National Assembly (France)

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National Assembly
Assemblée nationale
16th legislature of the Fifth French Republic
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
History
Founded 4 October 1958; 66 years ago (1958-10-04)
Preceded by National Assembly
(French Fourth Republic)
Leadership
Yaël Braun-PivetRE
Since 28 June 2022
Structure
Seats 577
250px
Political groups
Government (250)

Opposition (323)

Vacant (4)

  •      Vacant (4)
Elections
Two-round system
Last election
12 and 19 June 2022
Next election
2027
Meeting place
File:Examen du projet de loi sur l'enseignement supérieur et la recherche à l'Assemblée Nationale 2.jpg
Palais Bourbon, Paris
Website
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The National Assembly (French: Assemblée nationale; pronounced: [asɑ̃ble nɑsjɔnal]) is the lower house of the bicameral French Parliament under the Fifth Republic, the upper house being the Senate (Sénat). The National Assembly's legislators are known as députés (French pronunciation: ​[depyte]), meaning "delegate" or "envoy" in English; etymologically, it is a cognate of the English word deputy, which is the standard term for legislators in many parliamentary systems).

There are 577 députés, each elected by a single-member constituency (at least one per department) through a two-round system; thus, 289 seats are required for a majority. The president of the National Assembly, Yaël Braun-Pivet, presides over the body. The officeholder is usually a member of the largest party represented, assisted by vice presidents from across the represented political spectrum. The National Assembly's term is five years; however, the President of France may dissolve the Assembly, thereby calling for new elections, unless it has been dissolved in the preceding twelve months. This measure has become rarer since the 2000 French constitutional referendum reduced the presidential term from seven to five years; since the 2002 French legislative election and until the 2022 French legislative election, the President of the Republic has always had a coattail effect of majority in the Assembly two months after the presidential election, and it would accordingly be of little benefit to dissolve it. Due to the separation of powers, the President of the Republic may not take part in parliamentary debates. They can address the Congress of the French Parliament, which meets at the Palace of Versailles, or have the address read by the presidents of both chambers of Parliament, with no subsequent debate.

Following a tradition started by the first National Assembly during the French Revolution, the left-wing parties sit to the left as seen from the president's seat and the right-wing parties to the right; the seating arrangement thus directly indicates the left–right political spectrum as represented in the Assembly. The official seat of the National Assembly is the Palais Bourbon on the Rive Gauche of the Seine in the 7th arrondissement of Paris. The Assembly also uses other neighbouring buildings, including the Immeuble Chaban-Delmas on the Rue de l'Université, Paris. Like most institutions of importance in Paris, it is guarded by Republican Guards.

Relations with the executive

Jacques Chaban-Delmas served three times President of the Assembly between 1958 and 1988

The Constitution of France in the Fifth Republic greatly increased the power of the executive at the expense of Parliament, compared to previous constitutions (Third and Fourth Republics), following the May 1958 crisis.[1]

The President of the Republic can decide to dissolve the National Assembly and call for new legislative elections. This is meant as a way to resolve stalemates where the Assembly cannot decide on a clear political direction. This possibility is seldom exercised. The last dissolution was by President Jacques Chirac in 1997, following from the lack of popularity of Prime Minister Alain Juppé. However, the plan backfired, as the newly elected majority was opposed to Chirac.

The National Assembly can overthrow the executive government (that is, the Prime Minister and other ministers) by a motion of no confidence (motion de censure). For this reason, Prime Ministers and their government are necessarily from the dominant party or coalition in the assembly. In the case of a President of the Republic and National Assembly from opposing parties, this leads to the situation known as cohabitation; this situation, which has occurred three times (twice under François Mitterrand, once under Jacques Chirac), is likely to be rarer now that terms of the President and Assembly are the same length (5 years since the 2000 referendum) and are elected in the same year.

