*** Welcome to piglix ***

French legislative election, 1973

French legislative election, 1973
France
← 1968 4 March and 11 March 1973 1978 →

All 491 seats to the French National Assembly
246 seats were needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
  Pierre Messmer01.JPG Reagan Mitterrand 1984 (cropped).jpg
Leader Pierre Messmer François Mitterrand
Party UDR PS
Leader's seat Moselle-8th Nièvre-3rd
Last election 354 seats 57 seats
Seats won 272* 102
Seat change Decrease 82 Increase 45
Popular vote 8,242,661 (1st round)
10,701,135 (2nd round)
4,559,241 (1st round)
5,564,610 (2nd round)
Percentage 34.68% (1st round)
45.62% (2nd round)
19.18% (1st round)
23.72% (2nd round)

  Third party Fourth party
  Georges Marchais.JPG Jean Lecanuet.jpg
Leader Georges Marchais Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber (Radical),
Jean Lecanuet (CD, above)
Party PCF Reforming Movement
Leader's seat none Nancy (Servan-Schreiber),
Seine-Maritime (Lecanuet)
Last election 34 seats 33 (Progress and Modern Democracy)
Seats won 73 30
Seat change Increase 39 Decrease 3
Popular vote 5,085,108 (1st round)
4,893,876 (2nd round)
2,979,781 (1st round)
1,631,978 (2nd round)
Percentage 21.39% (1st round)
20.86% (2nd round)
12.54% (1st round)
6.96% (2nd round)

2010UKElectionMap.svg

PM before election

Pierre Messmer
UDR

Elected PM

Pierre Messmer
UDR


Pierre Messmer
UDR

Pierre Messmer
UDR

French legislative elections took place on 4 and 11 March 1973 to elect the fifth National Assembly of the Fifth Republic.

In order to end the May 1968 crisis, President Charles de Gaulle dissolved the National Assembly and his party, the Gaullist Party Union of Democrats for the Republic (UDR), obtained the absolute majority of the seats. Nevertheless, the failure of his 1969 referendum caused his resignation. His former Prime minister Georges Pompidou was elected President of France.

In order to respond to the discontent expressed during May 1968, Jacques Chaban-Delmas, the left-wing Gaullist who led the cabinet, promoted a programme of reforms for the advent of a "New Society", which advocated social dialogue and political liberalisation. This worried the conservative part of the Presidential Majority and Pompidou himself. Furthermore, Chaban-Delmas was accused, by the presidential circle, to want strengthen his powers to the detriment of Pompidou. In 1972, Chaban-Delmas is replaced by Pierre Messmer, a classical and conservative Gaullist.

After Gaston Defferre's catastrophic result in the 1969 presidential election, the SFIO was replaced by the Socialist Party (PS), formed by the SFIO's merger with an array of political clubs on the democratic left. Two years later, François Mitterrand's Convention of Republican Institutions joined the PS. He took the party's lead during the Epinay Congress, and proposed to form an alliance with the French Communist Party (PCF). In order to prepare the legislative elections, Communists and Socialists signed the Common Programme.


...
Wikipedia

...