Participation in the second round of legislative elections in Val-d’Oise was 30.80% at 5 p.m. At the same time, 38.11% of French people went to their polling station. In the department, the participation rate was 43.91% in the first round at the end of the day.
At noon, the participation in Val-d’Oise stood at 10.1%. This is well below the national rate at the same time (18.99%). Val-d’Oise ranks second to last in metropolitan France as a whole, behind Seine-Saint-Denis at 8.88%.
During the first round of legislative elections, at midday, 13.07% of voters had moved to put their ballot in the ballot box. This was already a figure much lower than the national rate at the same time which was 18.43%. It was also significantly less than in the 2017 election. In the middle of the day, the Val-d’Oisiens were then 16.51% to have moved in the first round.
The Val-d’Oisiens are called upon to choose their ten deputies this Sunday. The 736,624 voters of the department are expected in the 811 polling stations, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. The first round did not allow any candidate to be elected. In all, 117 candidates had tried their luck. There are twenty left in the ballot who are still vying for the votes of the Val-d’Oisiens.
The Nupes present in the ten constituencies
This second round opposes the representatives of the New popular, ecological and social union (Nupes) and the candidates of the presidential majority (Together) in nine constituencies. Representatives of the left-wing coalition came out on top almost everywhere. Only the 9th constituency (Gonesse, Goussainville, Luzarches), opposes a candidate of the National Rally, Jean-Baptiste Marly, to a representative of Nupes, Arnaud Le Gall.
In the 2017 legislative elections, the newly created La République en Marche won nine of the ten seats of deputy for Val-d’Oise. Only the eighth where LREM had not presented a candidate remained in the hands of François Pupponi, of the Socialist Party who has since joined the MoDem and the government majority. In the first constituency, the election of Isabelle Muller-Quoy (LREM) was finally invalidated a few months later, and it was Antoine Savignat who allowed the Republicans to return to the Palais-Bourbon.
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