%3280.94%4301.23%
New Caledonia28,56140.51%13,27318.83%9,71113.77%6,4359.13%4,1445.88%2,1613.07%1,0311.46%3990.57%2,6973.83%9631.37%5600.79%5650.80%
French Polynesia24,41840.25%11,79719.45%8,03513.24%4,3117.11%4,8097.93%2,1663.57%6181.02%3760.62%1,9833.27%8741.44%4590.76%8191.35%
Saint Pierre and Miquelon53419.77%45916.99%1,10540.91%802.96%511.89%1164.29%1084.00%190.70%823.04%752.78%501.85%220.81%
Wallis and Futuna2,11539.47%57910.80%5019.35%1182.20%1,35425.27%721.34%781.46%340.63%2444.55%1182.20%480.90%981.83%
Saint Martin/Saint Barthélemy2,07024.74%1,44517.27%2,35428.13%1,10713.23%3544.23%2472.95%2082.49%480.57%3394.05%921.10%630.75%410.49%
French residents overseas224,95745.09%26,3805.29%109,39421.92%43,2528.67%20,9564.20%40,7748.17%5,9641.20%3,2660.65%7,0741.22%12,4892.50%3,1450.63%1,3000.26%
Total
Source:Ministry of Interior
Results byregion
RegionEmmanuel
Macron
Marine
Le Pen
Jean-Luc
Mélenchon
Éric
Zemmour
Valérie
Pécresse
Yannick
Jadot
Jean
Lassalle
Fabien
Roussel
Nicolas
Dupont-Aignan
Anne
Hidalgo
Philippe
Poutou
Nathalie
Arthaud
Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%
Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes1,175,08527.75%943,29422.28%897,43321.20%312,9167.39%217,9065.15%224,7355.31%136,4363.22%96,4092.28%98,4652.33%77,5701.83%30,5960.72%23,1370.55%
Bourgogne-Franche-Comté394,11726.31%409,63927.35%277,89918.56%107,0577.15%76,6545.12%60,2354.02%49,5573.31%33,9322.27%38,6912.58%26,5431.77%12,7370.85%10,6430.71%
Brittany647,17232.79%385,39319.53%407,52720.65%96,9844.91%92,8084.70%122,1986.19%58,6532.97%51,1932.59%35,1161.78%43,5962.21%19,9131.01%12,9650.66%
Centre-Val de Loire383,85128.53%347,84525.86%251,25918.68%88,5756.58%71,6905.33%54,4014.04%38,6592.87%33,5902.50%31,7592.36%23,1621.72%11,2260.83%9,2560.69%
Corsica26,79518.11%42,28328.58%19,77913.37%18,93612.80%9,3636.33%4,8013.25%15,40810.42%4,5533.08%2,6001.76%1,5891.08%1,3740.93%4550.31%
Grand Est762,28227.28%825,21929.54%492,43917.63%200,2657.17%120,9314.33%111,9604.01%77,4422.77%47,4251.70%74,9182.68%40,0311.43%22,2430.80%18,6580.67%
Hauts-de-France773,22125.40%1,015,36133.35%577,87818.98%179,6065.90%107,6313.53%95,2343.13%62,5482.05%94,8313.11%55,4391.82%40,8561.34%21,1500.69%20,9770.69%
Île-de-France1,656,34130.19%711,69012.97%1,659,15230.24%409,5327.47%339,4686.19%296,2295.40%87,3721.59%105,1701.92%87,3601.59%78,5611.43%33,0630.60%21,9070.40%
Normandy521,76929.26%484,10627.14%335,59018.82%99,4465.58%79,8004.47%73,2894.11%45,4882.55%46,3582.60%38,5602.16%30,2351.70%16,0050.90%12,8390.72%
Nouvelle-Aquitaine945,33227.63%779,94822.80%681,40519.92%210,5016.15%157,2304.60%151,7474.44%201,7735.90%96,8002.83%67,6621.98%77,3262.26%32,6000.95%18,4960.54%
Occitanie777,78023.48%815,49524.62%742,54322.42%260,2127.86%129,1433.90%139,2344.20%184,9945.59%83,4832.52%63,2601.91%77,1662.33%23,9020.72%14,8840.45%
Pays de la Loire707,89033.27%442,02520.78%408,96919.22%114,3885.38%106,7865.02%127,9346.01%54,5922.57%45,0582.12%44,2152.08%43,2912.03%18,4410.87%13,8530.65%
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur619,52923.34%732,37727.59%524,67719.77%310,83811.71%116,1374.38%107,6704.06%72,8472.74%54,7302.06%60,2042.27%29,5111.11%16,2240.61%9,4730.36%
Guadeloupe18,13713.43%24,20417.92%75,86256.16%3,0982.29%3,9792.95%1,9271.43%1,0330.76%6680.49%2,1141.56%2,2661.68%7130.53%1,0840.80%
Martinique20,04316.30%16,49513.42%65,29253.10%3,1532.56%4,7313.85%1,9781.61%1,1620.95%7470.61%2,9892.43%3,9353.20%9770.79%1,4471.18%
French Guiana5,10114.22%6,33417.66%18,14350.59%1,5734.39%9972.78%9402.62%5161.44%2460.69%7172.00%5351.49%4621.29%2970.83%
Réunion62,54218.04%85,77024.73%139,60440.26%13,0703.77%9,7382.81%7,9942.31%4,8441.40%3,0740.89%8,3382.40%5,5491.60%2,7050.78%3,5381.02%
Mayotte5,93616.94%14,95842.68%8,39823.96%4821.38%2,8108.02%2950.84%3591.02%2060.59%5301.51%3180.91%3280.94%4301.23%
Total
Source:Ministry of Interior

