
Laure Muller (LREM) and René Pilato (Nupes) thus make their arrival in the hemicycle while Anne-Sophie Frigout (RN) and Thomas Mesnier (LREM) will have to leave it.
La Nupes won a seat in Charente and the RN lost one to Renaissance in Marne after the second round of three partial legislative elections on Sunday January 29.
- In Charente, Thomas Mesnier (LREM) gives way to René Pilato (Nupes)
In the first constituency of Charente, which includes the Angoulême prefecture, René Pilato won with 50.99% of the votes cast ahead of the presidential majority candidate and spokesperson for Horizons Thomas Mesnier (49.01%) . That is a difference of 474 votes according to the figures of the prefecture. The participation rate is 30.21%. The results are provisional pending a meeting of the control commission which will take place on Monday morning.
The margin was already very tight in the first round between the two candidates (42 votes apart) with a result of 35.54% for Thomas Mesnier, 35.36 for René Pilato.
- In the Pas-de-Calais, Bertrand Petit (Nupes) renewed
In the 8th district of Pas-de-Calais (Saint-Omer and surroundings) Bertrand Petit – related to PS and invested by Nupes, after having presented a dissident candidacy in June – is the only one of the three outgoing reappointed, after having largely dominated, with 66.49% of the votes, the candidate RN Auguste Evrard, who collected 33.51% of the votes, in a second round where only 27.93% of the voters of the constituency went to vote.
In June, Bertrand Petit won with 55.82% of the vote, allowing the left to reconquer this former stronghold, in a department where six out of twelve constituencies had been won by the RN. His election had been invalidated because of the choice of his deputy, René Hocq, ineligible because he was already replacing a senator.
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- In Marne, Laure Miller (LREM) replaces Anne-Sophie Frigout (RN)
In the second constituency of Marne, which includes several cantons of Reims, Laure Miller was elected with 51.8% of the vote against 48.2% of the vote for RN deputy Anne-Sophie Frigout, in a marked second round. by an abstention rate of 74.83%.
Laure Miller, who was however more than four points behind her opponent at the end of the first round, benefited from a good carryover of votes to win. The Nupes candidate Victorien Pâté, who came third in the first round, had called in particular not to give any voice to the RN.
In June, Laure Miller had been eliminated in the first round, her electorate being torn between her and former MP Aina Kuric (various center), who then presented herself as a dissident, but who withdrew this time.