While motions de censure are periodically proposed by the opposition following government actions that it deems highly inappropriate, they are purely rhetorical; party discipline ensures that, throughout a parliamentary term, the Government is never overthrown by the Assembly.[2] Since the beginning of the Fifth Republic, there has only been one single successful motion de censure, in 1962 in hostility to the referendum on the method of election of the President of the Republic;[3] President Charles de Gaulle dissolved the Assembly within a few days.[4]

The Government (the Prime Minister and the Minister in charge of Relations with Parliament) used to set the priorities of the agenda for the Assembly's sessions, except for a single day each month. In practice, given the number of priority items, it meant that the schedule of the Assembly was almost entirely set by the executive; bills generally only have a chance to be examined if proposed or supported by the executive. This, however, was amended on 23 July 2008. Under the amended Constitution, the Government sets the priorities for two weeks in a month. Another week is designated for the Assembly's "control" prerogatives (consisting mainly of oral questions addressed to the Government). The fourth one is also set by the Assembly. Furthermore, one day per month is set by a "minority" (group supporting the Government but which is not the largest group) or "opposition" group (having officially declared it did not support the Government).

Legislators of the Assembly can ask written or oral questions to ministers. The Wednesday afternoon 3 p.m. session of "questions to the government" is broadcast live on television. Like Prime Minister's Questions in the United Kingdom, it is largely a show for the viewers, with members of the majority asking flattering questions, while the opposition tries to embarrass the government.[5]

Elections

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Since 1988, the 577 deputies are elected by direct universal suffrage with a two-round system by constituency, for a five-year mandate, subject to dissolution. The constituencies each have about 100,000 inhabitants. The electoral law of 1986 specifies their variance of population within a department should not exceed 20%, when conducting any redistribution.[6] However, none were redrawn between 1982 and 2009. As a result of population movements, births and deaths inequalities between the less populous rural districts and the urban districts arose. The deputy for the most populous (within Val-d'Oise), represented 188,000 voters, while that for the other extreme (for Lozère at-large), represented 34,000. That for Saint Pierre and Miquelon serves fewer than 6,000. Most were redrawn in 2009 (boundaries officially adopted in 2010, effective in 2012),[7] but this redistribution was controversial,[8] such as the creation of eleven constituencies for French residents overseas without increasing the number of seats.[9][10] The electoral map is drawn by an independent commission.

To be elected in the first round of voting, a candidate must obtain at least 50% of the votes cast, with a turnout of at least 25% of the registered voters on the electoral rolls. If no candidate is elected in the first round, those who account for in excess of 12.5% (​18) of the registered voters are entered in the second round of voting. If no three or more meet such conditions, the two highest-placing candidates automatically advance to the second round of voting – at which, the candidate who receives the most votes is elected. Each candidate is enrolled along with a substitute, who takes the candidate's place if during tenure incapacitated or barred – if the deputy becomes a government member, most notably.

The organic law of 10 July 1985 established a system of party-list proportional representation within the framework of the département. It was necessary within this framework to obtain at least 5% of the vote to elect an official. However, the legislative election of 1986, carried out under this system, gave France a new majority which returned the National Assembly to the aforementioned two-round system.

Of the 577 elected deputies, 539 represent metropolitan France, 27 represent the overseas departments and overseas collectivities; 11 represent French residents overseas.[11]

Procedure

The agenda of the National Assembly is mostly decided by the Government, although the Assembly can also enforce its own agenda. Indeed, article 48 of the Constitution guarantees at least a monthly session decided by the Assembly.[12]

Law proposal

A law proposal is a document divided into three distinct parts: a title, an exposé des motifs and a dispositif. The exposé des motifs describes the arguments in favour of a modification of a given law or new measurements that are proposed. The dispositif is the normative part, which is developed within articles.[12]

A proposal for a law can originate from the Government (projet de loi) or a Member of Parliament (proposition de loi). Certain laws must come from the Government, including financial regulations.[13] The law proposals may pass through the National Assembly and Senate in an indifferent order, except for financial laws which must go through the Assembly first, or territorial organisational laws or laws for French citizens living in foreign countries, which must first pass through the Senate.[14]

