2011 French Senate Election (user search)
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
June 02, 2024, 02:12:05 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  Other Elections - Analysis and Discussion
  International Elections (Moderators: afleitch, Hash)
  2011 French Senate Election (search mode)
Pages: [1]
Author Topic: 2011 French Senate Election  (Read 27402 times)
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« on: September 08, 2011, 11:34:53 AM »

Also, those departments with over 4 seats are elected by some form of PR, others by absolute majority.

Isère, Maine-et-Loire, Oise, Réunion and New Caledonia all gained one seat.

Incumbents:
Indre-et-Loire: 1 PS, 1 PCF; 1 UMP
Isere: 1 PS, 1 PCF; 2 UMP
Jura: 1 UMP, 1 RDSE-UMP
Landes: 2 PS
Loir-et-Cher: 1 vacant (formerly UC-NC), 1 UC-MoDem
Loire: 2 UMP; 1 PCF, 1 PS
Haute-Loire: 1 UC-NC, 1 UMP
Loire-Atlantique: 3 UMP; 1 PS, 1 PG
Loiret: 2 UMP; 1 PS
Lot: 1 RDSE-PRG, 1 PS
Lot-et-Garonne: 1 UMP, 1 UC-AC
Lozere: 1 UMP
Maine-et-Loire: 2 UMP; 1 PS
Manche: 2 UMP; 1 PS
Marne: 2 UC-AC, 1 UMP
Haute-Marne: 2 UMP
Mayenne: 2 UC-AC
Meurthe-et-Moselle: 2 UMP; 1 PS, 1 PCF
Meuse: 1 UC-NC, 1 PS
Morbihan: 1 UMP, 1 UC-AC; 1 PS
Moselle: 3 PS; 1 UMP; 1 RASNAG-DVD (hates bloggers)
Nièvre: 2 PS
Nord: 3 PS, 1 Green, 2 PCF; 1 UC-NC, 1 UMP; 2 RASNAG-DVD
Oise: 2 UMP, 1 PS
Orne: 1 UMP 1 vacant (formerly UMP)
Pas-de-Calais: 3 PS, 1 PCF; 2 UMP; 1 UC-MoDem
Puy-de-Dôme: 2 PS, 1 UMP
Pyrénées-Atlantiques: 1 UMP, 1 UC-MoDem; 1 PS
Hautes-Pyrénées: 1 PS, 1 RDSE-PRG
Pyrénées-Orientales: 2 UMP
Paris: 4 PS, 2 Greens, 1 PCF; 4 UMP, 1 UC-NC
Seine-et-Marne: 3 UMP; 2 PS, 1 PCF
Yvelines: 4 UMP, 1 UC-MoDem; 1 PS
Essonne: 1 PCF, 1 PG, 1 PS; 2 UMP
Hauts-de-Seine:  4 UMP, 1 UC-MoDem; 1 PS, 1 PCF
Seine-Saint-Denis: 2 PCF, 1 PS, 1 Green; 2 UMP
Val-de-Marne: 2 PCF, 1 PS; 2 UMP, 1 UC-MoDem
Val-d'Oise: 2 PS, 1 MUP; 2 UMP
Guadeloupe: 1 PS-GUSR; 1 RDSE-GUSR/GM, 1 UMP
Martinique: 2 app PS
Reunion: 1 UC, 1 UMP; 1 PCR
Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon: 1 UMP
Mayotte: 1 UC-MDM, 1 UMP
New Caledonia: 1 UMP-LMD
French abroad: 5 UMP, 1 PS
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #1 on: September 20, 2011, 01:13:46 PM »

Even though the Senate has always been held by the right (or the center) since its creation in 1876, the left has made considerable gains with the 2004 and 2008 elections, mostly thanks to their excellent results in the various local elections held since this date.

What?! The left has never held a majority in the French Senate? Why? How?

The Senate is elected by an electoral college made up in huge majority by small-town councillors, thus over-representing the weight of small-c conservative rural France and small towns. Then, the Senate has traditionally been the upper house for notables and party barons.

