The French department of Alpes-de-Haute-Provence (04) is divided into two constituencies, each of which sends one deputy to the National Assembly of France. In the XIII legislature, these are represented by Jean-Louis Bianco and Daniel Spagnou. As at 2020, a total of 12 different deputies have represented Alpes-de-Haute-Provence since single member constituencies were re-introduced in 1988.
First | Second | |||||
Member | Party | Member | Party | |||
1958 | Roger Diet | UNR | Gabriel Domenech | UNR | ||
1962 | Claude Delorme | SFIO | Marcel Massot | Radical | ||
1967 | Claude Delorme | SFIO | Marcel Massot | Radical | ||
1968 | Claude Delorme | SFIO | Marcel Massot | Radical | ||
1973 | Claude Delorme | PS | Marcel Massot | MRG | ||
1978 | Pierre Girardot | PCF | François Massot | MRG | ||
1981 | André Bellon | PS | François Massot | MRG[1] | ||
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence | ||||||
Member | Party | Member | Party | |||
1986 | François Massot | PS | Pierre Delmar | RPR[2] | ||
First | Second | |||||
Member | Party | Member | Party | |||
1988 | François Massot | PS | André Bellon | PS[3] | ||
1993 | Pierre Rinaldi | RPR | Pierre Delmar | RPR | ||
1994 | Francis Galizi | UDF-CDS | ||||
1997 | Jean-Louis Bianco | PS | Robert Honde | PRG | ||
2002 | Jean-Louis Bianco | PS | Daniel Spagnou | UMP | ||
2007 | Jean-Louis Bianco | PS | Daniel Spagnou | UMP | ||
2012 | Gilbert Sauvan | PS | Christophe Castaner | |||
2017 | Delphine Bagarry | Emmanuelle Fontaine-Domeizel | LREM | |||
2020 | EDS |