French municipal elections, 2001

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Municipal elections were held in France on 11 and 18 March 2001. These elections were marked by a setback for the left and a victory for the right one year before the 2002 presidential election. However, the capital, Paris and the second largest city, Lyon both switched to the left.

Lyon Prefecture and commune in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France

Lyon is the third-largest city and second-largest urban area of France. It is located in the country's east-central part at the confluence of the rivers Rhône and Saône, about 470 km (292 mi) south from Paris, 320 km (199 mi) north from Marseille and 56 km (35 mi) northeast from Saint-Étienne. Inhabitants of the city are called Lyonnais.

Contents

Following the second round, the right controlled 318 municipalities, the left 259.

The next elections were scheduled for 2007 but were re-scheduled to 2008 not to interfere with legislative and presidential elections in 2007.

Results in Major Cities

CityPopulation (1999)IncumbentElected
Paris2 125 246 Jean Tiberi Bertrand Delanoë
Marseille 798 430 Jean-Claude Gaudin
Lyon 445 452 Raymond Barre Gérard Collomb
Toulouse 390 350 Dominique Baudis Philippe Douste-Blazy
Nice 342 738 Jacques Peyrat
Nantes 270 251 Jean-Marc Ayrault
Strasbourg 264 115 Catherine Trautmann Fabienne Keller
Montpellier 225 392 Georges Frêche
Bordeaux 215 363 Alain Juppé
Lille 212 597 Pierre Mauroy Martine Aubry
Rennes 206 229 Edmond Hervé
Le Havre 190 905 Antoine Rufenacht
Reims 187 206 Jean-Louis Schneiter
Saint-Étienne 180 210 Michel Thiollière
Toulon 160 639 Jean-Marie Le Chevallier Hubert Falco
Grenoble 153 317 Michel Destot
Angers 151 279 Jean-Claude Antonini
Dijon 149 867 Robert Poujade François Rebsamen
Brest 149 634 Pierre Maille François Cuillandre
Le Mans 146 105 Robert Jarry Jean-Claude Boulard
Clermont-Ferrand 137 140 Serge Godard
Amiens 135 510 Gilles de Robien
Aix-en-Provence 134 222 Jean-François Picheral Maryse Joissains-Masini
Limoges 137 140 Alain Rodet
Nîmes 133 424 Alain Clary Jean-Paul Fournier
Limoges 132 820 Jean Germain

Municipal Councillors of cities with 35,000+ population

Party/AllianceSeats
  PS PCF MDC PRG 9775
  RPR UDF DL 9722
Miscellaneous Right 5873
Miscellaneous Left 2518
 Miscellaneous649
  MNR 157
  Les Verts 123
  FN 106
 Ecologists48
 Far-Left41
 Regionalists13

Results by Party

Left (PS, PCF, Greens)

Communists

After the loss of Le Havre after the preceding municipal elections, the Communist Party lost the cities it managed to reconquer in 1995 (Ciotat, Sète, Nîmes) like some of its former bastions (Drancy, Argenteuil, Dieppe, Montluçon).

Le Havre Subprefecture and commune in Normandy, France

Le Havre, is an urban French commune and city in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region of northwestern France. It is situated on the right bank of the estuary of the river Seine on the Channel southwest of the Pays de Caux.

French Communist Party left-wing political party in France which advocates the principles of communism

The French Communist Party is a communist party in France.

The gain of Sevran or Arles (from the Socialist Party) were not enough to reverse the progressive collapse of "municipal Communism", a tendency already started since the 1983 election (with the loss of Nîmes, Sète, Reims, Levallois-Perret, Antony, or Sèvres) and confirmed in 1989 with the loss of Amiens.

Sevran Commune in Île-de-France, France

Sevran is a commune in the northeastern suburbs of Paris, France. It is located 16.2 km (10.1 mi) from the center of Paris.

Arles Subprefecture and commune in Provence-Alpes-Côte dAzur, France

Arles is a city and commune in the south of France, in the Bouches-du-Rhône department, of which it is a subprefecture, in the former province of Provence.

Nîmes Prefecture and commune in Occitanie, France

Nîmes is a city in the Occitanie region of southern France. It is the capital of the Gard department. Nîmes is located between the Mediterranean Sea and the Cévennes mountains. The estimated population of Nîmes is 146,709 (2012).

