Massif-central–Centre (European Parliament constituency)

For elections in the European Union, Massif central–Centre is a European Parliament constituency.

Massif central–Centre
European Parliament constituency
Location among the 2014 constituencies
Shown within France
Member stateFrance
Created2004
MEPs6 (2004–2009)
5 (2009–present)
Sources

It consists of the region of Centre-Val de Loire[1] and the former regions of Auvergne,[2] and Limousin.[3]

Results

Brackets indicate the number of votes per seat won.

2009

For the 2009 election, five MEPs were elected from the constituency:[4]

European Election 2009: Massif-Central Centre
List Candidates Votes % ±
UMP Jean-Pierre Audy
Sophie Briard-Auconie
Brice Hortefeux[5]
382,632
(127,544)
28.51
PS Henri Weber 238,806 17.79
EE Jean-Paul Besset 182,311 13.58
MoDem None 109,369 8.15
FG None 108,194 8.06
NPA None 73,162 5.45
FN None 68,665 5.12
Libertas None 65,718 4.90
AEI None 46,351 3.45
Parti de la France None 25,294 1.88
DLR None 19,231 1.43
LO None 18,841 1.40
Eŭropo Demokratio Esperanto None 2,633 0.20
Newropeans None 230 0.02
Union des gens None 229 0.02
AR None 228 0.02
Communists None 185 0.01
Humanist Party None 97 0.01
Rassemblement pour l'initiative citoyenn None 49 0.00
Programme contre la précarité et le sexisme None 24 0.00
Turnout 1,422,747 42.57

2004

European Election 2004: Massif Central-Centre
List Candidates Votes % ±
PS Catherine Guy-Quint
André Laignel
Bernadette Bourzai
440,249 (146,749.67) 31.23
UMP Brice Hortefeux
Marylène Descamps
287,085 (143,542.5) 20.36
UDF Janelly Fourtou 140,477 9.96
FN None 135,929 9.64
MPF None 93,301 6.62
LV None 88,457 6.27
PCF None 87,654 6.22
EXG None 38,070 2.7
CPNT None 33,995 2.41
La France d'en bas None 25,965 1.84
Rassemblement des Contribuables Français None 15,000 1.06
Workers' Party None 12,809 0.91
MNR None 5,443 0.39
Vivre mieux avec l'Europe None 2,785 0.2
Eŭropo Demokratio Esperanto None 2,159 0.15
AR None 284 0.02
Parti Fédéraliste None 102 0.01
Pôle des Libertés None 57 0.00
Turnout 1,409,821 45.38

Footnotes

  1. The region Centre-Val de Loire was previously named "Centre" before 17 January 2015.
  2. The former region of Auvergne is now part of the region of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes since 1 January 2016.
  3. The former region of Limousin is part of the region of Nouvelle-Aquitaine since 1 January 2016.
  4. "Circonscription Massif-Central Centre". Ministry of the Interior. 11 June 2009. Retrieved 3 July 2009.
  5. Elected, but resigned seat to continue his cabinet tenure. Replaced by the fourth candidate on the UMP list, Catherine Soullie.


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