As thus, the parties which have been strong in the Senate have been disproportionately the moderate parties, which are by far and large parties with strong small-town networks and networks of notables. Historically, the more left and right-wing factions (Socialists, PCF, Gaullists) have been weak while the dominant forces have been the centrists, liberals and Radicals. During the Third Republic, the Senate was traditionally Radical, the Radicals being by then a moderate party of notables and local barons with strong local government bases and networks. Of course, if you consider the Radicals as left-wing... then the Senate has been 'left-wing' in the past but the Socialists have never held it.

Mainstream PS and RPR/UMP strength/dominance in small-town local government is rather new, and even then most villages are governed by non-partisan mayors.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #2 on: September 24, 2011, 08:26:48 AM »

Anybody interested in a brief, uneducated department-by-department overview?
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #3 on: September 24, 2011, 12:23:25 PM »

Indre-et-Loire (2-1)Sad Nothing much to be expected in terms of major changes. PCF Senator Marie-France Beaufils could be defeated by a Socialist. Mayor of Tours Jean Germain (PS) will be elected.

Isère (2-2 + 1)Sad A very much divided right, an extra seat up for grabs. The PS-PCF list headed by president of the CG André Vallini will certainly win two seats, with a third one increasingly certain too. The right is divided into four lists: the official UMP list headed by Senator Bernard Saugey, the dissident UMP list with Michel Savin, the DVD-centrist list with Daniel Vitte (DVD, president of the association of local mayors) and Philippe Langenieux-Villard's other UMP dissident list. The left should profit from the utter division to take 3/5 seats, with a potential for 4/5 seats - even if the PS faces competition from the Greenies. +1 or +2 for the left.

Jura (0-2)Sad Two right-wing incumbents: Gérard Bailly and Gilbert Barbier (RDSE) are running for reelection. They face the opposition of former UMP regional councillor Sylvie Vermeillet (DVD) and the left headed by Denis Vuillermoz (PS). Nobody knows whether the left can take one seat here. nc or +1 for the left.

Landes (2-0)Sad Boring. Two PS holds. next.

Loir-et-Cher (0-1 + 1 vacant)Sad One MoDem Senator, Jacqueline Gourault, likely to be reelected. A second seat closely fought between Minister of the City Maurice Leroy (NC) and Romorantin-Lanthenay mayor Jeanny Lorgeoux (PS). Leroy seems to know that his election isn't certain, as he's pulling out all the stops. nc or +1 for the left.

Loire (2-2)Sad A closely fought department between Senator Bernard Fournier's UMP list and Senator Jean-Claude Frécon's PS list. The issue remains whether Maurice Vincent, PS mayor of Saint-Etienne, will win a third seat for the left or whether Senator Christiane Longère (UMP) will hold her seat. There is also the chance that the NC, running alone, might win a seat... nc or +1 for the left.

Haute-Loire (0-2)Sad One retiring UMP senator here. UC-NC Senator Jean Boyer to hold his seat, DVD president of the CG Gérard Roche likely to win the second one.

Loire-Atlantique (2-3)Sad The right has a lot to lose here, where local governance has undergone quite a sea change since 2001. The sole incumbent of all 5 running again, UMP Senator André Trillard is running again and will win. The left hopes and will probably get an extra seat. The PS-EELV-PCF list is led by regional councillor    Yannick Vaugrenard, with a Greenie in the third position and quite likely to win. UMP faces Saint-Sebastien-sur-Loire mayor Joël Guerriau (NC)'s rival list. +1 for the left (outside chance of +2??)

Loiret (1-2)Sad The right is apparently hoping to gain a seat from the left here, probably because of the PS' division between 3 candidates (+2 PCF candidates). PS Senator Jean-Pierre Sueur could be the victim of a potential rightie gain. Still not counting on it, though. nc or -1 for the left.

Lot (2-0)Sad Nothing to see. The PS will win a seat, the PRG will hold the seat of retiring PRG incumbent Jean Milhau. Moving along.

Lot-et-Garonne (0-2)Sad Two retiring righties. Left hoping to gain a seat with the president of the CG, Pierre Camani. Leading right-wingers are Alain Merly (PR) and Henri Tandonnet (NC). +1 for the left

Lozère (0-1)Sad One of the key contests. Senator and former president of the CR Jacques Blanc (UMP) is running for reelection against Alain Bertrand, PS mayor of Mende. The race is apparently very close. nc or +1 for the left. Has this department ever elected a socialist?