Maps

[edit]
  • Simplified 2022 French presidential election's first round map
    Simplified 2022 French presidential election's first round map
  • Map of which candidate placed second in every department during the first round
    Map of which candidate placed second in every department during the first round
  • 2022 French presidential election's first round in Petite Couronne by commune
    2022 French presidential election's first round inPetite Couronne by commune
  • Results of the first round by parliamentary constituency
    Results of the first round byparliamentary constituency
  • Results of the first round by municipality
    Results of the first round bymunicipality
  • First-place candidate by country (Overseas French) during the first round
    First-place candidate by country (Overseas French) during the first round

Second round

[edit]

Tables

[edit]
Results bydepartment
DepartmentEmmanuel
Macron
Marine
Le Pen
Votes%Votes%
Ain166,63554.99%136,37045.01%
Aisne102,42840.09%153,06959.91%
Allier87,64552.35%79,76147.65%
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence41,65748.55%44,13951.45%
Hautes-Alpes42,20955.06%34,44644.94%
Alpes-Maritimes261,98750.13%260,62749.87%
Ardèche90,25452.40%82,00147.60%
Ardennes55,08543.34%72,02656.66%
Ariège39,29751.09%37,61648.91%
Aube68,83048.32%73,63051.68%
Aude85,46445.10%104,03854.90%
Aveyron89,95360.07%59,78939.93%
Bouches-du-Rhône481,12952.08%442,75947.92%
Calvados218,57160.29%143,95539.71%
Cantal45,05456.07%35,30143.93%
Charente95,65455.06%78,08544.94%
Charente-Maritime201,15956.32%156,02043.68%
Cher77,73952.56%70,16047.44%
Corrèze68,27255.78%54,13144.22%
Corse-du-Sud26,16041.69%36,59558.31%
Haute-Corse29,95142.13%41,13757.87%
Côte-d'Or144,54857.27%107,86642.73%
Côtes-d'Armor209,85662.90%123,79837.10%
Creuse30,55252.04%28,15247.96%
Dordogne111,48051.52%104,89448.48%
Doubs141,91657.16%106,34742.84%
Drôme143,69655.72%114,21644.28%
Eure146,75048.62%155,08551.38%
Eure-et-Loir109,74453.29%96,18546.71%
Finistère332,39667.50%160,07332.50%
Gard177,66247.85%193,65952.15%
Haute-Garonne409,93264.42%226,45035.58%
Gers57,11555.66%45,49044.34%
Gironde484,77161.37%305,11238.63%
Hérault297,21152.57%268,09847.43%
Ille-et-Vilaine390,33270.94%159,93029.06%
Indre57,57451.41%54,41048.59%
Indre-et-Loire189,23062.66%112,77037.34%
Isère359,68559.80%241,74940.20%
Jura68,84353.07%60,88246.93%
Landes128,77156.54%98,98243.46%
Loir-et-Cher91,35953.81%78,43346.19%
Loire194,87856.64%149,17443.36%
Haute-Loire62,37250.16%61,97949.84%
Loire-Atlantique492,42269.20%219,19830.80%
Loiret180,88257.57%133,33142.43%
Lot55,13059.18%38,03140.82%
Lot-et-Garonne81,34549.53%82,87450.47%
Lozère22,06454.20%18,64445.80%
Maine-et-Loire274,81066.53%138,25933.47%
Manche159,81459.61%108,29240.39%
Marne136,05452.10%125,07447.90%
Haute-Marne38,22643.04%50,58156.96%
Mayenne102,26364.21%57,00635.79%
Meurthe-et-Moselle179,24854.42%150,15645.58%
Meuse41,93344.39%52,52755.61%
