2016 The Republicans (France) presidential primary explained

Election Name:The Republicans presidential primary, 2016
Country:France
Type:primary
Ongoing:no
Next Election:2021 The Republicans congress
Next Year:2021
Election Date:20–27 November 2016[1]
Candidate1:François Fillon
Party1:The Republicans (France)
Candidate2:Alain Juppé
Party2:The Republicans (France)
1Blank:Popular vote 
2Blank:Share 
3Blank:Popular vote 
4Blank:Share 
3Data1:
4Data1:
Map2 Image:Primaire droite & centre de 2017 T2 carte départements & régions.svg
Map2 Caption:Results of the second round by department and region
UMP nominee
Posttitle:LR nominee
Before Election:Nicolas Sarkozy
After Election:François Fillon

The Republicans held a presidential primary election, officially called the open primary of the right and centre (French: primaire ouverte de la droite et du centre), to select a candidate for the 2017 presidential election. It took place on 20 November 2016, with a runoff on 27 November since no candidate obtained at least 50% of the vote in the first round.[1] It was the first time an open primary had been held for The Republicans or its predecessor parties.

In the first round of The Republicans primary on 20 November, François Fillon won an upset victory with 44% of the vote, while Alain Juppé—long held by most opinion polls as the favourite to win the nomination—came in a distant second with 29%. Former President Nicolas Sarkozy, who was projected to come in second behind Juppé, was eliminated with just under 21% of the vote.

In the runoff round, Fillon won by an even larger margin with nearly twice as many votes as Juppé (66.5% to 33.5%). Of the six departments and similar areas won by Sarkozy in the first round, all switched to Fillon in the runoff. Similarly, of the thirteen departments and similar areas that originally voted for Juppé, eight switched to Fillon in the second round. The constituency for French residents overseas was won by Juppé in the first round and Fillon in the second round.

Voting procedures

Unlike previous Union for a Popular Movement primaries, this was the first primary to be open to the general public. The first round of voting took place on 20 November 2016. Voting booths were open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.[2] A runoff was held on 27 November after no candidate obtained at least 50% of the vote in the first round.[1]

All registered voters were allowed to vote in the primary, as well as minors whose eighteenth birthday was before 23 April 2017.[3] 10,228 voting booths were established with each person on the voting register attached to an office.[4] To receive a ballot, a voter must pay 2 euros.[5]

People abroad who wanted to vote in The Republicans party were given electronic voting machines to do so.[6]

Candidates

Candidates from The Republicans had to obtain the support of 20 members of the National Assembly, 2,500 party members and 250 elected representatives to participate.[7] For candidates from other parties, the party themselves would decide the conditions for their submission into the primary. Seven candidates were accepted by the High Authority on September 6, 2016:[8]

Validated candidates

Name, ageDetails and notes
Jean-François Copé width = 80%

Copé announced his candidacy on 14 February 2016 at 20:00 on France 2 – while Nicolas Sarkozy was speaking on TF1 – a few weeks after the release of his book The French Start. After nearly 18 months of media silence, Copé said he was "ready" to return to center stage. Copé was quoted on France 2 as "being very hypocritical to delay unnecessarily", even when a judge's decision on the "sad Bygmalion case" arrived the previous Monday. Copé had been placed under attended witness status and thus escaped indictment.

François Fillon[9] width = 80%

Fillon announced his candidacy in April 2015 by declaring that he is "a candidate to bring a project of rupture and progress around an ambition to make France the first European power in ten years". He announced in January 2016 that he would leave politics if he fails to win the primary. Fillon had also committed, as Alain Juppé did, to serve only one term if he was elected President in 2017.

Alain Juppé[10] width = 80%

Juppé announced his intention to contest the 2016 Republicans (formerly UMP) internal election, which decided who will be the candidate of the right-wing for the 2017 presidential election, on 20 August 2014. The most popular politician in France, he is described by The Daily Telegraph as "a consensual conservative seen as less divisive than Nicolas Sarkozy".[11] [12]

Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet[13] width=80%

Kosciusko-Morizet declared her candidacy on 8 March 2016, on the occasion of the International Women's Day, stating that "I think we can finally change politics. I am a candidate to give everyone, every French person, control of their life."

Bruno Le Maire width=80%

Le Maire officially declared his candidacy at a public meeting in Vesoul on 23 February 2016. "My decision is simple, strong, unwavering. Yes, I am a candidate for president," he said on stage. Le Maire had earlier left little doubt about his participation in the primary. "If I told you that I was not getting ready for the primary, I would be lying. And I do not like to lie," he had said on RTL 4 in January. In the wake of his candidacy, Bruno Le Maire has also released a book about his vision of France entitled Do Not Resign. He already enjoyed broad support, including that of Michel Barnier and Yves Jégo, even as the UDI had not yet decided on its participation in the primary.

