French presidential election, 2002

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Second Round

President: Jacques Chirac, Rally for the Republic (RPR)
Opponent: Jean-Marie Le Pen, Front National
Vote: Jacques Chirac (Winner): 25,540,873 (82.21%) Jean-Marie Le Pen (Opponent): 5,525,906 (17.79%)

First Round

Candidate Party Vote Percent
Jacques Chirac Rally for the Republic (RPR) 5,666,440 19.88%
Jean-Marie Le Pen Front National 4,805,307 16.86%
Lionel Jospin Socialist Party (PS) 4,610,749 16.18%
François Bayrou Union for French Democracy (UDF) 1,949,436 6.84%
Arlette Laguiller Lutte Ouvrière (Worker's struggle) 1,630,244 5.72%
Jean-Pierre Chevènement Mouvement des Citoyens (Citizens' movement) 1,518,901 5.33%
Noël Mamère Les Verts (The Greens) 1,495,901 5.25%
Olivier Besancenot Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire (Communist Revolutionary League) 1,210,694 4.25%
Jean Saint-Josse Chasse, Pêche, Nature, Traditions (Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions) 1,204,863 4.23%
Alain Madelin Démocratie Libérale (Liberal Democracy) 1,113,709 3.91%
Robert Hue French Communist Party (PCF) 960,757 3.37%
Bruno Mégret Mouvement National Républicain (National Republican Movement) 667,123 2.34%
Christiane Taubira Parti radical de gauche (Left Radical Party) 660,576 2.32%
Corinne Lepage Citoyenneté Action Participation 535,911 1.88%
Christine Boutin close to UDF 339,142 1.19%
Daniel Gluckstein Parti des travailleurs 132,702 0.47%
  Total 28,502,455 100%

General Summary

Image:Paris May1 2002 DCP 8508.JPG
On May 1, Labour Day, the yearly demonstrations for workers' rights were compounded by protests against Jean-Marie Le Pen. Hundreds of thousands of people who normally do not take part in such demonstrations came, in addition to the usual unions. Another unusual sights for May 1 demonstrations, French tricolor flags were commonplace.

In the months before the election, the campaign had increasingly focused on questions of law and order, with a particular attention towards crime committed by the youth, especially the youth of foreign origin. Lionel Jospin was, at the time, Prime Minister of France; the Jospin government was criticized for its "softness" on crime by its political opponents. Some contend that alarmist reporting on the TF1 channel and other media had overemphasized the alleged crime wave.

The first round of election came as a shock to many commentators, almost all of whom had expected the second ballot to be between Jacques Chirac and Lionel Jospin. Jospin's poor showing and the widespread splintering of the left-wing vote in the first round of the election meant that instead Jean-Marie Le Pen faced Chirac in the second ballot. The election brought the two-round voting system into question as well as raising many concerns about apathy and the way in which the left had become so divided.

There was a widespread stirring of national public opinion, and more than one million people in France took part in street rallies, in an expression of fierce opposition to Le Pen's ideas. Some held up protest signs stating "I'm ashamed to be French". Spontaneous street protests began in the night from April 21 to April 22, then on April 22 and 23, then as follows:

  • April 24: 60,000 people in the streets protesting J.M. Le Pen's success
  • April 25: 250,000 people in the streets protesting J.M. Le Pen's success
  • April 27: 200,000 people in the streets protesting J.M. Le Pen's success (out of which 45,000 in Paris)
  • May 1:
    • Approximately 20 000 people in the yearly demonstration of the National Front in Paris in the honor of Joan of Arc and in support of J.M. Le Pen.
    • Approximately 1,300,000 people (according to the Ministry of the Interior,as reported in Libération), out of which more than 400,000 in Paris, for Labor Day and against the National Front.

The choice between Chirac, who is suspect for actions carried out whilst he was mayor of Paris (see corruption scandals in the Paris region) and but benefits from Presidential immunity as long as he stays president, and Le Pen, a nationalist often accused of racism and antisemitism, was one that many found tough. Some people suggested going to vote with a clothes peg on the nose, to express disgust for the Chirac vote, but this may have been illegal, because it is prohibited to advertise one's vote inside the voting precinct. In the days before the second ballot, a memorable poster was put up of Chirac with the slogan "Vote for a Crook, not a Fascist". Chirac defeated Le Pen by a landslide.

See also: President of France, France, Politics of France

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