Morbihan269,75562.81%159,71737.19%
Moselle249,58950.46%245,06049.54%
Nièvre50,69849.89%50,92350.11%
Nord634,03852.85%565,76247.15%
Oise182,79147.27%203,86552.73%
Orne79,26755.11%64,55944.89%
Pas-de-Calais324,14442.51%438,39057.49%
Puy-de-Dôme188,46860.16%124,82539.84%
Pyrénées-Atlantiques219,76663.05%128,77936.95%
Hautes-Pyrénées65,08555.50%52,18244.50%
Pyrénées-Orientales106,18843.68%136,92256.32%
Bas-Rhin320,19858.96%222,83841.04%
Haut-Rhin191,81452.90%170,77747.10%
Rhône551,54468.66%251,72031.34%
Haute-Saône53,56843.10%70,72056.90%
Saône-et-Loire144,98953.33%126,86046.67%
Sarthe154,90955.41%124,65844.59%
Savoie125,77057.62%92,48742.38%
Haute-Savoie237,50661.66%147,69438.34%
Paris808,99685.10%141,59114.90%
Seine-Maritime332,13955.28%268,68844.72%
Seine-et-Marne329,77156.98%249,01443.02%
Yvelines464,91071.05%189,47428.95%
Deux-Sèvres117,80562.13%71,79137.87%
Somme109,41545.37%131,77354.63%
Tarn106,76853.06%94,44146.94%
Tarn-et-Garonne62,50347.98%67,77052.02%
Var252,72344.90%310,12655.10%
Vaucluse134,47548.00%145,70552.00%
Vendée244,49461.86%150,77238.14%
Vienne125,17460.12%83,05039.88%
Haute-Vienne103,32959.18%71,26340.82%
Vosges91,55547.59%100,83952.41%
Yonne78,03848.41%83,16951.59%
Territoire de Belfort31,98751.44%30,20248.56%
Essonne338,56765.43%178,90634.57%
Hauts-de-Seine552,12480.39%134,68519.61%
Seine-Saint-Denis326,03873.72%116,22326.28%
Val-de-Marne376,20474.48%128,87325.52%
Val-d'Oise299,82966.15%153,44633.85%
Guadeloupe40,22930.40%92,10669.60%
Martinique46,91839.13%73,00060.87%
French Guiana14,07339.30%21,73460.70%
Réunion147,27040.43%217,02159.57%
Mayotte15,70740.90%22,69459.10%
New Caledonia43,79461.04%27,95838.96%
French Polynesia42,89051.80%39,91348.20%
Saint Pierre and Miquelon1,24349.31%1,27850.69%
Wallis and Futuna3,83067.44%1,84932.56%
Saint Martin/Saint Barthélemy3,85044.58%4,78755.42%
French residents overseas458,87486.14%73,83013.86%
Total18,768,63958.55%13,288,68641.45%
Source:Minister of the Interior
Results byregion
RegionEmmanuel
Macron
Marine
Le Pen
Votes%Votes%
Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes2,253,50759.76%1,517,27740.24%
Bourgogne-Franche-Comté714,58752.87%636,96947.13%
Brittany1,202,33966.58%603,51833.42%
Centre-Val de Loire706,52856.44%545,28943.56%
Corsica56,11141.92%77,73258.08%
Grand Est1,372,51952.07%1,263,52247.93%
Hauts-de-France1,384,26647.87%1,507,75552.13%
Île-de-France3,496,43973.02%1,292,21226.98%
Normandy936,54155.84%740,57944.16%
Nouvelle-Aquitaine1,768,07958.33%1,263,13441.67%
Occitanie1,574,37253.96%1,343,13046.04%
Pays de la Loire1,268,89864.78%689,89335.22%
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur1,214,18049.52%1,237,80250.48%
Guadeloupe40,22930.40%92,10669.60%
Martinique46,91839.13%73,00060.87%
French Guiana14,07339.30%21,73460.70%
Réunion147,27040.43%217,02159.57%
Mayotte15,70740.90%22,69459.10%
French residents overseas458,87486.14%73,83013.86%
Source:Minister of the Interior