Deposit of a law

For an ordinary proposition of law, texts must be first reviewed by a permanent parliamentary commission, or a special commission designated for this purpose. During the discussion in the commission, or in plenary sessions in the Assembly, the Government and Parliament can add, modify or delete articles of the proposal. The text is thus amended. Amendments proposed by a parliamentarian cannot mobilise further public funding. The Government has to right to ask the Assembly to pronounce itself in one vote only with the amendments proposed or accepted by the Government itself.[12]

Projects of propositions of laws will be examined succinctly by the two chambers of Parliament (National Assembly and Senate) until the text is identical. After two lectures by the two chambers (or just one if the Government chooses to engage an acceleration of the text adoption, which can happen only in certain conditions) and without any accord, the Prime Minister or the two presidents of the chambers, conjointly with first, can convoke a special commission composed by an equal number of members of Assembly and Senators to reach a compromise and propose a new text. The new proposition has to be approved by the Government before being re-proposed to the two chambers. No new amendments can be added except on the Government's approval. If the new proposal of law fails to be approved by the two chambers, the Government can, after a new lecture by the National Assembly and the Senate, ask the National Assembly to rule a final judgement. In that case, the National Assembly can either take back the text elaborated by the special commission or the last one that they voted for – possibly modified by several amendments by the Senate.[12]

The President of the Republic, on the Government or the two chambers' proposal, can submit every law proposal as a referendum if it concerns the organisation of public powers, reforms on the economy, social and environmental measures, or every proposition that would have an impact on the functioning of the institutions. A referendum on the previous conditions can also be initiated by a fifth of the membership of Parliament, supported by a tenth of the voters inscribed on the electoral lists.[15] Finally, the laws are promulgated by the President of the Republic's signature. The officeholder may call for a new legislative deliberation of the law or one of its articles in front of the National Assembly, which cannot be denied.[12]

Conditions and benefits of deputies

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Remuneration

File:Accoyer.jpg
Deputies wear tricolor sashes on official occasions outside the Assembly or on public marches, like other elected officials in France; former President of the National Assembly Bernard Accoyer is pictured here.
File:Pont de la Concorde et Chambre des Députés.JPG
The Palais Bourbon in Paris, where the National Assembly meets
File:La bibliothèque de Assemblée nationale 014.jpg
Ceiling paintings in the Library of the Assemblée nationale in the Palais Bourbon, on a series of cupolas and pendentives, are by Eugène Delacroix.

Assembly legislators receive a salary of €7,043.69 per month. There is also the "compensation representing official expenses" (indemnité représentative de frais de mandat, IRFM) of €5,867.39 per month to pay costs related to the office, as well as a total of €8,949 per month to pay up to five employees. They also have an office in the Assembly, various perquisites in terms of transport and communications, social security, a pension fund and unemployment insurance. Under article 26 of the Constitution, deputies, like Senators, are protected by parliamentary immunity. In the case of an accumulation of mandates, a deputy cannot receive a wage of more than €9,779.11. Deputies' expenses can be scrutinised by a commission; sanctions can be pronounced if expenses were undue.

Accumulation of mandates and minimum age

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The position of deputy of the National Assembly is incompatible with that of any other elected legislative position (Senator or since 2000, Member of European Parliament) or with some administrative functions (members of the Constitutional Council and senior officials such as prefects, magistrates, or officers who are ineligible for department where they are stationed).

Deputies may not have more than one local mandate (in a municipal, intercommunal, general, or regional council) in addition to their incumbent mandate. Since the 2017 legislative election, deputies cannot hold an executive position in any local government (municipality, department, region). However, they can hold a part-time councillor mandate. In July 2017, 58% of deputies held such a seat. Since 1958, the mandate is also incompatible with a ministerial function. Upon appointment to the Government, the elected deputy has one month to choose between the mandate and the office. If they choose the second option, then they are replaced by their substitute. Since a change validated by the National Assembly in 2008, deputies can return to their seat in the Assembly one month after the end of their cabinet position. Previously, a special election had to be held.

