Regional Council of Centre-Val de Loire explained

Regional Council of Centre-Val de Loire
Native Name:Conseil régional du Centre-Val de Loire
Native Name Lang:French
Leader1:François Bonneau, (PS)
Leader1 Type:President
Leader1 Term:since 7 September 2007
Members:77
Chambers:1
House Type:Regional council
Last Election1:20 and 27 June 2021
Next Election1:2028
Structure1:CVDL G Parliament 2021.svg
Structure1 Res:220px
Structure1 Alt:Current composition of the regional council of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
Political Groups1:Majority (42)

Opposition (35)

The Regional Council of Centre-Val de Loire (French: conseil régional du Centre-Val de Loire) is a deliberative assembly composed of 77 councillors, elected to six-year terms. As a whole, the body represents the region of Centre-Val de Loire, France. The current president of the council is François Bonneau of the Socialist Party (PS).[1] A position he has held since 7 September 2007 and the resignation of fellow party member Michel Sapin. The regional council meets at the hôtel de région in Orléans, Loiret department. The building is located at 9, rue Saint-Pierre Lentin.

Composition

Allocation of seats

Council seats are allocated by department, as follows:

Political groups

The current council is composed of six political groups:[2]

Executive

Presidents

The current council president is François Bonneau of the Socialist Party (PS), first elected to the position in 2007.

List of previous council presidents!President!Party!Term start!Term end!Notes
Region Centre (1974—2015)
Raymond BoisdéFNRI19741976
Pierre SudreauMR19761979Changed political affiliation while in office.
UDF
Jean DelaneauUDF-PR19791983
Daniel BernardetUDF198317 March 1985
Maurice DoussetUDF-PR17 March 198515 March 1998
Bernard HarangUDF-DL15 March 1998Resigned after being elected with support of the Front National
Lydie GerbaudRPR15 March 1998Acting as doyenne d'âge
Michel SapinPS15 March 199827 March 2000Resigned upon entry into government.
Jean GermainPS27 March 2000Acting as 1st Vice-President.
Alain RafesthainPS27 March 20002 April 2004
Michel SapinPS2 April 20047 September 2007Resigned upon being elected to the National Assembly.
Jean GermainPS7 September 2007Acting as 1st Vice-President.
François BonneauPS7 September 200717 January 2015
Region Centre-Val de Loire (2015—)
François BonneauPS17 January 2015Present

Vice-presidents

Currently, the regional council executive is also composed of 13 vice presidents.

!Title!Name!Party!Delegate for!Other mandates!Department
1st vice presidentMarc GricourtPSFinance, European funds, and personnelMayor of BloisLoir-et-Cher
2nd vice presidentCathy Munsch-MassetPSEducation and apprentenshipIndre-et-Loire
3rd vice presidentBenoît FaucheuxEÉLVEnvironment and energy transitionIndre-et-Loire
4th vice presidentIsabelle GaudronPSProfessional development, insertion, and orientation1st deputy mayor of AmboiseIndre-et-Loire
5th vice presidentHarold HuwartPRGEconomic development, social and solidarity economic and agricultureMunicipal councillor of Nogent-le-RotrouEure-et-Loir
6th vice presidentAnne LeclercqPSHealth & social training and health1st deputy mayor of Ouzouer-sur-TrézéeLoiret
7th vice presidentDominique RoulletPSRegional planning and digital governance1st deputy mayor of IssoudunIndre
8th vice presidentAgnès SinsoulierPSCultureCher
9th vice presidentPhilippe FourniéPSTransportation and intermodalityDeputy mayor of VierzonCher
10th vice presidentAnne BesnierPSHigher education and researchVice president of the Communauté de communes des Loges, municipal councillor of Fay-aux-Loges, deputy senator for Jean-Pierre SueurLoiret
11th vice presidentCharles FournierEÉLVDemocracy, citizen initiatives, rural development, cooperation, and equalityLoir-et-Cher
12th vice presidentChristelle de CrémiersEÉLVTourism, terroirs, and foodOpposition municipal councillor of GienLoiret
13th vice presidentMohamed MoulayPSSportsMunicipal councillor of Joué-lès-ToursIndre-et-Loire

Notes and References

  1. Web site: L'exécutif Région Centre-Val de Loire. www.regioncentre-valdeloire.fr. 2020-04-30.
  2. Web site: Expression des groupes politiques Région Centre-Val de Loire. www.regioncentre-valdeloire.fr. 2020-04-30.