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1 élections européennes
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2 européen
européen, -enne [øʀɔpeɛ̃, εn]1. adjective2. masculine noun, feminine* * *- éenne øʀɔpeɛ̃, ɛn nom masculin, féminin1) Géographie ( habitant) European* * *øʀɔpeɛ̃, jɛn nm/f Européen, -ne* * *A adj European.( féminin européenne) [ørɔpeɛ̃, ɛn] adjectif————————————————européennes nom féminin pluriel -
3 Front National
, FNExtreme right-wing and xenophobic political party, founded by Jean Marie Le Pen in 1972. The party is strongly Eurosceptic, anti-immigration, and traditionalist; party members, including Le Pen, have been prosecuted for racist remarks, negationism, and the downplaying of war-crimes.The Front National has been a significant force in French politics since the 1980's, particularly where they have been aided by proportional representation. They won 10 seats at the European Parliament in 1984, and then 35 seats in the French general election of 1986, after François Mitterrand introduced a degree of proportional representation into the voting system. PR was quickly dropped again after this, and the FN has never since had more than a single Député. However, in European elections, where PR has remained, the FN has continued to pick up seats, most recently with 7 in the 2004 election.In 1995, the Front National won municipal elections in three towns in the south of France, Orange, Vitrolles and Marignane, in "triangular" second rounds for which neither the socialists (PS) nor the main conservative party would withdraw their candidates.Perhaps the FN's most visible success was that of its leader, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in the 2002 Presidential election, when he obtained second place in the first round, thus securing a place in the runoff. It is interesting to note that in this second round, which was a massive victory for Jacques Chirac, le Pen took less than 1% more of the vote than in the first round.The high profile of the FN in French politics surprises many foreign observers, but it is not really a surprise in a country with a fragmented party political structure. France's biggest mainstream political parties have a tradition of instrumentalising whatever means possible in order to damage their opponents, and for a long time French left-wing parties have sought to portray the Front National as the natural ally of other conservative parties. Yet by blurring the distinction between this far right party other mainstream conservative parties, they paradoxically helped to legitimise the FN. Mitterrand's introduction of PR into the voting system for general elections in 1984, which propelled the FN into the limelight, was actually intended to stop the mainstream conservative parties from winning. The policy backfired, since the conservatives won anyway, and the FN obtained its own "group" in the French parliament.Currently (2008) the FN is in decline. The party has lost voters to other right-wing parties, and has had to sell off its flagship headquarters building in Neuilly-sur-Seine, in order to pay its debts. See Political Parties in FranceDictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Front National
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4 Le Pen, Jean-Marie
(adj Lepéniste)Born 1928.Founder and long-time leader of the right-wing Front National (FN) (National Front) party. In his youth, le Pen was involved with a number of extreme right-wing youth movements, and enjoyed a reputation as a brawler. A lawyer by training, le Pen served with the Foreign Legion in Algeria during the war for Algerian independence. He was first elected to the French parliament in 1956, at the age of 28, on a right-wing populist ticket. In 1972, his rise to national prominence began after he created the National Front party. Campaigning on an anti-immigration and anti-European Union platform, the FN picked up seats in municipal, regional, parliamentary and European elections. Le Pen himself was elected to the European parliament in 1984; then in 1986 he was re-elected to the French National Assembly, along with 33 other FN deputies, when proportional representation was (briefly) introduced into the election process. Since 1994, he has always been reelected to the European Parliament.Le Pen's most remarkable achievement, however, was in 2002, when, as a candidate in the Presidential election, he scored 16.86% of the vote, becoming one of the two candidates to go through to the second round - where he lost heavily to Jacques Chirac..During his turbulent life, Le Pen has had a number of run-ins with the law, including the following examples and several more. In 1971 he was found guilty of "apologies for war crimes". In 1987 he received the first of several condemnations for inciting racial hatred. In the same year, he caused outrage by sugggesting that the Auschwitz gas chambers were merely "a detail of history". In 1991 he was condemned for "banalising crimes against humanity". In 2008 he was condemned to a suspended prison sentence for apologising for war crimes and denying crimes against humanity.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Le Pen, Jean-Marie
