French order of precedence
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The French order of precedence is a symbolic hierarchy of officials in the Government of France used to direct protocol.
The current order of precedence was established by presidential decree number 89-655 of September 13, 1989.
- The President of the Republic (François Hollande)
- The Prime Minister (Manuel Valls)
- The President of the Senate (Gérard Larcher)
- The President of the National Assembly (Claude Bartolone)
- Former Presidents of the Republic, in order of term
- The Government (Ministers forming the Government), in the order decided by the President of the Republic
- Former Prime Ministers, in order of term
- The President of the Constitutional Council (Jean-Louis Debré)
- The Vice President of the Conseil d'État (Jean-Marc Sauvé)
- The President of the Economic, Social and Environmental Council (Jean-Paul Delevoye)
- The Defender of rights[1] (Jacques Toubon)
- Members of the National Assembly
- Senators
- European parliament members
- The judicial authority represented by the first President of the Court of Cassation (Vincent Lamanda) and the public prosecutor of that court (Jean-Louis Nadal)
- The first President of the Revenue Court (Cour des Comptes) (Didier Migaud) and the public prosecutor of that court
- The Great Chancellor of the Légion d'honneur, chancellor of the National Order of Merit (Général Jean-Louis Georgelin) and the members of the councils of these orders
- The Chancellor of the Order of the Libération (François Jacob), and the members of the council of this order
- The Chief of the Defence Staff (Amiral Édouard Guillaud)
The following then apply in Paris
- The prefect of the Île-de-France région, prefect of Paris (Jean-François Carenco)
- The prefect of police, prefect of the Paris defense zone (Michel Cadot)
- The mayor of Paris, president of the Council of Paris (Anne Hidalgo)
- The representatives to the European Parliament
- The chancellor of the Institute of France, the perpetual secretaries of the French Academy, the Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, the Academy of Sciences, of the Académie des beaux-arts and of the Academy of moral and political sciences
- The general secretary of the government; the general secretary of national defence; the general secretary of the Ministry of foreign affairs
- The president of the administrative court of appeal of Paris (Patrick Frydman); the first president of the Paris court of appeal (Jacques Degrandi) and the general public prosecutor of that court (François Falletti)
- The general delegate for weaponry; the general secretary for administration of the Ministry of defence; the chief of staff of the army; the chief of staff of the navy; the chief of staff of the air force; the military governor of Paris, commanding the Île-de-France army region
- The president of the high council of broadcasting (CSA) (Olivier Schrameck)
- The president of the national commission "computing and freedoms" (CNIL) (Isabelle Falque-Pierrotin)
- The president of the concurrence council
- universities of Paris
References
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