[4] A decree of 20 December 1852 reinstated the elder Adolphe Cicéron as notary in Le Moule.
[2] Ciceron was reelected in the triennial renewal of the senate on 4 January 1903, again in the first round, by 189 votes against 95 for his opponent.
On 5 July 1910 he protested against the pressure the administration had exerted during the Guadeloupe legislative elections, and opposed sending a cruiser to the island.
He was rapporteur of the colonial budget for 1911, and demanded equality in exchange of products with metropolitan France and improvements in customs arrangements, agricultural credits and port facilities.
[2] Ciceron claimed that there had been electoral corruption by an unknown person, and said that Alexandre Saverdat, general councillor and agent of Hégésippe Légitimus, had received 50,000 francs by telegraph on 6 January 1912.