Seventh French legislative constituency for citizens abroad

It covers all French citizens living in two countries in Western Europe (Germany and Austria) and fourteen countries in Eastern Europe – specifically, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Kosovo (recognised by France), Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovenia, and Slovakia.

(Europe Écologie–The Greens initially chose Pierrette Stephan-Letondor, with Florian Chiron as her deputy (suppléant).

[8] A resident of Baden-Württemberg, Stephan-Letondor was a radio-journalist for Südwestrundfunk, and a member of the German party Alliance '90/The Greens.

[6] The National Front did not present a candidate of its own, but endorsed Agnès Dejouy, of the small, new far-right party Sovereignty, Independence and Freedoms, which is allied to the National Front as part of the "Marine blue gathering" (rassemblement bleu Marine).

[6] The centre-right Radical Party and the centrist Republican, Ecologist and Social Alliance jointly chose Nicolas Jeanneté, a "cultural entrepreneur" and resident of Germany, as their candidate.

Her deputy was Jean-Marie Langlet[6] The centrist green party Cap 21 chose Bruno Pludermacher, a resident of Munich.

[14] Solidarity and Progress, the French branch of the LaRouche movement, was represented by Elodie Viennot, with Théo Genot as her deputy.

[15] Jean-Claude Wambre, a commercial agent established in Nieder-Olm near Mainz, ran as an independent candidate.

[17] Hyacinthe Muller, a student of economics and music who had been living almost all his life in Germany, stood as an independent candidate, with Raphaëlle Deliancourt as his deputy.

inline
inline
Frédéric Petit, 2019