Jean-Frédéric Poisson width=80%

As head of the Christian Democratic Party, he was their candidate in the centre-right's 2016 primary.

Nicolas Sarkozy width = 80%

Sarkozy announced his intention to contest the primary on 22 August 2016.[14]

Withdrawn candidates

Opinion polls

First round

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample size
bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC
Fillon
UMP/LR
Juppé
UMP/LR
Kosciusko-Morizet
UMP/LR
Le Maire
UMP/LR
Sarkozy
UMP/LR
Others/Undecided
Le Parisien/i-Télé-CQFD5–6 Jun 201498813%19%28%40%
Ifop13–16 Apr 20157045%33%12%42%8%
Ifop4–9 Jun 20151,8797%42%13%33%5%
Ipsos25–31 Aug 201551911%40%11%34%4%
Ifop3–4 Sep 20151,0799%30%3%21%37%
Ifop25 Sep–9 Oct 20155,2208%37%2%6%37%10%
BVA/Presse Régionale6–15 Oct 201511,2448%31%2%11%38%10%
Ifop9 Oct-16 Nov 20155,2749%35%2%9%34%11%
Opinion Way26 Oct–17 Nov 201540021%29%10%11%29%
Ifop16 Dec 2015–7 Jan 20165,98912%38%4%12%29%5%
Ifop11-22 Jan 20164,97412%41%2%10%30%5%
Ipsos-Sopra Steria22-31 Jan 20161,3339%44%2%11%32%2%
BVA/Orange et iTélé11-12 Feb 20161,05311%47%9%10%11%12%
Ifop1-15 Feb 20164,96711%39%3%11%32%7%
Elabe/BFMTV16 Feb-16 Mar 20165,00111%41%4%13%23%8%
Odoxa/Le Parisien18 Feb-10 Mar 20164,0369%41%3%16%23%8%
Ifop23 Feb-18 Mar 20168,0908%38%3%16%27%8%
Ifop29 Mar-14 Apr 20165,77515%37%3%12%26%7%
Odoxa/Le Parisien17 Mar-29 Apr 20161,6609%41%4%15%24%7%
Ifop28 Apr-20 May 20168,60412%35%4%13%27%9%
Opinion Way19–23 May 201680813%39%3%13%27%5%
Odoxa9 Jun 20161,0339%28%7%54%2%
Ifop25 May–17 Jun 20161,03711%35%4%13%28%9%
Ipsos17–26 Jun 20161,2349%38%2%16%30%5%
Elabe17 May–29 Jun 201662411%39%2%12%29%7%
Harris Interactive 12-14 Sept 201656310%37%3%9%37%4%
Ipsos9–18 Sept 20161,21610%37%4%13%33%3%
Ifop22 Aug–5 Sept 201662010%35%4%10%33%8%
BVA13–20 Sept 201677411%38%4%11%34%2%
Ifop9–26 Sept 201652712%35%4%13%31%5%
Kantar Sofres21-26 Sept 20165618%39%4%13%33%3%
Harris Interactive 3–5 Oct 201665112%39%3%8%35%3%
Odoxa1 Sept–6 Oct 201668011%39%4.5%12%31%2.5%
Kantar Sofres30 Sept–6 Oct 201658611%42%4%11%28%4%
Odoxa10–20 Oct 201662111%43%4%13%26%3%
Harris Interactive 7–9 Nov 201697517%39%4%7%31%2%
Kantar Sofres 7–10 Nov 201671418%36%4%9%30%3%
Odoxa9–11 Nov 201655420%36%5%8%26%5%
BVA3–13 Nov 201692818%37%4%9%29%3%
Ipsos Sopra-Steria8–13 Nov 20161,33722%36%3%7%29%3%
Ifop31 Oct–14 Nov 201664720%33%3%8%30%6%
Elabe9–15 Nov 201668021%34%5%7%30%3%
Opinion Way13–15 Nov 201682825%33%4%9%25%4%
Ifop10–17 Nov 201674427%31%2%7%30%3%
Ipsos18 Nov 201680730%29%3.5%5%29%3.5%
First round results20 November 201644.1%28.6%2.6%2.4%20.7%1.8%

Second round

Polls conducted prior to the first round

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample size
bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC
Juppé
LR
Fillon
LR
Undecided
Odoxa/Le Parisien17 Mar-29 Apr 20161,66072%28%
Opinion Way19–23 May 201680866%34%