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5 électeur
électeur, -trice [elεktœʀ, tʀis]masculine noun, feminine noun* * *- trice elɛktœʀ, tʀis nom masculin, féminin voter* * *elɛktœʀ, tʀis nm/f (-trice)voter, elector* * *électeur, - trice nm,f voter, elector; les électeurs de l'Ain the electorate ou voters of the Ain; carte d'électeur polling card GB, voter registration card US; ⇒ grand. Électeur A French citizen is entitled to vote in all public elections, if aged 18 or above, unless declared bankrupt or subject to a temporary loss of voting right as part of a court sentence. EU citizens resident in France are also entitled to vote in European elections., électrice [elɛktɶr, tris] nom masculin, nom fémininles électeurs the voters, the electorate -
6 Verts, les
the French Green Party, founded in 1984 from the amalgamation of two ecology parties. The French Green Party has deputies in the National Assembly, Eurodeputies (MEPs), and also a strong presence in local government in France, notably in towns or other authorities where the Greens are allied with the Socialists. As allies of the Socialists, the Greens even had two ministers in the first Jospin government from 1997 to 2002, in particular the most prominent of their leaders, madame Dominique Voynet.The Greens came to prominence in the1990s, when "red-green" alliances with the Socialists in local politics and national politics led to the election of deputies, of a number of Green mayors, and to the appointment of a number of Greens as deputy mayors in many French cities, notably including Paris. After the 2008 municipal elections, the Greens officially controlled 42 municipalities in France; however, their place in the political landscape of France was weaker than it was a decade earlier, and with the environmental issue being seized by most of France's mainstream political parties, the party faced an uncertain future as a force in French politics. However, under the inspiration of Daniel Cohn Bendit, the French Greens surged back in the 2009 european elections, coming third, just a few thousand votes behind the socialist Party.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Verts, les
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7 Aubry, Martine
b.1950Daughter of Jacques Delors, Martine Aubry is a French socialist politician, elected as leader of the Socialist Party (PS) in November 2008 after a fierce contest with her centre-left rival Ségolène Royal. As minister of employment in the Jospin government from 1997 to 2000, Aubry is best known for having introduced the statutory 35-hour working week into French labour law, a move heavily criticized by her political opponents, as having severly damaged France's international competitiveness and thereby boosted unemployment rather than reducing it. Though the Jospin government to which she belonged was committed to getting rid of "cumul des mandats", Aubry in early 2009 was simultaneously first secretary of the Socialist Party, Mayor of Lille, and president of the Lille metropolitan area. As leader of the PS, she has been much criticised from within, firstly for her very narrow margin of victory in the leadership contest (50.04%), secondly for being a "three-day-week" leader of the PS (the rest of the week being devoted to her functions in Lille) and thirdly for leading the party to its worst electoral score, in the 2009 European elections, where the Socialists obtained under 15% of the vote, just a short way in front of the Green party.Since the Strauss-Kahn affair rocked the Socialist party in 2011, Aubry is seen as one of the two main contenders for nomination as the PS's candidate in the French 2012 Presidential election - the other being her predecessor the more social democratic François Hollande.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Aubry, Martine
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8 député
député [depyte]masculine noun• elle a été élue député de Metz she has been elected as deputy or member for Metz━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━577 députés, elected in the « élections législatives » held every five years, make up the lower house of the French parliament (the « Assemblée nationale »). Each député represents a constituency (« circonscription »). Their role is comparable to that of Members of Parliament in Britain and Congressmen and Congresswomen in the United States. → ASSEMBLÉE NATIONALE ÉLECTIONS MAIRE* * *depytenom masculin1) Politique deputyêtre député au Parlement européen — to be a Euro-MP GB ou member of the European Parliament
