Legislative elections 2024: the map of France for deputies elected in the first round

Legislative elections 2024: the map of France for deputies elected in the first round
Legislative elections 2024: the map of France for deputies elected in the first round

Several hundred thousand French people will not have to vote next Sunday in the second round of the legislative elections, called at the beginning of June by Emmanuel Macron after the dissolution of the National Assembly. And for good reason: their deputy was already elected this Sunday, winning the majority of votes. There are 76 according to the final figures from the Ministry of the Interior, published overnight from Sunday to Monday.

Find on our dedicated pages the candidates in your constituency and, on June 30 from 8 p.m., the results of the first round of the legislative elections in Paris, Lyon, Marseille and throughout France.

According to our count, it is the National Rally, allied with Eric Ciotti’s LR, which elected the most in the first round: 39. Mostly in the north of France. Among these “new” deputies, we include Marine Le Pen. The former presidential candidate, already leader of the RN deputies since 2022, thus collected more than 58% of the votes in this first round in the 11th constituency of Pas-de-Calais. Sébastien Chenu (19th constituency of the North, 58.3%), Philippe Ballard (2nd constituency of Oise, 53.2%), Bruno Bilde (12th constituency of Pas-de-Calais, 59.2%) were also elected in the first round this Sunday.

Alongside the RN, it is the New Popular Front (NFP) which manages to send the most deputies to the National Assembly in the first round. Particularly thanks to its very good results in cities. 32 candidates were elected this Sunday, most of them in Île-de-France. Half of the capital’s 18 constituencies have already elected their deputy, all labeled NFP. Among them: Danièle Obono (LFI) with more than 64% of the votes in the 17th constituency, the rebellious Sophia Chikirou (more than 58%) in the 6th, the ecologist Sandrine Rousseau (52.1%) in the 9th or again Emmanuel Grégoire, socialist deputy to Anne Hidalgo, facing former minister Clément Beaune (50.9%). Manuel Bompard (LFI, in Bouches-du-Rhône) and Olivier Faure (PS, in Seine-et-Marne) were also elected this Sunday.

The presidential majority, for its part, elected only two deputies in the first round: Pierre Cazeneuve in the 7th constituency of Hauts-de-Seine, and Mikaele Seo in the Wallis-et-Futuna constituency. LR Philippe Juvin also managed to get elected in the first round – the only one in his camp – in the 1st constituency of Hauts-de-Seine.

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