Polls conducted after the first round

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample size
bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC
Juppé
LR
Fillon
LR
Undecided
Opinion Way20 Nov 20163,09544%56%
Ifop-Fiducial21-23 Nov 20166,90135%65%
Second round results27 November 201633.5%66.5%

Hypothetical Polling

Juppé-Sarkozy

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample size
bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC
Juppé
UMP/LR
Sarkozy
UMP/LR
Undecided
Ipsos25–31 Aug 201551956%44%
Ifop3–4 Sep 20151,07933%54%13%
Ifop25 Sep–9 Oct 20155,22030%54%16%
BVA/Presse Régionale6–15 Oct 201511,24448%52%
Ifop11-22 Jan 20164,97462%38%
BVA/Orange et iTélé11-12 Feb 20161,05359%41%
Ifop1-15 Feb 20164,96759%41%
Elabe/BFMTV16 Feb-16 Mar 20165,00164%36%
Ifop23 Feb-18 Mar 20168,09062%38%
Ifop29 Mar-14 Apr 20165,77561%39%
Odoxa/Le Parisien17 Mar-29 Apr 20161,66063%37%
Ifop28 Apr-20 May 20168,60459%41%
Opinion Way19–23 May 201680863%37%
Ifop25 May-17 Jun 20161,03760%40%
Elabe17 May–29 Jun 201662459%41%
Ifop22 Aug–5 Sept 201662054%46%
Harris Interactive 12–14 Sept 201656352%48%
Ipsos9–18 Sept 20161,21656%44%
BVA13–20 Sept 201679856%44%
Ifop9–26 Sept 201652757%43%
Kantar Sofres21–26 Sept 201656159%41%
Harris Interactive 3–5 Oct 201665153%47%
Odoxa1 Sept–6 Oct 201668059.5%40.5%
Kantar Sofres30 Sept–6 Oct 201658662%38%
Odoxa10–20 Oct 201662165%35%
Harris Interactive 7–9 Nov 201697558%42%
Kantar Sofres 7–10 Nov 201671459%41%
Odoxa9–11 Nov 201655458%42%

Juppé-Le Maire

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample size
bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC
Juppé
UMP/LR
Le Maire
UMP/LR
Undecided
Odoxa/Le Parisien17 Mar-29 Apr 20161,66066%34%
Opinion Way19–23 May 201680867%33%

Sarkozy-Le Maire

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample size
bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC
Sarkozy
UMP/LR
Le Maire
UMP/LR
Undecided
Opinion Way19–23 May 201680846%54%

Sarkozy-Fillon

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample size
bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC
Sarkozy
UMP/LR
Fillon
UMP/LR
Undecided
Opinion Way19–23 May 201680847%53%

Le Maire-Fillon

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample size
bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC bgcolor=#0066CC
Le Maire
UMP/LR
Fillon
UMP/LR
Undecided
Opinion Way19–23 May 201680850%50%

Results

In the first round of the primary on November 20, Fillon won an upset victory with 44% of the vote, while Juppé - long held by most opinion polls as the favorite to win the nomination - came in a distant second with 29%.[15] [16] Sarkozy, who was projected to come in second behind Juppé, was eliminated with just under 21% of the vote. In his concession speech, Sarkozy endorsed Fillon and vowed to "embark on a life with more private passions and fewer public passions."[17] This led to some media outlets declaring that "Sarkozy's political career [had] been effectively ended."[18]

In the runoff round, Fillon won by an even larger margin with nearly twice as many votes as Juppé (66.5% to 33.5%). Of the five departments won by Sarkozy in the first round, all but one switched to Fillon in the runoff. Similarly, of the thirteen departments that originally voted for Juppé, nine switched to Fillon in the second round.|- style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;"! rowspan="2" colspan="2" style="text-align:left" | Candidates! rowspan="2" colspan="2" style="text-align:left" | Parties! colspan="2" | 1st round! colspan="2" | 2nd round|- style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;"! width="60" | Votes! width="30" | %! width="60" | Votes! width="30" | %|- style="font-weight:bold"| style="background-color:" || style="text-align:left;" | François Fillon| style="text-align:left;" | The Republicans| LR| | %| | %|-| style="background-color:" || style="text-align:left;" | Alain Juppé| style="text-align:left;" | The Republicans| LR| | %| | %|-| style="background-color:" || style="text-align:left;" | Nicolas Sarkozy| style="text-align:left;" | The Republicans| LR| | %| colspan="2" rowspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9" | |-| style="background-color:" || style="text-align:left;" | Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet| style="text-align:left;" | The Republicans| LR| | %|-| style="background-color:" || style="text-align:left;" | Bruno Le Maire| style="text-align:left;" | The Republicans| LR| | %|-| style="background-color:" || style="text-align:left;" | Jean-Frédéric Poisson| style="text-align:left;" | Christian Democratic Party| PCD| | %|-| style="background-color:" || style="text-align:left;" | Jean-François Copé| style="text-align:left;" | The Republicans| LR| | %|-| colspan="8" style="background-color:#E9E9E9" ||- style="font-weight:bold;"| colspan="4" style="text-align:left" | Total| | 100%| | 100%|-| colspan="8" style="background-color:#E9E9E9" ||-| colspan="4" style="text-align:left" | Valid votes| | %| | %|-| colspan="4" style="text-align:left" | Spoilt and null votes| | %| | %|- style="font-weight:bold;"| colspan="4" style="text-align:left" | Total| | 100%| | 100%|-| colspan="8" style="background-color:#E9E9E9" ||-| colspan="8" style="text-align:left" | Table of results ordered by number of votes received in first round. Official results by High Authority.