To be eligible to be elected to the National Assembly, one must be at least 18 years old,[16] of French citizenship, as well as not subject to a sentence of deprivation of civil rights or to personal bankruptcy.

Eligibility conditions

1. Eligibility due to personal requirements

The essential conditions to run for elections are the following. First, a candidate must have French citizenship. Secondly, the minimum age required to run for a seat at the National Assembly is set at 18 years old.[17] The candidate must also have fulfilled his National Civic Day, a special day created to replace the military service.[18] Finally, a candidate under guardianship and curatorship cannot be elected to the Assembly.[19]

Furthermore, a person cannot be elected if they were declared ineligible following fraudulent funding of a previous electoral campaign. Indeed, the voter could be considered as highly influenced and their decision making could be impacted. The sincerity of the results could thus not be regarded as viable and legitimate.[20]

2. Eligibility due to positions that a person may occupy

The deputy mandate cannot be cumulated with a mandate of Senator, MEP, member of the Government or of the Constitutional Council.[17]

The deputy mandate is also incompatible with being a member of the military corps on duty, as well as with the exercise of one of the following mandates: regional council executive, Corsican Assembly executive, departmental council executive or municipal council executive in a municipality of a least or more than 3,500 inhabitants.[21] Prefects are also unable to be elected in France in every district they are exercising power or exercised power for less than three years before the date of the election.[22]

Since the 31 March 2017, being elected deputy is incompatible with most executive local mandates such as mayors, president of a regional council or member of the departmental council.[23]

Historical composition

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Election Metropolitan
France
Overseas France Total seats Changes
Overseas
departments

(DOM)
Overseas
territories

(TOM)
Territorial
collectivities
1958 465 10[lower-alpha 14] + 71[lower-alpha 15] 33[lower-alpha 16] 579
1962 465 10 7 482
  • French Algeria became independent.
  • A new constituency was created for Wallis and Futuna (TOM) in 1961.
1967 470 10 7 487
  • 5 new constituencies were created in 1966.
1968 470 10 7 487
1973 473 10 7 490
  • 3 new constituencies were created in 1972.
1978 474 11 5 1 491
  • An additional constituency was created in Corsica in 1975.
  • In 1976, Comoros gained their independence except Mayotte, which became a Territorial collectivity (one constituency), and Saint Pierre and Miquelon (formerly TOM) became a DOM.
  • In 1977, French Territory of the Afars and the Issas (formerly known as French Somali Coast) became independent; moreover, a new constituency was created in Polynesia (TOM) and another in New Caledonia (TOM).
1981 474 11 5 1 491
1986 555
(95 departments)
15
(5 DOM)
5
(3 TOM)
2
(2 Territorial collectivities)
577
  • In 1985, Saint Pierre and Miquelon (formerly DOM) became a Territorial collectivity.
  • In 1986, party-list proportional representation system was introduced and the majoritarian two-ballot system remained only in 3 single-member constituencies: Wallis et Futuna (TOM), Mayotte and Saint Pierre and Miquelon (Territorial collectivities).
1988 555 15 5 2 577
  • In 1988, the majoritarian two-ballot system was re-established. In comparison to 1981 elections, 96 new constituencies were created (91 in the Metropolitan France, 5 in the Overseas departments), while 10 parisian constituencies (n. 22 to n. 31) were suppressed.

French Revolution (1789–1799)

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1791
136 345 264
1792
200 389 160
1795
63 54 33
1797
28 44 105
1798
106 44
1799
30 240 150 80

Kingdom of France (1815–1848)

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May 1815
40 510 80
August 1815
50 350
1816
20 10 136 92
1820
80 194 160
1824
17 413
1827
170 260
1830
274 282
1831
73 282 104
1834
75 50 320 15
1837
19 142 56 64 168 15
1839
240 199 20
1842
193 266
1846
168 290

French Second Republic (1848–1852)

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1848
80 600 200
1849
180 75 450

Second French Empire (1852–1870)