Maps

[edit]

Aftermath

[edit]

The New York Times commented that the race was much closer than in 2017, when Macron won 66.1% of the vote to Le Pen's 33.9%, but that Macron's margin was wider than expected prior to the election.[87] Le Pen conceded defeat minutes after the estimated results were released,[85] but still called the outcome a victory for her political movement and for the upcoming parliamentary elections.[88][1] It was the best result for thefar right in France since the founding of theFifth French Republic in1958.[89]

Olivier Véran,Minister for Solidarity and Health, stated that the government has "heard the French people's message", referring to the increasing number of votes for the far-right, and that "there will be a change of method".[88] Macron reflected on the results of the elections self-critically, assuming that many voters voted for him to counter the far right rather than in support of his political positions.[90] Macron was congratulated by several world leaders on his re-election, with his first call coming from German chancellorOlaf Scholz.[91][92]

Notes

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^TheUnion of Democrats and Independents (UDI) announced it would support the candidate put forward byThe Republicans (LR),Valérie Pécresse.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abClinch, Silvia Amaro,Matt (24 April 2022)."Macron beats far-right rival Le Pen in French presidential election".CNBC. Retrieved24 April 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^Bernard, Mathias (24 April 2022)."French president Emmanuel Macron wins re-election: a victory with deep challenges".The Conversation. Retrieved25 April 2022.
  3. ^"French presidential election: How France's once-dominant political parties fell from grace".France 24. 10 April 2022.
  4. ^Samuel, Henry (11 April 2022)."Valérie Pécresse could lose €5m of her own election campaign money".The Daily Telegraph.Archived from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  5. ^"Macron wins French presidential election".Le Monde.fr. 24 April 2022. Retrieved25 April 2022.
  6. ^"The Constitution of the Fifth Republic".elysee.fr. 20 November 2012. Retrieved30 April 2022.
  7. ^"Constitution du 4 octobre 1958 – Article 7". Légifrance.Archived from the original on 8 December 2017. Retrieved8 December 2017.
  8. ^"Comment les dates de l'élection sont-elles choisies ?". Conseil constitutionnel présidentielle 2017.Archived from the original on 12 July 2019. Retrieved8 December 2017.
  9. ^"France to hold presidential election in April 2022 – spokesman". Reuters. 13 July 2021.Archived from the original on 15 July 2021. Retrieved15 July 2021.
  10. ^"Concernant les parrainages, qu'est-ce qui a changé depuis 2012 ?". Conseil constitutionnel présidentielle 2017.Archived from the original on 3 February 2017. Retrieved8 December 2017.
  11. ^Louis Hausalter (22 December 2017)."A droite, "Wauquiez voudra tuer la primaire"".Marianne.Archived from the original on 16 January 2018. Retrieved16 January 2018.
  12. ^Marie-Pierre Haddad (2 November 2017)."Et si le Parti socialiste n'était pas en mesure de présenter un candidat en 2022 ?". RTL.Archived from the original on 16 January 2018. Retrieved16 January 2018.
  13. ^Gehrke, Laurenz (16 January 2020)."Marine Le Pen announces bid for 2022 French presidential election".politico.eu.Archived from the original on 29 June 2020. Retrieved26 May 2020.
  14. ^"Jean Lassalle candidat à la présidentielle 2022".lepoint.fr (in French). 16 March 2021.Archived from the original on 16 March 2021. Retrieved16 March 2021.
  15. ^"Joachim Son-Forget : portrait d'un candidat à la présidentielle inattendu".RTL.fr (in French). 14 February 2020.Archived from the original on 30 July 2020. Retrieved26 May 2020.
  16. ^"Jean-Luc Mélenchon déclare sa candidature à la présidentielle 2022".Le Monde.fr (in French). 8 November 2020.Archived from the original on 8 November 2020. Retrieved8 November 2020.
  17. ^"Présidentielle : la majorité s'affiche unie en lançant " Ensemble Citoyens ! "".Les Echos (in French). 29 November 2021.Archived from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved1 December 2021.
  18. ^"Présidentielle : le député LR Guillaume Peltier annonce rejoindre Eric Zemmour".Europe 1 (in French). 9 January 2022.Archived from the original on 20 February 2022. Retrieved9 January 2022.
