Caroline Cayeux | |
Office: | Minister for Relations with Local Authorities |
Term Start: | 4 July 2022[1] |
Term End: | 28 November 2022 |
President: | Emmanuel Macron |
Primeminister: | Élisabeth Borne |
Predecessor: | Christophe Béchu |
Successor: | Dominique Faure |
Office1: | Mayor of Beauvais |
Term Start1: | 18 March 2001 |
Term End1: | 31 August 2022 |
Predecessor1: | Walter Amsallem |
Successor1: | Franck Pia |
Office2: | Member of the French Senate for Oise |
Term Start2: | 1 October 2011 |
Term End2: | 1 October 2017 |
Predecessor2: | Alain Vasselle |
Successor2: | Olivier Paccaud |
Birth Date: | 1 November 1948 |
Birth Name: | Caroline Laurence Fournier |
Birth Place: | 16th arrondissement of Paris, France |
Party: | RPR (1981-2002) UMP (2002-2015) The Republicans (2015-2018) Miscellaneous right (since 2018) |
Caroline Cayeux (pronounced as /fr/; born 1 November 1948) is a French politician who has been serving as Minister for Relations with Local Authorities in the government of Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne between July 2022 and November 2022.[2]
Prior to joining the government, Cayeux served as mayor[3] of Beauvais.
Cayeux became Departmental President of Oise for the Rally for the Republic in 1998, after the incumbent, Jean-François Mancel was forced to resign for entering into an electoral and political alliance with the far-right FN.
Cayeux defeated the incumbent Socialist Party Mayor of Beauvais Walter Amsallem in the 2001 election and was re-elected with 58% in 2008 against Sylvie Houssin of the PS.
Cayeux was defeated as a RPR dissident candidate in the 2002 French legislative election and as a candidate on the UMP list in the 2004 Senate election. She became regional councilor of Picardy in 2004, on the UMP-UDF list of Gilles de Robien.
Cayeux was the only candidate for the UMP nomination in Picardy for the 2010 regional elections and will thus be the UMP's top candidate.
In 2018, Cayeux made international news playing an April Fools' Day prank via social media, claiming that furniture giant IKEA would be bringing 4,000 new jobs to Beauvais; the prank was not well received across social media [4] [5]
Following Cayeux's appointment to the Borne government, more than 100 French public figures signed an open letter denouncing her opposition to a 2013 law for same-sex marriage and adoption which Cayeux had called a "caprice" and "plan that goes against nature".[6]