1877 French legislative election

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1877 French legislative election
Flag of France (1794-1958).svg
  1876 14–28 October 1877 1881  

All 521 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
261 seats needed for a majority
 First partySecond partyThird party
  Jules Armand Dufaure.jpg Georges-Eugene Haussmann - BNF Gallica.jpg Broglie Albert.JPG
Leader Jules Dufaure Georges-Eugène Haussmann Albert de Broglie
Party Republican Union Bonapartists Legitimists
Seats won31310444

France electorale - deputes elus de 1877.jpg
Results by district (republicans in red, monarchists in blue)

Prime Minister before election

Gaëtan de Rochebouët
Independent

Elected Prime Minister

Jules Dufaure
Republican Left

Legislative elections were held in France on 14 and 28 October 1877 to elect members of the Chamber of Deputies. They were held during the Seize Mai crisis.

Contents

President Patrice de MacMahon dissolved the Chamber of Deputies elected in 1876, in the hope of a conservative and royalist victory. Although royalists lost seats, Bonapartists increased their seat total over 1876; the Republicans lost 80 seats, but retained a majority.

The elections proved a serious setback for those hoping for a restoration of the monarchy, such as MacMahon. In the Senate elections of January 1879, the monarchists also lost control of the Senate. MacMahon resigned, and the Republican Jules Grévy was elected president by the National Assembly. [1]

Along with the 1997 election, it is a rare case of an election in which the sitting President's party lost a general election which he had called.

Results

PartyVotes%Seats
Republican Union 313
Bonapartists 104
Legitimists 44
Orléanist 11
Others49
Total521
Total votes8,087,323
Registered voters/turnout9,948,44981.29
Source: Rois et Presidents

See also

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References

  1. R. Gildea (2008). Children of the Revolution. pp. 253–254.