  19. ^"Two Le Pen allies defect to join Zemmour's presidential bid".Reuters.com. 20 January 2022.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  20. ^"Gilbert Collard quitte le RN et rejoint Éric Zemmour".Lefigaro.fr. 21 January 2022.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  21. ^"Twitter".Twitter.Archived from the original on 14 February 2022. Retrieved2 February 2022.
  22. ^"Stéphane Ravier, sénateur RN, annonce son ralliement à Eric Zemmour".Le Monde.fr (in French). 13 February 2022.Archived from the original on 15 February 2022. Retrieved13 February 2022.
  23. ^"Defections sap conservative contender Pécresse in French presidential race".France 24. France 24. France 24. 11 February 2022.Archived from the original on 11 February 2022. Retrieved11 February 2022.
  24. ^Le Baron, Simon (14 February 2022)."Le "grand remplacement" de Valérie Pécresse ne passe pas chez Les Républicains".www.franceinter.fr (in French). Retrieved24 April 2022.
  25. ^"French far right's new face: the meteoric rise of Éric Zemmour".The Guardian. 8 October 2021. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  26. ^""Grand remplacement» : Valérie Pécresse dénonce une "polémique montée" sur une «théorie de la haine"" ["Great replacement": Valérie Pécresse denounces a "staged controversy" over a "theory of hate"].Le Parisien (in French). AFP. 15 February 2022.Archived from the original on 16 February 2022. Retrieved17 February 2022.
  27. ^Caulcutt, Clea (14 February 2022)."France's Pécresse comes under fire for reference to far-right conspiracy theory".Politico.Archived from the original on 17 February 2022. Retrieved17 February 2022.
  28. ^"In France, a Racist Conspiracy Theory Edges Into the Mainstream".The New York Times. 15 February 2022.Archived from the original on 1 March 2022. Retrieved13 March 2022.
  29. ^Sebag, Gaspard; Nussbaum, Ania (13 February 2022)."France's Pecresse Raises 'Great Replacement' in Campaign Gambit". Bloomberg.Archived from the original on 1 March 2022. Retrieved13 March 2022.
  30. ^"French elections: Putin's war gives Macron boost in presidential race".BBC News. 19 March 2022.Archived from the original on 22 March 2022. Retrieved22 March 2022.
  31. ^"French far-right election candidate Zemmour wins backing of Marine Le Pen's niece".Reuters. 6 March 2022.Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved30 March 2022.
  32. ^Willsher, Kim (2 March 2022)."French far-right leader Marine Le Pen forced to defend Putin links".The Guardian.Archived from the original on 29 March 2022. Retrieved30 March 2022.
  33. ^Jack, Victor (26 February 2022)."Putin's European pals have to eat their words".Politico.Archived from the original on 30 March 2022. Retrieved30 March 2022.
  34. ^"Gérard Larcher: "Macron tente d'enjamber la présidentielle"".LEFIGARO (in French). 14 March 2022. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  35. ^"Présidentielle : Macron ne participera à aucun débat avant le premier tour".Le Point (in French). 7 March 2022. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  36. ^"Présidentielle : Marion Maréchal, nièce de Marine Le Pen, officialise son soutien à Eric Zemmour".francetvinfo.fr. 6 March 2022.Archived from the original on 24 March 2022. Retrieved23 March 2022.
  37. ^"Le Pen's niece joins forces with far-right rival Zemmour".France 24. 6 March 2022.Archived from the original on 9 April 2022. Retrieved10 April 2022.
  38. ^Williamson, Lucy (8 April 2022)."French election: Far-right Le Pen closes in on Macron ahead of vote".BBC News.Archived from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved8 April 2022.
  39. ^Hummel, Tassilo (8 April 2022)."France's Macron accuses far-right of 'playing with fear' as Le Pen reaches all-time high in poll".Reuters.Archived from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved8 April 2022.
  40. ^Crisafis, Angelique (8 April 2022)."France elections: Macron's lead over Le Pen narrowing as vote nears".The Guardian.Archived from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved8 April 2022.
  41. ^Méheut, Constant; Breeden, Aurelien (26 March 2022)."Late Surge Has Fiery French Leftist Eyeing Presidential Runoff".The New York Times.Archived from the original on 12 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  42. ^Paris, Gilles (8 March 2022)."Mélenchon surges in the polls despite fiery remarks on Ukraine in the past".Le Monde.Archived from the original on 12 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  43. ^"Far-left Melenchon emerges as third competitor in French election poll".Reuters. 9 March 2022.Archived from the original on 12 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  44. ^"Présidentielle: Christiane Taubira annonce qu'elle votera pour Jean-Luc Mélenchon".RMC. 8 April 2022.Archived from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved11 April 2022.