Source: First round result Second round result|}

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Primaire Les Républicains 2016 : résultat favorable à Juppé dans les sondages. L'Internaute/La Rédaction. 26 January 2016. 29 January 2016.
  2. Web site: Primaire de la droite et du centre. Haute autorité de la Primaire de la droite et du centre 2016. www.primaire2016.org. 2017-08-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20170205195730/http://www.primaire2016.org/charte. 2017-02-05. dead.
  3. Web site: Primaire de la droite et du centre. Haute autorité de la Primaire de la droite et du centre 2016. www.primaire2016.org. 2017-08-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20170904194246/http://www.primaire2016.org/mineurs/formulaire. 2017-09-04. dead.
  4. Web site: Primaire de la droite et du centre. Haute autorité de la Primaire de la droite et du centre 2016. www.primaire2016.org. 2017-08-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20170607090221/http://www.primaire2016.org/ou-voter/. 2017-06-07. dead.
  5. News: Le projet de charte de la primaire UMP. Goar. Matthieu. 2015-04-02. Le Monde.fr. 2017-08-04. fr. 1950-6244.
  6. News: Les expatriés pourront voter par Internet à la primaire de la droite. RTL.fr. 2017-08-04. fr-FR.
  7. Web site: The 2017 French presidential election: The race has started… and so far it has more candidates than voters. LSE. Lorimer. Marta. 1 June 2016. 9 June 2016.
  8. News: Haute Autorité de la Primaire. Décision – 21 septembre 2016 (HAP 2016-12 D), Liste des candidats à la primaire. 1 December 2016. 21 September 2016. fr. https://web.archive.org/web/20161117213910/http://www.primaire2016.org/upload/default/57e26463a3481_HAP%20-%202016-12%20D%20-%20Liste%20des%20candidats.pdf. 2016-11-17. dead.
  9. Web site: Primaire de l'UMP : Fillon sera candidat "quoi qu'il arrive" . Le Monde . May 9, 2013 . September 8, 2014.
  10. Web site: Inti Laundaro . Alain Juppé Declares Intention to Seek French Presidency in 2017 . The Wall Street Journal . August 20, 2014 . September 8, 2014.
  11. Web site: Ex-PM Juppé announces bid for 2017. France24. 27 June 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150630011010/http://www.france24.com/en/20140820-france-alain-juppe-candidacy-2017-presidential-race-ump/. 30 June 2015. dead. dmy-all.
  12. Web site: Marion Maréchal-Le Pen: the new wonder-girl of France's far-right. The Daily Telegraph. 2 January 2016.
  13. Web site: Big fight for the French Right. Politico Europe. Vinocur. Nicholas. 11 January 2016. 11 January 2016.
  14. Web site: Nicolas Sarkozy declares candidacy for French presidential election . The Guardian. 22 August 2016.
  15. Web site: Nicolas Sarkozy crashes out of French Right-wing primaries as Thatcherite Francois Fillon takes surprise lead. The Telegraph. Henry Samuel. November 20, 2016. November 20, 2016.
  16. Web site: Nicolas Sarkozy, in Upset, Is Knocked Out of Race for French Presidency. Wall Street Journal. William Horobin. November 20, 2016. November 21, 2016.
  17. Web site: France Sarkozy: Ex-president exits after defeat. BBC. November 21, 2016. November 21, 2016.
  18. Web site: Sarkozy defeated in primary for French right's presidential candidate. The Guardian. Angelique Chrisafis. November 20, 2016. November 20, 2016.