The outgoing bonus worked well. For the three partial legislative elections that took place this Sunday, the outgoing candidates came out on top in a first round marked by high abstention. The second round of these elections, provoked after invalidation decisions by the Constitutional Council, will take place next Sunday.
Charente: a Renaissance duel – Nupes in the second round
In the first constituency of Charente, which includes the Angoulême prefecture, the margin is again very tight (42 votes difference) between the candidate of the presidential majority and spokesperson for Horizons Thomas Mesnier (35.54% of votes cast) and the representative of Nupes, the Insoumis René Pilato (35.36%), after a first round marked by a very low turnout (28.76%).
The key will be the carryover of the RN votes, which gathered 14.8% of the vote on Sunday. In the second round last year, the emergency doctor was ahead of Mr. Pilato by only 24 ballots.
Marne: the RN candidate in the lead, Renaissance climbs to the second round
In the second constituency of Marne, comprising several cantons of Reims, outgoing RN deputy Anne-Sophie Frigout comes in first place with 34.80% of the vote (+12.82 points compared to the first round in June). The candidate of the united presidential majority Laure Miller is also progressing, and manages to climb to the second round, with 30.0% of the vote (+8.77 points).
In June, she was eliminated in the first round, her electorate being torn between her and former MP Aina Kuric (various centre), who was running as a dissenter, and has since withdrawn.
Arrived third (16.17%), the candidate of the Nupes Victorien Pâté is eliminated. In this constituency, 76% of voters did not go to the polls.
Pas-de-Calais: the Nupes facing the RN
In the 8th constituency of Pas-de-Calais (Saint-Omer and surroundings) the outgoing deputy Bertrand Petit – related to the PS and invested by Nupes, after having presented a dissident candidacy in June – comes very largely in the lead with 46.14% votes (+23.60 points compared to June), against the candidate RN Auguste Evrard (23.97, -3.49 points), in a first round also marked by a strong abstention (70.39%). The presidential majority candidate, Benoît Potterie (Horizons) is eliminated, with a score of 21.17%.
In June, the voices of the left were divided in the first round between Mr. Petit (22.54%) and the former candidate Nupes Simon Roussel (15.75%), who this time did not present his candidacy .
In the second round, the socialist had won with 55.82% of the vote, allowing the left to reconquer this former stronghold, in a department where six out of twelve constituencies had been won by the RN. His election had been invalidated because of the choice of his substitute René Hocq, who was ineligible because he was already replacing a senator.