Socialists

Catherine Trautmann, defeated in Strasbourg by the UDF Catherine Trautmann.jpg
Catherine Trautmann, defeated in Strasbourg by the UDF

As for the French Socialist Party lost in total 23 cities of more than thirty thousand inhabitants, whereas several party personalities undergo defeat in their respective towns. Catherine Trautmann, Minister of Culture, is not re-elected in Strasbourg, like Jack Lang in Blois. In Avignon, Élisabeth Guigou fails to unseat the RPR incumbent, Marie-Josée Roig. Martine Aubry becomes mayor of Lille only with 49.6% of the votes (and with a 53% abstention) in this city historically solid for the Socialists. Their victories in several cities such as Ajaccio, Auxerre (helped by the presence of two right-wing candidates in the second round), Dijon, or Salon-de-Provence, or in the major cities of Paris and Lyon, do not counterbalance the party's loses.

Catherine Trautmann French politician and MEP

Catherine Trautmann is a French politician for the French Socialist Party. She served as Minister of Culture of France in the Lionel Jospin cabinet 1997–2000 and was a Member of the European Parliament 1989–1997 and 2004–2014.

Strasbourg Prefecture and commune in Grand Est, France

Strasbourg is the capital and largest city of the Grand Est region of France and is the official seat of the European Parliament. Located at the border with Germany in the historic region of Alsace, it is the capital of the Bas-Rhin department. In 2016, the city proper had 279,284 inhabitants and both the Eurométropole de Strasbourg and the Arrondissement of Strasbourg had 491,409 inhabitants. Strasbourg's metropolitan area had a population of 785,839 in 2015, making it the ninth largest metro area in France and home to 13% of the Grand Est region's inhabitants. The transnational Eurodistrict Strasbourg-Ortenau had a population of 915,000 inhabitants in 2014.

Jack Lang (French politician) French politician

Jack Mathieu Émile Lang is a French politician. A member of the Socialist Party, he served as France's Minister of Culture from 1981 to 1986 and 1988 to 1992, and as Minister of Education from 1992 to 1993 and 2000 to 2002. He was also the Mayor of Blois from 1989 to 2000. He served until 2012 in the National Assembly from the sixth district of Pas-de-Calais.

The Greens

The Green, progress importantly by the first round- they carry Saumur with over 50% by the first round. The Greens start to emerge as the second most important party in the "plural left" after the Socialist Party, to the disadvantage of the Communists. In Besançon, they obtain more than 16% of the votes.

The Greens (France) political party in France

The Greens was a green-ecologist political party in France. The Greens had been in existence since 1984, but their spiritual roots could be traced as far back as René Dumont's candidacy for the presidency in 1974. On 13 November 2010, The Greens merged with Europe Ecology to become Europe Ecology – The Greens.

Saumur Subprefecture and commune in Pays de la Loire, France

Saumur is a commune in the Maine-et-Loire department in western France.

Besançon Prefecture and commune in Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France

Besançon is the capital of the department of Doubs in the region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté. The city is located in Eastern France, close to the Jura Mountains and the border with Switzerland.

In Paris and Lyon, their support of the PS in the second round contributes to the victory of the left there.

Far-Left (LO, LCR)

Workers' Struggle

Workers' Struggle ran 128 lists in 109 different cities, which won 4.37% of the votes, or 120,347 votes. LO obtained 33 councillors including 11 women, in 22 different cities, without amalgamating its lists with those of the plural left in the second round.

Revolutionary Communist League

Revolutionary Communist League ran or "supported" (according to their terms) 91 lists, common with various coalition partners. It obtained 4.52%, or 93,182 votes. By the first round, these lists obtained 26 elected officials. Several lists then amalgamated with lists of the plural left, including of the MDC.

Right (RPR, UDF, DL)

The parliamentary right compensated for the defeats it suffered in Lyon and Paris by important gains: it gained forty municipalities of more than 15,000 inhabitants in addition to those it already controlled, and gains from the left several towns of 30,000 inhabitants, including:

It holds the towns of Toulouse, Marseille and Nice with the victory of the lists led by Philippe Douste-Blazy in the first (55% of the votes), by Jean-Claude Gaudin in the second (48.5% of the votes) and by Jacques Peyrat in the last (44.48% of the votes).

Far-Right (FN, MNR)

In 1995, the candidates of the FN had carried the towns of Toulon, Marignane, Orange and later Vitrolles in 1997. In 2001, Jean-Marie Le Chevallier, mayor of Toulon (MNR, ex-FN) was beaten by the first round, obtaining only 7.78% of the votes. The mayor of Orange, Jacques Bompard (FN, now MPF) was re-elected by the first round and the mayor of Marignane, Daniel Simonpieri (MNR), by the second round with 62.52% of the votes, against 37.48% for Guy Martin (DL). In Vitrolles, Catherine Mégret (MNR) was initially re-elected with 45.32% of the voices against 44.07% for Domenica Tichadou (PS) but her election was invalidated afterwards. She was finally defeated by Guy Obino (PS) in 2002.

The strong presence of both MNR and FN lists in numerous cities caused the failure of many far-right candidates to reach the runoff, as many FN candidates had done in 1995.

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