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Sunday, June 13, 2027 · 415 days away
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French Legislative Election 2027
Event overview
Election for all 577 seats of the Assemblu00e9e Nationale after the presidential vote.
France's legislative election is scheduled around Sunday 13 June 2027, renewing all 577 seats of the Assemblée Nationale. A second round follows one week later in constituencies where no candidate wins outright in round one.
Deputies serve five-year terms and are elected by two-round majority system in single-member constituencies: 539 in metropolitan France, 27 in overseas territories, and 11 for French nationals abroad. A candidate wins outright in round one only with an absolute majority on turnout of at least 25 percent of registered voters; otherwise the top two, plus any candidate reaching 12.5 percent of registered voters, contest round two.
The last regular legislative election was in June 2022, producing a hung Assembly. President Macron dissolved the chamber on 9 June 2024 after the European Parliament results and called snap elections for 30 June and 7 July 2024, which returned the New Popular Front largest, Ensemble second, and the Rassemblement National largest by single-party vote share. Article 12 of the Constitution prohibits a further dissolution within one year of that poll; the 2024 chamber therefore runs until June 2029 under normal rules but would be renewed mid-mandate in 2027 only if the new president elected in April 2027 opts for dissolution under Article 12. Gabriel Attal's brief tenure as prime minister ended in September 2024 when Macron named Michel Barnier, who lost a no-confidence vote in December 2024, before François Bayrou took office. These rapid turnovers exposed the structural instability of the 2024 Assembly and heightened expectations of another dissolution in 2027.
Historically, newly elected presidents have almost always dissolved the Assembly to seek a governing majority, as Chirac did in 1995 and Macron did after his 2017 election. A 13 June 2027 first round assumes that pattern.
Under Article 12, a presidential dissolution triggers new elections 20 to 40 days later. If the new president elected on 25 April 2027 dissolves the chamber upon taking office on or around 13 May, the first round falls within 2 June to 22 June 2027, with 13 June a conventional Sunday in that window. The date would mark the first post-Macron parliamentary test and determine the new government's working majority. The calendar rhyme with 2002, when Jacques Chirac's re-election was followed by legislative elections on 9 and 16 June, and with 2017 when Macron's first term began with 11 and 18 June legislative rounds, cements the Sunday-after-mid-June window as the post-presidential convention.
The legislative election cycle has been tied to the presidential calendar since the 2000 constitutional reform and the 2001 statute that cut the presidential term to five years, producing the so-called quinquennat. Under the pre-2002 arrangement, cohabitation between a president of one camp and a prime minister of another occurred three times (1986–88, 1993–95, 1997–2002); the current calendar was designed to reduce cohabitation by having legislative elections immediately follow presidential polls. The 2022 and 2024 cycles have nonetheless produced successive hung assemblies, renewing debate about whether France needs proportional representation for at least some seats. The 12.5-percent threshold for qualifying for the second round, unchanged since 1976, remains one of the highest in European legislative systems.
This vote caps the transition begun with the French Presidential Election Second Round and the end of Macron's term. Comparative continental ballots include the Spanish General Election 2027 and the Italian General Election 2027.
When exactly is the legislative election? Expected Sunday 13 June 2027 for round one, with round two on 20 June; contingent on presidential dissolution timing under Article 12.
Is the election confirmed or expected? Expected. The Constitution does not automatically call a legislative vote after presidential elections; the date depends on an Article 12 decree issued by the new president.
Who is responsible for running the election? The Ministry of the Interior administers the ballot; the Conseil constitutionnel rules on contested results and certifies seat allocations.
Where can I read the official announcement? The Journal officiel will publish the convening decree when issued, with results carried on resultats-elections.interieur.gouv.fr.
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