1936 French legislative election Registered 11,768,491 Turnout 84.45%
Majority party
Minority party
Third party
File:Léon Blum 1937.jpg
File:Édouard Daladier.jpg
File:Louis Marin.jpg
Leader
Léon Blum
Édouard Daladier
Louis Marin
Party
SFIO
PRRRS
Republican Union
Alliance
Popular Front
Popular Front
National Front
Last election
129 seats
157 seats
76 seats
Seats won
149
111
128
Seat change
Increase 20
Decrease 46
Increase 52
Popular vote
1,955,306
1,422,611
1,666,004
Percentage
19.86%
14.45%
16.92%
Swing
Decrease 0.65pp
Decrease 4.73pp
Increase 4.04pp
Fourth party
Fifth party
File:Pierre-Étienne Flandin 1935.jpg
File:Thorez.jpg
Leader
Pierre-Étienne Flandin
Maurice Thorez
Party
Republican Left
PCF
Alliance
National Front
Popular Front
Last election
72 seats
12 seats
Seats won
95
72
Seat change
Increase 23
Increase 60
Popular vote
2,536,294
1,502,404
Percentage
25.76%
15.26%
Swing
Increase 12.19pp
Increase 6.94pp
File:Ce sont les soviets qui tirent les ficelles du Front populaire.jpeg Political poster (1936) claiming that the Popular Front was under Soviet control.
Legislative elections were held in France on 26 April and 3 May 1936, the last elections before World War II . The number of candidates set a record, with 4,807 running for election to the Chamber of Deputies . In the Seine Department alone, there were 1,402 candidates.[ 1]
The Popular Front , composed of the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO), the Radical-Socialists , the French Section of the Communist International (SFIC), and miscellaneous leftists, won power from the broad Republican coalitions that had governed since the 6 February 1934 crisis . Léon Blum became president of the council.
Results
File:FP1936.png Vote strength for the Popular Front
The SFIC, predecessor of the Communist Party , more than tripled its seats total from 11 SFIC and 9 Union Ouvrière deputies in 1932 to 72 in 1936. The party made gains in industrialized suburbs and working-class areas of major cities. They also progressed in rural central and southwestern France (e.g., Dordogne , Lot-et-Garonne)
The Radicals lost votes to the SFIO and SFIC, but also to the right.
The SFIO declined slightly. In working-class suburbs, the party declined, but it gained votes in Brittany , to the dismay of the right.
Only 174 seats were elected in the first round, 424 were decided in a run-off. The right fared better in the second round.
Party or alliance Votes % Seats Popular Front French Section of the Workers' International 1,955,306 19.86 149 French Communist Party 1,502,404 15.26 72 Radical Socialist Party 1,422,611 14.45 111 Socialist Republican Union 748,600 7.60 29 Miscellaneous left 28 Total 5,628,921 57.16 389 National Front Republican Left 2,536,294 25.76 95 Republican Union 1,666,004 16.92 128 Total 4,202,298 42.67 223 Others 16,047 0.16 0 Total 9,847,266 100.00 612 Valid votes 9,847,266 99.09 Invalid/blank votes 90,692 0.91 Total votes 9,937,958 100.00 Registered voters/turnout 11,768,491 84.45 Source: Mackie & Rose,[ 2] Nohlen & Stöver,[ 3] Quid
References
External links