Maine-et-Loire (1-2 +1)Sad Divided right, divided left. The official PS list is headed by Daniel Raoul, incumbent, and features a Greenie in second. The UMP list is headed by... wait for it... Christophe Béchu, candidate for every election in the world (municipal, EU, regional, cantonal). Senator Catherine Deroche (UMP) second behind him. Also a centrist list led by Christian Gillet (NC) and a DVD list led by Isabelle Leroy. The new seat closely fought between the right and the left. nc or +1 for the left, nc or +1 for the right.

Manche (1-2)Sad The left is apparently conceding Senator Jean-Pierre Godefroy (PS)'s seat. 3 UMP senators seem likely. -1 for the left.

Marne (0-3)Sad The left doesn't seem to have the numbers to gain a seat. 2 AC and 1 UMP are likely to win.

Haute-Marne (0-2)Sad 3 UMP candidates for 2 UMP seats, bit of a headache, but the left can't win here.

Mayenne (0-2)Sad Arthuis and Zocchetto (both AC) will win.

Meurthe-et-Moselle(2-2)Sad Right is divided between two lists, the PS-PCF is united. The left will hold its two seats, the right will hold its two seats. Wouldn't know enough, but a leftie gain of one seems unlikely.

Meuse (0-2)Sad A very chaotic situation on the right which may or may not profit to Jean-Louis Dumont (MP). The two incumbents: Claude Biwer (AC) and Claude Léonard (UMP) are both running for reelection. Biwer is old and is a bit of a crook, so he seems to be set to lose. Léonard faces two key rivals: Christian Namy, UMP president of the CG and Gérard Longuet, Minister of Defense. The left probably doesn't have the numbers to profit from this, but as Bieber would say, never say never. nc for the left, outside chance of +1

Morbihan (1-2)Sad The right is aggressively fighting to take Senator Odette Herviaux's (PS) seat. Senator Joseph Kergueris (AC) is running for reelection and will probably win. MP-mayor of Plouay Jacques Le Nay (UMP) is eyeing a seat too. Last but not least, the big candidacy is that of the president of the CG and MP François Goulard (RS-DVD). Goulard, Le Nay or Herviaux for the third seat? nc or -1 for the left.

Moselle (3-2)Sad The right would like to gain a seat from the PS, probably from the president of the CR Jean-Pierre Masseret (he's a Senator too) who is third on the PS list. It hopes to profit from a Green list, but the right is divided too: Senator Jean-Louis Masson (DVD, NI), Senator Philippe Leroy's UMP list and MP François Grosdidier (also UMP) on a dissident list. nc or -1 for the left (I'd go with no change).

Nièvre (2-0)Sad nothing to see. Moving along...

Nord (6-5)Sad The right has a lot to lose here. It is very divided with 5 lists: Senator Jacques Legendre (UMP) on one list, Jean-René Lecerf-Valérie Létard (both incumbents, UMP and NC) on another, Alex Türk-Sylvie Desmarescaux (both incumbents, DVD-NI) on another, and two smaller lists. The PCF can afford to go it alone here and save their two seats, but one of their incumbents Ivan Renar (MUP, Robert Hue's party) is staging a dissident list. A PS-EELV list headed by Michel Delebarre with Green incumbent Marie-Christine Blandin in fourth. The right could pay a big price for being divided. A loss of one is almost certain, giving the left a 7-4 advantage. But it could also a second seat and give the left a 8-3 advantage. Will Legendre, Lecerf and Türk be able to win only one seat for their lists? Or will one of them save their running mates like Létard or Desmarescaux? +1 or +2 for the left.

Oise (1-2 +1)Sad Finally a clean, simple fight. The UMP's list is headed by Philippe Marini, senator and Beauvais mayor Caroline Cayeux in second and senator Alain Vasselle in third. The left's list is led by president of the CG Yves Rome and with Laurence Rossignol, vp of the CR, in second. Can the left win the extra seat, or will the right take it? +1 for either left or right, probs left.

Orne (0-1 +1 vacant)Sad Nathalie Goulet (UC) will be reelected. Mortagne-au-Perche mayor Jean-Claude Lenoir (UMP) likely to win the second seat. Hard to see the lefties win here.

Pas-de-Calais (4-3)Sad Divided situations on both left and right. The PS list is headed by Senator Daniel Percheron, president of the CR and has 3 incumbent MPs after him on the list. He needs to face Senator Michel Sergent's dissidence on the left, a PCF list (it can afford to go alone) and a EELV list. The right is divided with two small rival centre-right lists against the big UMP-MoDem list. The right is led by MoDem senator Jean-Marie Vanlerenberghe (the one who scares the kids with his face) with Calais mayor Natacha Bouchart in second. The right doesn't seem to be able to save the third seat... +1 for the left.

Puy-de-Dôme (2-1)Sad A divided left, but with a right still likely to lose its sole seat. The PS contenders are Michèle André (incumbent) and Alain Néri MP. There is  Tony Bernard (PG) who apparently seems to be in a good position too. Finally, there is the DVG president of the CG Jean-Yves Gouttebel who is likely to win, and could bring Pierrette Daffix-Ray (DVG) with him too. The PS could be left without a sole senator here, where the 2008 expulsion crisis has dwindled its ranks... but it's not like the UMP will benefit. +1 for the left.

PART TWO... NEXT.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #4 on: September 24, 2011, 12:25:10 PM »

Pyrénées-Atlantiques (1-2)Sad The last three presidents of the CG are each vying for a seat: the incumbent president Georges Labazée (PS), his predecessor Jean Castaings (UMP) and finally that guy's predecessor, Jean-Jacques Lasserre (MoDem). There's also Senator Annie Jarraud-Vergnolle (PS) favoured to win reelection. It seems as if the PS will win two seats, while the final seat will probably go to Lasserre and not Castaings. +1 for the left. btw, go PNV!

Hautes-Pyrénées (2-0)Sad Nothing to see. Move along.

Pyrénées-Orientales (0-2)Sad The left hopes to win the seat of retiring UMP Senator Paul Blanc through the candidacy of Frechiste president of the CR Christian Bourquin (DVG). That seems likely enough... Jean-Paul Alduy (UMP) will be reelected. +1 for the left.

Paris (7-5)Sad The big race of the elections (duh, it's Paris), with big loses for the right and nice gains for the left likely. The local UMP is basically in shambles and everybody in there hates each other. The right is divided: the official UMP list headed by Sports Minister Chantal Jouanno with incumbents Philippe Dominati and Catherine Dumas in the next two spots; the dissident list led by Pierre Charon, a former aide to Sarkozy and local councillor and Senator Yves Pozzo di Borgo's NC list. The left, in contrast, is united behind Senator Jean-Pierre Caffet's PS-EELV-PCF list. Big names on that list: Senator Jean Desessard (EELV), Marie-Noëlle Lienemann, Senator Roger Madec (PS), Senator Nicole Borvo Cohen-Seat (PCF), Senator David Assouline (PS) and PCF boss Pierre Laurent in 9th. The loss of one seat by the right is certain. The loss of a second seat is also likely, leading the UMP to say that voting Charon is voting for a communist (Pierre Laurent). At worst, it seems like Charon/Jouanno/Dominati will win for the right. +1 or +2 for the left

Seine-et-Marne (3-3)Sad A divided right: the official UMP list with the 3 incumbents, a NC list and a ARES list led by former cabinet minister Yves Jégo (now with Borloo). Yves Jégo's list angered the local bigwigs (Copé and Jacob). The left is united, and is certain to hold its 3 seats but a gain is still unlikely. nc or maybe +1 for the left.

Yvelines (1-5)Sad The PS might benefit here from, wait for it, a divided right! Gérard Larcher's UMP list faces a DVD list led by Chesnay mayor Philippe Brillault, a MoDem-centrist list led by Senator Roselle Cros and a NC list. The PS could add a second seat with Philippe Esnol, mayor of Conflans-Sainte Honorine. Uncertainty over whether the UMP will sweep the remaining seats, or if Brillaut could win. +1 for the left.

Essonne (3-2)Sad Chaos! The right is divided, badly: Senator Laurent Beteille's first UMP list and Senator-criminal Serge Dassault's second UMP list (+3 smaller lists, one led by the Radical mayor of Massy). The left's official slate is led by Jean-Vincent Placé, EELV's particularly distasteful attack dog. This led to the dissidence of former president of the CG and former MP Michel Berson (PS). The left will hold 3, the right 2 but who will be the winners? On the left, will Berson take the third leftie seat from PCF Senator Bernard Véra/on the right, will Beteille take a seat from Dassault's list?

Hauts-de-Seine (2-5)Sad lol @ the right in the 92. They never cease to amaze with their intense hatred of each other. The big official UMP list is led by Roger Karoutchi, with Isabelle Debré in second, Balkany's friend Georges Siffredi in third and Isabelle Balkany in fourth (NKM's daddy is in 7th). He faces first the dissident list led by senator Jacques Gautier (UMP) with Jean-Pierre Schosteck in third. Then there's the MoDem list led by senator Denis Badré with Arnaud de Courson, who defeated Balkany in March in the cantonals in third. Then there's Hervé Marseille (NC), mayor of Meudon with his own list with André Santini in a symbolic last place. And a smaller dvd list with Hugues Sirven-Viénot. The left is quite likely to gain a seat with this chaotic mess. Its list is headed by Clamart mayor Philippe Kaltenbach with the PCF incumbent in second and a Greenie in third. But it faces a rival PG list with Pascale Le Néouannic, regional councillor. Ok, the left's gain goes to EELV. But how do the other 4 rightie seats split? 2 for Karoutchi-Debré, 1 each for Gautier and Marseille? Does Denis Badré manage reelection, perhaps at Marseille's expense? +1 for the left.

Seine-Saint-Denis (4-2)Sad The right in precarious situation: one retiring incumbent, two lists (UMP and NC). The PCF, of course, going it alone - it can afford it here; a PS-EELV list. The left will certainly gain one seat, with the PCF holding its 2 seats despite Jack Ralite's retirement. +1 for the left.

Val-de-Marne (3-3)Sad A divided right: the official UMP list with the 2 UMP incumbents led by Christian Cambon, MoDem Senator Jean-Jacques Jégou's list and Vincennes mayor Laurent Lafon's NC list. The PS-PCF-EELV are united in a single list, and could profit from the right's division with a potential gain. nc or +1 for the left.

Val-d'Oise (3-2)Sad A divided right, aren't you tired of hearing that? Here we go again: senator Hugues Portelli's UMP list with president of the CG Arnaud Bazin (DVD) in third. Franconville mayor Francis Delattre's official (?) UMP list. Philippe Sueur, mayor of Enghien-les-Bains, also running. The left is united around Alain Richard with Robert Hue in third on the list. Paris Senator Alima Boumediene Thiery (EELV) is running a dissident list here, but nobody cares. no change here folks.

Guadeloupe (1-2)Sad Lucette Michaux-Chevry is retiring, and the local UMP is in shambles here. Senator/president of the CG Jacques Gillot (dvg, GUSR-PS) will win reelection, and he seems to have LMC's support. The UMP is running Joël Beaugendre and Blaise Aldo, notably. The PS-PPDG (ex-commies) are running a ticket with Félix Desplan and Jacques Bangou (son of a former PPDG senator in the 80s-90s). Daniel Marsin, a RDSE senator affiliated with the right-wing of the GUSR (close to Bockel's party), is running but will probably lose. +2 for the left, despite a bit of a spat between Lurel (PS) and Gillot (GUSR).

Martinique (2-0)Sad the UMP is a joke party here, basically, so forget them. The fight is on the left between incumbent Senator Claude Lise, president of the CG (RDM, ex-PPM) and probably Maurice Antiste (PS) who could defeat Lise. PS Senator Serge Larcher will be reelected probably.

La Réunion (1-2 +1)Sad Two divided camps: the right between Michel Fontaine (UMP) where Dider Robert (UMP, president of the CR) is in third; and Senators    Jean-Paul Virapoullé and Anne-Marie Payet's rival UMP-centrist list. Then on the left there's Michel Vergoz (PS), a EELV list and finally a PCR-MoDem list with Paul Vergès, former president of the CR and Senator Gélita Hoarau (PCR). The likely outcome seems 2 PCR, 1 PS, 1 UMP, so +2 for the left.

Mayotte (0-2)Sad I gave up on understanding this place long ago. MDM (centrist?) senator Adrien Giraud is running again, as is UMP senator Soibahadine Ibrahim Ramadani. But the UMP is divided with other candidates: the mayor of Mamoudzou and a former RPR boss. The PS is led by Ahamada Fahardine, mayor of Bandraboua. +2 for the left???

New Caledonia (0-1 +1)Sad Logically, one seat should go to Pierre Frogier, boss of the R-UMP and MP since 1996. Nobody knows how the other seat will go: there is a second UMP candidate, a Calédonie ensemble (centrist loyalist) slate on the right and on the left there's Charles Pidjot, boss of the nationalist UC. But the FLNKS is again divided between the UC and Palika. nc or +1 for the "left" (Pidjot would be leftie if elected).

Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon (0-1)Sad The incumbent is Denis Detcheverry (RDSE, ex-UMP). He faces, on the right, former MP (1986-2007) Gérard Grignon (UMP) and on the left the mayor of Saint-Pierre Karine Claireaux (PS). Karine Claireaux seems to be the favourite. +1 left.

French abroad (1-5)Sad It seems as if the first two on the PS-EELV list will win and the first 3/4 on the UMP list will win too. Uncertainty on the last seat. +1 for the left probably.

Somebody do me a favour and count up the gains I'm predicting for the left.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #5 on: September 24, 2011, 12:32:14 PM »

Did it myself, my numbers are probably messed up:

'minimum' gains for the left: +18
'maximum' gains for the left: +30

+23 or so required for the left to get a majority.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #6 on: September 24, 2011, 05:31:16 PM »

I'll try to do soon. Err, too late...

Before then, a technical question : what criterion did you use to classify senators among the right or among the left ? For example, what do you do with the RDSE group ? Wikipedia breaks it down into left-wing and right-wing members, I don't know if you proceed the same way or rather give it all to the left.

Anyways, according to you classification, the breakdown of this series is 93-70 for the right. It must become 93-77 for the left in order for it to win a majority.

The right-wing RDSE members in Jura, SPM, Guadeloupe so forth are counted as 'right'. All MoDems are counted as 'right'.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #7 on: September 25, 2011, 07:25:19 AM »

Wow, Morbihan. Never expected that.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #8 on: September 25, 2011, 09:09:42 AM »

Either  Detcheverry raped the wives of every grand elector or he passed some backroom deal with Grignon to prevent the socialist from winning.

Note to my internet service provider: next time you cut my internet on an election day, I'll call Steve Harper to complain.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #9 on: September 25, 2011, 09:35:05 AM »

All non-PR departments are in:

Indre-et-Loire: the left in good position to gain one seat to make it 3-0 (+1)

Jura: TCTC between Barbier and a leftie for the second seat it seems (potential +1)

Landes: booooring

Loir-et-Cher: Bayrou's twat reelected, PS likely to pick up one seat with Leroy struggling but not out yet (potential +1)

Haute-Loire: nothing to see

Loiret: well, yeah, never trust UMP rumours again. The PS incumbent reelected easily. UMP in good shape to hold 2 other seats.

Lot: PS-PRG landslide

Lot-et-Garonne: Camani (PS) in good shape, Tandonnet (NC) likely to get the second seat (+1)

Lozère: In 1998, Jacques Blanc was elected to the regional presidency with FN votes. Today, with 169 votes, he has exactly half of all votes and one more than the Socialist. The FN has one vote. If he wins that guy, he wins - with FN support. If the FN dude votes leftie, then Blanc still wins because he's older. (unlikely +1)

Manche: Godefroy (PS) struggling, but not entirely out imo. (potential -1)

Marne: two centrists reelected, UMP will take the other seat.

Haute-Marne: UMP to win second seat.

Mayenne: The centrist twins will win

Meuse: Namy (UMP) to take second seat

Morbihan: Herviaux (PS) reelected. PCF and Green candidate third and second respectively. Le Nay (UMP) is fourth close behind the Communist. Goulard and Kergueris tied for fifth. Looking very bad for the right. Shocker of the night. +2 for the left or at least +1

Nievre: booring

Orne: right is doing fine

Puy-de-Dome: PS incumbent will win, other two PS also doing well. Gouttebel (DVG) doing surprisingly poorly.

Pyrénées-Atlantiques: Labazée (PS) will win, Lasserre (MoDem) on track too, Jarraud-Vergnolle  (PS) could take third seat. +1 for the left

Hautes-Pyrénées: only the Rad elected outright by the first round, the PS will be elected on the second round.

Pyrénées-Orientales: Bourquin (DVG) elected, Alduy (UMP) trails Calvet (UMP) for the second seat. +1 left

Reunion: 2 UMP, 1 PCR, 1 PS. +1 for the left.

Mayotte: tctc

French abroad: UMP 4, PS 2. Left +1

New Caledonia: Right wins the new seat, so right +1
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #10 on: September 25, 2011, 09:45:55 AM »

Rumours say that in the 92, Gautier's dissident list is beating Karoutchi-Balkany's official list.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #11 on: September 25, 2011, 09:50:51 AM »

Maine-et-Loire:

PS list 37.91 > 2
UMP list 30.94 > 2
NC list 13.93

+1 left
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #12 on: September 25, 2011, 10:09:58 AM »

93 seems like 2 PS, 1 PCF, 1 EELV vs. 1 UMP, 1 NC. So no change here.

Isere seems like 2 PS, 1 PCF vs. 1 UMP and 1 UMP-dissident. So +1 for the left (new seat)
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #13 on: September 25, 2011, 10:12:18 AM »

Loire-Atlantique:

Left 49.82% > 3
UMP 25.46% > 1
NC 18.05% > 1

+1 left
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #14 on: September 25, 2011, 11:21:08 AM »

Paris

Left 61.22% > 8
Jouanno UMP 22.9% > 2
Charon UMP 7.98% > 1
NC 7.65% > 1
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #15 on: September 25, 2011, 11:25:18 AM »

Hauts-de-Seine:

Left 30.91% > 3
UMP 23.24% > 2
Gautier 19.36% > 1
NC 13.78% > 1
MoDem 9.61%
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #16 on: September 25, 2011, 04:43:52 PM »
« Edited: September 25, 2011, 04:59:03 PM by Caudillo Francisco Franco »

My preliminary count assuming my guesses on the 3 uncalled Guadeloupe/Martinique seats are correct:

176 - 172

By the narrowest of margins, the left has it.

By party:
UMP 126
PS 121
PCF-PCR 21
NC 12
PRG 12
DVG 11
Greenies 10
DVD 8
AC 7
DVD-RASNAG 7
MoDem 4
Radicals-UMP 3
Miscellaneous centrists (UC group) 2 (including the sole Villepiniste senator)
MRC (RDSE) 1
LGM (RDSE) 1

Preliminary guesswork of new groups:

PS-EELV-DVG 142
UMP-DVD-PRV 137
UC 25
CRC-PCR 21
RDSE 16 (of course, a few dvg will probably join the group and it could even be extended into a re-hash of the 1997 RCV group)
RASNAG 7
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #17 on: September 25, 2011, 05:14:11 PM »

PC says they had 16 seats up to election, they re-elected 14 and gaiend 1 (Morbihan).
One of the losses in in Seine St Denis. Where is the second one?

Essonne

The PG also lost both their seats.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #18 on: September 27, 2011, 03:33:19 PM »

Tragic. We're losing another Chris Christie look-alike. Now we need to hope the MP for Ottawa-Vanier stays in office for a long time.
Logged
Hash
Hashemite
Moderator
Atlas Superstar
*****
Posts: 32,411
Colombia


WWW
« Reply #19 on: October 01, 2011, 11:39:47 AM »

The UC group has been transformed into the Union centriste et republicaine (UCR), taking in a few Radicals from the UMP group and the remaining right-wingers in the RDSE (except Barbier?). The RDSE has 14 members, one less than the threshold. I suppose they could get the greenies to join them.
Logged
Pages: [1]  
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.074 seconds with 12 queries.