2) ( envoyé) representative, delegate* * *depyte nm/f député, -e1) (en mission) delegate* * *1 Pol deputy; élu député de Lyon elected (as) deputy for Lyons; député britannique (British) MP; être député au Parlement européen to be a Euro-MP GB ou member of the European Parliament;2 ( envoyé) representative, delegate.ⓘ Député A member of the Assemblée nationale, elected for five years from a constituency within a département. The minimum age is 23, and a député appointed to be a member of the government is replaced by a suppléant.[en Grande-Bretagne] member of Parliamenta. [en Grande-Bretagne] woman MPb. [aux États-Unis] Congresswoman -
9 conseil
conseil [kɔ̃sεj]1. masculine nouna. ( = recommandation) piece of advice• il est de bon conseil he gives good or sound adviceb. ( = profession) consultancy• cabinet or société de conseil firm of consultantsc. ( = personne) consultant (en in)• conseil juridique legal consultant or adviser• conseil en communication communications or media consultantd. ( = assemblée) board2. compounds► conseil d'administration [de société anonyme] board of directors ; [d'hôpital, école] board of governors━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━In France, the « Conseil constitutionnel » is an official body that ensures that the constitution is respected in matters of legislation and during elections. The « Conseil d'État » examines bills before they are submitted to the « Conseil des ministres », a weekly meeting which some or all ministers attend. → ARRONDISSEMENT COMMUNE DÉPARTEMENT RÉGION━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Each « département » of France is run by a Conseil général, whose remit covers transport, housing, secondary schools, social welfare, and cultural and economic development. The council is made up of « conseillers généraux », each of whom represents a « canton » and is elected for a six-year term. Half of the council's members are elected every three years.* * *kɔ̃sɛjnom masculin1) ( avis) advice [U]quelques conseils de prudence — a few words of caution ou warning
2) ( assemblée) council3) ( conseiller) consultant•Phrasal Verbs:* * *kɔ̃sɛj1. nm1) (= avis) piece of advice, advice no pldonner un conseil à qn — to give sb some advice, to give sb a piece of advice
demander conseil à qn — to ask sb's advice, to ask sb for advice
Est-ce que je peux te demander conseil? — Can I ask your advice?, Can I ask you for some advice?
2) (= assemblée) council3) (= expert) consultant2. adj* * *conseil nm1 ( avis) advice ¢; un conseil a piece of advice; des conseils some advice; beaucoup de conseils a lot of advice; donner un conseil à qn to give sb advice; demander conseil à qn to ask (for) sb's advice; suivre/écouter les conseils de qn to follow/to listen to sb's advice; un petit conseil a little piece of advice; un bon conseil a piece of good advice; conseil d'ami piece of friendly advice; un conseil gratuit a piece of free advice; quelques conseils de prudence a few words of caution ou warning; sur les conseils de qn on sb's advice; donner à qn le conseil de faire to advise sb to do; il est de bon conseil he always gives good advice; conseils d'entretien cleaning ou care instructions; ⇒ nuit;3 ( conseiller) consultant; conseil en gestion management consultant.conseil d'administration Entr board of directors; conseil de classe Scol staff meeting (for all those teaching a given class); conseil de discipline Admin, Mil, Scol disciplinary committee; conseil de famille Jur Board of Guardians; ( non officiel) family meeting ou gathering; conseil général Pol council of a French department; conseil de guerre Mil council of war; conseil des ministres Pol gén council of ministers; ( au Royaume-Uni) Cabinet meeting; conseil municipal Pol town council; conseil régional Pol regional council; conseil de révision Mil medical board (assessing fitness for military service); conseil de surveillance Entr supervisory board; conseil d'université Univ senate; Conseil constitutionnel Jur Constitutional Council; Conseil économique et social Pol Economic and Social Council; Conseil d'État Pol Council of State (advising government on administrative matters); Conseil de l'Europe, CE Pol Council of Europe; Conseil de sécurité (de l'ONU) Pol (UN) Security Council; Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel, CSA Radio, TV body which monitors broadcasting; Conseil supérieur de la langue française body responsible for the regulation and advancement of the French language; Conseil supérieur de la magistrature, CSM Jur High Council for the Judiciary.ⓘ Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel The body which appoints the heads of the public broadcasting systems, licenses private contractors, monitors advertising and oversees all matters concerning impartiality, freedom of speech, quality and the promotion of French language and culture in the broadcast media.