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1852
3 253 7
1857
7 276
1863
17 251 15
1869
30 212 41

French Third Republic (1870–1940)

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  PUP
  PCF
  SFIO
  Far-Left / Radicals and Socialists / Radical Socialists
  SI / PRS
  Miscellaneous
  SE
  PDP
  FR
1871
38 112 72 20 214 182
1876
27 98 193 48 15 22 76 40 15 24
1877
27 73 147 66 3 111 38 56
1881
48 1 47 170 157 44 8 44 38
1885
60 40 200 83 65 63 73
1889
57 13 69 214 14 3 169 37
1893
67 41 99 242 30 27 61 14
1898
97 55 86 232 5 53 39 14
1902
43 104 129 62 127 89 35
1906
54 20 132 115 90 66 78 30
1910
75 24 261 1 66 30 131 7
1914
5 102 22 192 66 77 50 88
1919
68 26 86 107 21 29 183
1924
26 104 44 139 123 29 116
1928
11 102 60 125 180 24 100
1932
9 10 132 43 160 121 49 83
1936
6 72 149 44 115 82 42 100

French Fourth Republic (1946–1958)

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  PCF
  SFIO
  Miscellaneous
  RGR
  MRP
  CNIP
  PRL
  RPF / CNRS / UNR
  UFF (fr)
1945
159 146 60 6 151 64
June 1946
151 127 31 9 166 61
November 1946
182 102 69 29 173 72
1951
103 107 90 95 96 121 13
1956
150 95 77 14 7 83 95 22 52

French Fifth Republic (since 1958)

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  PCF
  LFI
  PSU
  FGDS
  SFIO
  PS
  PRG
  TDP
  Miscellaneous
  Vacant
  REN
  CD
  UDF / MoDem
  LC
  UDI
  UDR
  RPR
  RI
  UMP / LR
  RN
1958
10 40 37 1 57 132 189
1962
41 2 65 44 6 36 233 28 27
1967
73 4 117 9 41 243
1968
34 57 9 33 354
1973
73 1 102 12 30 272
1978
86 104 10 17 121 150
1981
44 283 17 62 85
1986
35 206 2 23 127 149 35
1988
27 260 9 23 2 129 126 1
1993
24 53 50 207 242 1
1997
35 7 255 12 16 112 139 1
2002
21 3 140 7 20 29 357
2007
15 4 186 7 27 3 22 313
2012
7 17 280 12 6 45 2 12 194 2
2017
10 17 1 30 3 28 308 42 18 112 8
2022
12 72 21 26 1 3 64 150 48 27 3 61 89

16th legislature

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Parliamentary groups

Composition of the National Assembly as of 28 June 2022[24]
Parliamentary group Members Related Total President
RE Renaissance 168 4 172 Aurore Bergé
RN National Rally 88 1 89 Marine Le Pen
LFI-NUPES La France Insoumise 75 0 75 Mathilde Panot
LR The Republicans 59 3 62 Olivier Marleix
DEM Democratic group, MoDem and Independents 48 0 48 Jean-Paul Mattei
SOC-NUPES Socialists and associated 27 4 31 Boris Vallaud
HOR Horizons 28 2 30 Laurent Marcangeli
ECO-NUPES Ecologist Group 23 0 23 Cyrielle Chatelain
GDR-NUPES Democratic and Republican Left 22 0 22 André Chassaigne
LIOT Group Liberties, İndependents, Overseas and Territories 16 0 16 Bertrand Pancher
NI Non-Attached Members 9

