French presidential election, 1995
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Results of the second round: the candidate with the plurality of votes in each administrative division. Jacques Chirac: blue; Lionel Jospin: pink | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Presidential elections took place in France on 23 April and 7 May 1995, to elect the fifth president of the Fifth Republic.
The Socialist incumbent president, François Mitterrand, who had been in office since 1981, did not stand for a third term. He was 78, had terminal cancer, and his party had lost the 1993 legislative election in a landslide defeat. Since then, he had been "cohabiting" with a right-wing cabinet led by Prime Minister Edouard Balladur, a member of the neo-Gaullist RPR party. Balladur had promised the RPR leader, Jacques Chirac, that he would not run for the presidency, but as polls showed him doing well and he had the support of many right-wing politicians, he decided to run. The competition within the right between Balladur and Chirac was a major feature of the campaign.
Meanwhile, the left was weakened by scandals and disappointments regarding Mitterrand's presidency along with the Unemployment rate hovering around 10%. In June 1994, former Prime Minister Michel Rocard was dismissed as leader of the Socialist Party (PS) after the party's poor showing in the European Parliament elections. Then, Jacques Delors decided not to stand as a candidate because he disagreed with the re-alignment on the left orchestrated by new party leader Henri Emmanuelli. This left the field wide open for numerous potential candidacies: among those who are known to have considered a run, or were strongly urged by others, are Jack Lang, Pierre Joxe, Laurent Fabius, Ségolène Royal and Robert Badinter. Former party leader and education minister Lionel Jospin was chosen by PS members as the party's candidate in a primary election pitting him against Emmanuelli. He promised to restore the credibility and moral reputation of his party, but his chances of winning were seen as being thin. The economy was also still struggling with a depression which began in mid-1990, and the government's policies were widely blamed for both the recession and its slow recovery.
The French Communist Party (PCF) tried to stop its electoral decline. Its new leader Robert Hue campaigned against "king money" and wanted to represent a renewed communism. He was faced with competition for the far left vote by the Trotskyist candidacy of Arlette Laguiller, who ran for the fourth time. Both of these candidates had a better result than their parties had in 1988, but came nowhere near being able to participate in the next round. In choosing Dominique Voynet, the Greens opted for their integration with the left.
On the far-right, Jean-Marie Le Pen tried to repeat his surprising result that he obtained in the 1988 presidential election. His main rival for the far-right vote was Philippe de Villiers, candidate of the eurosceptic parliamentary right. Both candidates primarily focused over the financial situation.
In January 1995, when he announced his candidacy, Balladur was the favourite of the political right. According to the SOFRES polls institute, he held an advantage of 14 points over Chirac (32% against 18% for the first round). He took advantage of his "positive assessment" as Prime Minister and advocated a moderately liberal economic policy. Chirac denounced the "social fracture" and criticised the "dominant thought", targeting Balladur. Chirac argued that "the pay slip is not the enemy of employment". Indeed, unemployment was the main theme of the campaign. From the start of March, Chirac gained ground on Balladur in the polls. Another factor that contributed to Balladur's fall in popularity was the revelation of a bugging scandal which had implicated Balladur.[1]
Chirac's campaign slogan was "La France pour tous" ("France for everyone"); Balladur's "Believe in France"; and Jospin's "A clear vote for a more just France".
Opinion polls
Jacques Chirac | Lionel Jospin | Édouard Balladur | |
---|---|---|---|
3–5 March 1994 | 14% | 24% | 33% |
6–8 September 1994 | 16% | 27% | 30% |
26–28 December 1994 | 14% | 22% | 25% |
10–12 January 1995 | 17% | 20% | 29% |
24–26 January 1995 | 18% | 17% | 32% |
7–9 February 1995 | 17,5% | 22,5% | 28% |
21–23 February 1995 | 19% | 24% | 23% |
8–9 March 1995 | 24% | 21% | 20% |
21–22 March 1995 | 26% | 22% | 17% |
4–5 April 1995 | 24% | 22% | 20% |
13–14 April 1995 | 24% | 20,5% | 16,5% |
Results | 20,8 % | 23,2 % | 18,15 % |
Results
Candidates | Parties | 1st round | 2nd round | ||||
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Votes | % | Votes | % | ||||
Lionel Jospin | Socialist Party (Parti socialiste) | PS | 7,097,786 | 23.30% | 14,180,644 | 47.36% | |
Jacques Chirac | Rally for the Republic (Rassemblement pour la République) | RPR | 6,348,375 | 20.84% | 15,763,027 | 52.64% | |
Édouard Balladur | RPR, supported by the Union for French Democracy (Union pour la démocratie française) | RPR/UDF | 5,658,796 | 18.58% | |||
Jean-Marie Le Pen | National Front (Front national) | FN | 4,570,838 | 15.00% | |||
Robert Hue | French Communist Party (Parti communiste français) | PCF | 2,632,460 | 8.64% | |||
Arlette Laguiller | Workers' Struggle (Lutte Ouvrière) | LO | 1,615,552 | 5.30% | |||
Philippe de Villiers | Movement for France (Mouvement pour la France) | MPF | 1,443,186 | 4.74% | |||
Dominique Voynet | The Greens (Les Verts) | VEC | 1,010,681 | 3.32% | |||
Jacques Cheminade | European Workers' Party (Parti ouvrier européen) | POE | 84,959 | 0.28% | |||
Total | 30,462,633 | 100% | 29,943,671 | 100% | |||
Valid votes | 30,462,633 | 97.18% | 29,943,671 | 94.03% | |||
Spoilt and null votes | 883,161 | 2.82% | 1,902,148 | 5.97% | |||
Turnout | 31,345,794 | 78.38% | 31,845,819 | 79.66% | |||
Abstentions | 8,647,118 | 21.62% | 8,131,125 | 20.34% | |||
Registered voters | 39,992,912 | 39,976,944 | |||||
Table of results ordered by number of votes received in first round. Official results by Constitutional Council of France.
Source: List of candidates · First round result · Second round result |
First round
Lionel Jospin won the first round, in what appeared to be an electoral recovery for the Socialist Party. His right-wing challenger for the runoff vote on 7 May was Jacques Chirac and not Edouard Balladur. Defeated, Balladur endorsed the RPR candidate. Jean-Marie Le Pen repeated his good result of the previous presidential election.
During the TV debate between the two finalists, they disagreed about the presidential term. Jospin wanted to reduce it to five years whereas Chirac was in favour of the seven-year term. The PS candidate responded: "The choice is five years with me or seven years with Jacques Chirac, which will be very long". Eventually, the presidential term was reduced to five years after the 2002 election.
Second round
Jacques Chirac was elected President of the French Republic. Édouard Balladur resigned as prime minister and foreign minister Alain Juppé succeeded him.
External links
See also
References
- ↑ Opinion poll shows Balladur in big trouble New Straits Times, 22 February 1995. At Google News
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