  45. ^"Election présidentielle de 2022 : EELV lance sa primaire sur fond de polémique avec Anne Hidalgo".Le Monde.fr (in French). 23 November 2020.Archived from the original on 9 April 2021. Retrieved29 March 2021.
  46. ^Tristan Quinault-Maupoil (27 May 2019)."Européennes 2019: Yannick Jadot, l'homme qui a porté EELV sur le podium".Le Figaro.Archived from the original on 27 May 2019. Retrieved27 May 2019.
  47. ^Daoulas, Jean-Baptiste (3 November 2020)."Sandrine Rousseau, la candidate écolo qui défie Yannick Jadot et Eric Piolle".LExpress.fr (in French).Archived from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved4 May 2021.
  48. ^"Jean-Marc Governatori annonce sa candidature à la primaire des écologistes pour la présidentielle".Le Monde.fr (in French). AFP. 3 July 2021.Archived from the original on 4 July 2021. Retrieved4 July 2021.
  49. ^abc"Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo is Socialists' candidate in 2022 French election".POLITICO. 15 October 2021.Archived from the original on 31 October 2021. Retrieved31 October 2021.
  50. ^abc"Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo wins French Socialists' presidential nomination".France 24. 14 October 2021.Archived from the original on 31 October 2021. Retrieved31 October 2021.
  51. ^Brunet, Romain (27 January 2022)."A French citizens' initiative – the 'People's Primary' – aims to fix democracy".France 24.Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  52. ^"Comment voter?".La Primaire Populaire (in French).Archived from the original on 27 January 2022. Retrieved27 January 2022.
  53. ^"Présidentielle 2022 : Valérie Pécresse remporte le Congrès LR et devient la candidate de la droite". 4 December 2021.Archived from the original on 4 December 2021. Retrieved4 December 2021.
  54. ^Pollet, Mathieu (28 September 2021)."French right-wing Les Republicains to choose Presidential candidate".www.euractiv.com.Archived from the original on 24 October 2021. Retrieved24 October 2021.
  55. ^"Élection présidentielle : Laurent Fabius rend publique la liste des candidats – Conseil constitutionnel présidentielle 2022".presidentielle2022.conseil-constitutionnel.fr.Archived from the original on 8 March 2022. Retrieved7 March 2022.
  56. ^"En résumé – Conseil constitutionnel présidentielle 2022".presidentielle2022.conseil-constitutionnel.fr (in French).Archived from the original on 2 February 2022. Retrieved4 February 2022.
  57. ^ab"Les parrainages validés par candidat" (in French). Conseil constitutionnel présidentielle 2022. 10 February 2022.Archived from the original on 10 February 2022. Retrieved10 February 2022.
  58. ^"Élection présidentielle: les règles pour les parrainages des candidats".Vie publique (in French).
  59. ^"Presidentielle 2022:Sociologie de l'électorat"(PDF). Ipsos France. Retrieved14 November 2023.
  60. ^abMarcellin, Joffrey (11 April 2022)."Présidentielle 2022 : 'Personnellement, je voterai blanc' au second tour, annonce Jean Lassalle".Midi Libre.Archived from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  61. ^ab"Déclaration de Philippe Poutou au soir du 1er tour de l'élection présidentielle".l'Anticapitaliste. 10 April 2022.Archived from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  62. ^abcdef"French Socialist, Green, conservative candidates back Macron in election run-off against Le Pen". France 24. 10 April 2022.Archived from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  63. ^ab"Présidentielle: Roussel appelle à faire barrage pour "battre l'extrême droite", sans nommer Macron".BFMTV. 10 April 2022.Archived from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  64. ^ab@Fabien_Roussel (10 April 2022)."J'appelle tous les Français à se servir du seul bulletin à notre disposition pour la battre au second tour" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  65. ^@yjadot (10 April 2022)."Ce soir, en responsabilité, j'appelle les électeurs et les électrices à faire battre l'extrême droite en votant pour Emmanuel Macron le 24 avril prochain" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  66. ^@vpecresse (10 April 2022)."Je voterai en conscience E.Macron pour empêcher l'arrivée au pouvoir de M.Le Pen et le chaos qui en résulterait" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  67. ^Goldhammer, Arthur (12 April 2022)."In French Election, It's Macron vs. Le Pen in a Showdown for Mélenchon's Voters".The New Republic.Archived from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  68. ^@n_arthaud (10 April 2022)."Nous avons le choix entre 2 ennemis. Le 24 avril, je voterai blanc" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  69. ^"Nous avons le choix entre 2 ennemis. Le 24 avril, je voterai blanc".Paris March. AFP. 11 April 2022.Archived from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.
