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Assemblee Nationale

National Assembly
Assemblée nationale
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
History
Founded 4 October 1958
Leadership
Claude Bartolone, Socialist
Since 26 June 2012
Majority Leader
Olivier Faure, Socialist
Since 6 December 2016
Minority Leader
Christian Jacob, Republican
Since 23 November 2010
Structure
Seats 577 seats
National Assembly of France 2012.svg
Political groups
     SER (284)
     LR (199)
     UDI (27)
     RRDP (18)
     GDR (15)
     Non-inscrits (26)
     Vacant (8)
Elections
Two-round system
Last election
10 & 17 June 2012
Next election
11 & 18 June 2017
Meeting place
Panorama de l'hémicyle de l'assemblée nationale.jpg
Palais Bourbon, Paris
Website
http://www.assemblee-nationale.fr/

The National Assembly (French: Assemblée nationale; pronounced: [a.sɑ̃.ble.na.sjɔˈnal]) is the lower house of the bicameral Parliament of France under the Fifth Republic. The upper house is the Senate (Sénat). The National Assembly's members are known as députés (French pronunciation: ​[depyˈte]; "delegate" or "envoy" in English; the word is an etymological cognate of the English word "deputy", usually "adjoint" in French).

There are 577 députés, each elected by a single-member constituency through a two-round voting system. Thus, 289 seats are required for a majority. The assembly is presided over by a president (currently Claude Bartolone), normally from the largest party represented, assisted by vice-presidents from across the represented political spectrum. The term of the National Assembly is five years; however, the President of the Republic may dissolve the Assembly (thereby calling for new elections) unless it has been dissolved in the preceding twelve months. This measure is becoming rarer since the 2000 referendum reduced the presidential term from seven to five years: a President usually has a majority elected in the Assembly two months after the presidential election, and it would be useless for him/her to dissolve it for those reasons.

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 sit to the right, and the seating arrangement thus directly indicates the political spectrum as represented in the Assembly. The official seat of the National Assembly is the Palais Bourbon on the banks of the river Seine (48°51′43″N 2°19′07″E / 48.861899°N 2.318605°E / 48.861899; 2.318605); the Assembly also uses other neighbouring buildings, including the Immeuble Chaban-Delmas on the rue de l'Université (48°51′39″N 2°18′57″E / 48.860799°N 2.315902°E / 48.860799; 2.315902). It is guarded by Republican Guards.


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