Bureau of the National Assembly

Composition of the Bureau as of 12 June 2023[25]
Post (in charge of) Name Constituency Group
Quaestor Marie Guévenoux Essonne's 9th RE
Éric Ciotti Alpes-Maritimes's 1st LR
Éric Woerth Oise's 4th RE
1st Vice President (international relations) Valérie Rabault Tarn-et-Garonne's 1st SOC-NUPES
2nd Vice President (transparency and representatives of interest groups) Élodie Jacquier-Laforge Isère's 9th MODEM
3rd Vice President (communication and the press) Naïma Moutchou Val-d'Oise's 4th HOR
4th Vice President (application of the deputy's statute) Caroline Fiat Meurthe-et-Moselle's 6th LFI-NUPES
5th Vice President (study groups) Sébastien Chenu Nord's 19th RN
6th Vice President (artistic and cultural heritage of the National Assembly) Hélène Laporte Lot-et-Garonne's 2nd RN
Secretary Christophe Blanchet Calvados's 4th MODEM
Soumya Bourouaha Seine-Saint-Denis's 4th GDR-NUPES
Yannick Favennec Mayenne's 3rd HOR
Philippe Gosselin Manche's 1st LR
Caroline Janvier Loiret's 2nd RE
Hubert Julien-Laferrière Rhône's 2nd ECO-NUPES
Pierre Morel-A-L'Huissier Lozère's 1st LIOT
Danièle Obono Paris's 17th LFI-NUPES
Claire Pitollat Bouches-du-Rhône's 2nd RE
Rémy Rebeyrotte Saône-et-Loire's 3rd RE
Jean Terlier Tarn's 3rd RE
Laurence Vichnievsky Puy-de-Dôme's 3rd MODEM

Presidencies of committees

Presidencies of committees as of 12 June 2023[26]
Standing committees President Group
Cultural and Education Affairs Committee Isabelle Rauch HOR
Economic Affairs Committee Guillaume Kasbarian RE
Foreign Affairs Committee Jean-Louis Bourlanges MoDem
Social Affairs Committee Fadila Khattabi RE
National Defence and Armed Forces Committee Thomas Gassilloud RE
Sustainable Development, Spatial and Regional Planning Committee Jean-Marc Zulesi RE
Finance, General Economy and Budgetary Monitoring Committee Éric Coquerel LFI-NUPES
Constitutional Acts, Legislation and General Administration Committee Sacha Houlié RE
Other committee President Group
European Affairs Committee Pieyre-Alexandre Anglade RE

Deputies

See also

Notes

    •      RN (87)
    •      LS (1)
    •      LR (58)
    •      LR-SL (2)
    •      UDI (1)
    •      DVD (1)
  1. There is no active agreement between LR and the government. However, in the October 2022 votes of no confidence and March 2023 votes of no confidence, the LR leadership declared their voting intentions were to abstain, with 42 deputies following the party line which granted continued support to the government, and as such can be classified as granting unofficial confidence and supply, although they haven't ruled out voting for a motion of no confidence or even tabling one in the future. Additionally, at the beginning of the 16th National Assembly, the Republicans' group submitted a declaration of opposition affiliation to the Chamber's Presidency, granting them the opposition group official statute.
    •      PS (27)
    •      FGPS (1)
    •      PPDG (1)
    •      PPM (1)
    •      DVG (1)
    •      EELV (15)
    •      G·s (4)
    •      GE (2)
    •      ND (1)
  2. 3 seats for Martinique, 3 for Guadeloupe, 3 for Réunion and 1 for French Guiana
  3. 67 seats for French Algeria and 4 seats for French departments of Sahara.
  4. They weren't elected in 1958 and remained provisionally in office to represent the territories of French Community: Mauritania (1), Senegal (2), Sudan (4), Ivory Coast (1), Upper Volta (4), Dahomey (2) and Niger (2), previously included in French West Africa; Chad (2), Ubangi-Shari (1), Ubangi-Shari-Chad (1), Gabon (1), French Congo (1), Gabon-French Congo (1), previously included in French Equatorial Africa; Madagascar (5); Comoros, French Somali Coast, French Polynesia, Saint Pierre and Miquelon and New Caledonia (with one seat each). In 1959, these last five entities decided to assume the status of Overseas territory (TOM) and new elections were held (in particular, 1959 Comoros by-election and 1959 French Somaliland by-election), while the other territories became independent and lost their representation. An additional seat was attributed to Comoros (multi-member costituency).

References

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External links

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