  70. ^"Archived copy".Facebook.Archived from the original on 12 April 2022. Retrieved12 April 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  71. ^Samuel, Henry (14 April 2022)."Marine Le Pen: I would hold a referendum on reinstating the death penalty".The Telegraph.ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  72. ^Samuel, Henry (15 April 2022)."Le Pen is willing to hold death penalty referendum if she is elected".The Independent. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  73. ^Samuel, Henry (15 April 2022)."'I'll ban the Muslim headscarf in public' says Marine Le Pen as veil enters French presidential race".The Telegraph.ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  74. ^"Macron clashes with Le Pen over Islamic headscarf ban".France 24. 15 April 2022. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  75. ^"Macron comes out on top in French election TV debate with Le Pen".The Guardian. 21 April 2022. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  76. ^Rose, Michel (22 April 2022)."Analysis: Macron cements French presidential frontrunner status with combative debate performance".Reuters. Retrieved25 April 2022.
  77. ^Duriex, Sarah (11 December 2024)."From Struggle to Victory: The Role of Civil Society in the Last French Election".The Commons Social Change Library. Retrieved29 January 2025.
  78. ^"POLITICO Poll of Polls — French polls, trends and election news for France".POLITICO.Archived from the original on 1 February 2022. Retrieved1 February 2022.
  79. ^ab"Election présidentielle 2022".www.resultats-elections.interieur.gouv.fr. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  80. ^"Macron wins French presidential election".Le Monde. 24 April 2022. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  81. ^"Macron beats Le Pen in French election – projections".BBC News. 24 April 2022. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  82. ^Cohen, Roger (24 April 2022)."Emmanuel Macron is re-elected French president, defeating Marine Le Pen".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  83. ^"Macron projected to win reelection as French president, defeating Le Pen".www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  84. ^Noack, Rick; Birnbaum, Michael; Petit, Elie (24 April 2022)."France's Macron wins presidency, holding off Le Pen's far-right threat to upend Europe and relations with Russia".Washington Post.ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  85. ^ab"Macron wins French presidential election as Le Pen concedes".The Sydney Morning Herald. 24 April 2022. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  86. ^"Résultats de l'élection présidentielle 2022".Archived from the original on 7 May 2022.
  87. ^Cohen, Roger (24 April 2022)."Emmanuel Macron is re-elected French president, defeating Marine Le Pen".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  88. ^ab"Boris Johnson congratulates Macron".Sky News.
  89. ^Adghirni, Sami (20 June 2022)."How an Emboldened Far-Right Is Changing French Politics".The Washington Post. Retrieved20 June 2022.
  90. ^Wiegel, Michaela; Paris."Präsident wiedergewählt: Macron will Wut der Le-Pen-Wähler ansprechen".FAZ.NET (in German).ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved24 April 2022.
  91. ^"Macron's first phone call after re-election was Germany's Scholz".France24. 24 April 2022. Retrieved25 April 2022.
  92. ^"French election: World leaders congratulate Macron on victory". Al Jazeera. 25 April 2022. Retrieved25 April 2022.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toFrench presidential election (2022).
FranceElections andreferendums in France
Presidential
Parliamentary
Regional
Cantonal then
departemental
Arrondissement
Municipal
Consular
European
Referendums
Winner
Lost inrunoff
Other candidates
Presidency
Elections
Family
Related
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2022_French_presidential_election&oldid=1322872637"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp