7th constituency of Seine-Saint-Denis | |
Member-Type: | Deputy |
Member: | Alexis Corbière |
Member-Party: | LFI |
Department: | Seine-Saint-Denis |
Canton: | Bagnolet, Montreuil |
Voters: | 141,389 |
Seine-Saint-Denis' seventh constituency is a French legislative constituency in the Seine-Saint-Denis département (north-east of Paris). It is entirely contained within the city of Montreuil.
Election | Member | Party | |
---|---|---|---|
1986 | Proportional representation - no election by constituency | ||
1988 | Jean-Pierre Brard | PCF | |
1993 | |||
1997 | CAP | ||
2002 | |||
2007 | |||
2012 | Razzy Hammadi | PS | |
2017 | Alexis Corbière | LFI | |
2022 |
Candidate | Party | Alliance | First round | Second round | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | +/– | Votes | % | +/– | |||||||||
Alexis Corbière | LFI diss. | 40.19 | N/A | 57.16 | N/A | |||||||||
Sabrina Ali-Benali | LFI | NFP | 36.39 | -27.18 | 42.84 | N/A | ||||||||
Pauline Breteau | HOR | ENS | 10.06 | -5.93 | ||||||||||
Françoise Trova | RN | 9.68 | +4.87 | |||||||||||
Antoine Toche | DIV | 1.31 | N/A | |||||||||||
Eric Verhaeghe | DIV | 0.95 | N/A | |||||||||||
Aurélie Jochaud | LO | 0.63 | -0.82 | |||||||||||
Yannick Duterte | DVG | 0.33 | N/A | |||||||||||
Elsa Caudron | DIV | 0.30 | N/A | |||||||||||
Sebastien Atlani | DIV | 0.14 | N/A | |||||||||||
Valid votes | 98.03 | +0.54 | 91.75 | N/A | ||||||||||
Blank votes | 1.49 | -0.55 | 6.86 | N/A | ||||||||||
Null votes | 0.48 | +0.01 | 1.39 | N/A | ||||||||||
Turnout | 66.31 | +20.41 | 57.17 | N/A | ||||||||||
Abstentions | 33.69 | -20.41 | 42.83 | N/A | ||||||||||
Registered voters | ||||||||||||||
Source: Ministry of the Interior,[1] Le Monde[2] [3] | ||||||||||||||
Result | LFI HOLD |
|-| colspan="8" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"||-
|-| colspan="8" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"||-
Razzy Hammadi is elected without opponent in the second round following the withdrawal of Jean-Pierre Brard.
|-| colspan="8" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"||-
The constituency was one of just two (the other being Nord's 19th constituency) in which there was only one candidate in the second round, thus guaranteeing his re-election. The law provides that candidates obtaining the votes of at least 12.5% of registered voters in the first round advance to the second round. The parties of the mainstream left had a nationwide agreement whereby if two of them advanced to the second round, the second-placed would automatically withdraw. Primarily, this was to avoid dividing the left-wing or centre-left electorate in constituencies where a right-wing, centre-right or far-right candidate had also reached the second round. In Montreuil, however, the Communist and Socialist candidates were the only ones to reach the second round, respectively in first and second place. Socialist candidate Mouna Viprey honoured the agreement and withdrew, enabling Brard to be re-elected in a walkover.[4] 30.17% of voters nonetheless cast a blank ballot.[5]
|-| colspan="8" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"||-
|-| colspan="8" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"||-