[kɔ̃sɛj] nom masculina. [d'ami] adviceb. [trucs] tips, hintsagir sur/suivre le conseil de quelqu'un to act on/to take somebody's advicedemander conseil à quelqu'un to ask somebody's advice, to ask somebody for advice(comme adjectif; avec ou sans trait d'union)3. [assemblée] board[réunion] meetinga. [d'une société] board of directorsb. [d'une organisation internationale] governing bodyconseil de cabinet cabinet council, council of ministersle Conseil constitutionnelFrench government body ensuring that laws, elections and referenda are constitutionalle Conseil économique et social consultative body advising the government on economic and social mattersconseil général ≃ county councila. [réunion] war council ≃ War Cabinetb. [tribunal] court-martialle Conseil des ministres ≃ the Cabineta. [en ville] ≃ town council, ≃ local (urban) councilb. [à la campagne] ≃ parish council (UK), ≃ local (rural) council4. ÉDUCATION————————de bon conseil locution adjectivaleun homme de bon conseil a man of sound advice, a wise counsellordemande-lui, elle est de bon conseil ask her, she's good at giving adviceThe Conseil constitutionnel, which ensures that new laws do not contravene the constitution, has nine members appointed for a nine-year period; it also includes the surviving former Presidents of France. The President of the Republic and any member of parliament can refer laws to the Conseil Constitutionnel for scrutiny.The French Council of State acts both as the highest court to which the legal affairs of the state can be referred, and as a consultative body to which bills and rulings are submitted by the government prior to examination by the Conseil des ministres. It has 200 members.The President himself presides over the Conseil des ministres, which traditionally meets every Wednesday morning; strictly speaking, when ministers assemble in the sole presence of the Prime Minister, this is known as le Conseil du cabinet.The body responsible for the administration of a département. Members are elected for a six-year term, with one councillor per canton, and are headed by the président du conseil général.The committee body for the administration of a région. Members are elected for a six-year term and are headed by the président du conseil régional. They decide on matters of planning, construction, regional development and education.This state body advises on the appointment of members of the magistrature, and on specific points of law concerning the judiciary. It is also consulted when the president wishes to exercise his official pardon. It has ten members: the Minister of Justice and nine others appointed by the President of the Republic.The town council is elected during the municipales (local elections). Elected members, or conseillers municipaux, oversee the administration of a commune in conjunction with the mayor.Demander conseilWhat should I do? Qu'est-ce que je dois faire ?What would you do, if you were me? Qu'est-ce que tu ferais si tu étais moi ?What would you do in my place? Qu'est-ce que tu ferais à ma place ?Do you think I should tell him? Tu crois que je devrais le lui dire ?I could do with ou I need some advice. J'aurais besoin d'un conseilDonner un conseilWhy don't you (just) tell her? Pourquoi ne pas le lui dire (carrément) ?Take my advice and say nothing to her. Je te conseille de ne rien lui direIf I were you, I'd phone him. Si j'étais toi, je l'appelleraisIf you ask me, I think you should resign. Si tu veux mon avis, je pense que tu devrais démissionnerPerhaps ou Maybe you should warn him. Peut-être que tu devrais le prévenirI'd think twice about going. Je réfléchirais à deux fois avant d'y allerYou could always try writing to him. Ce serait peut-être pas mal de lui écrireIt might be better to do it yourself. Ce serait peut-être mieux que tu le fasses toi-mêmeNow listen to me: you really must go and see a doctor. Écoute, il faut absolument que tu ailles voir un médecinIf you want my advice, you'll pretend it never happened. Si tu veux mon avis, fais comme si rien ne s'était passéI hope you won't take this the wrong way, but... Ne le prends pas mal, mais...It's not really any of my business, but... Je sais que ça ne me regarde pas, mais... -
10 assemblée
assemblée [asɑ̃ble]feminine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━The term Assemblée nationale has been used to refer to the lower house of the French parliament since 1946, though the old term « la Chambre des députés » is sometimes still used. Its members are elected in the « élections législatives » for a five-year term. It has similar legislative powers to the House of Commons in Britain and the House of Representatives in the United States. Sittings of the Assemblée nationale are public, and take place in a semicircular amphitheatre (l'Hémicycle) in the Palais Bourbon. → DÉPUTÉ ÉLECTION* * *asɑ̃ble1) ( foule) gathering; Religion2) ( réunion convoquée) meeting3) Politique ( groupe élu) assembly•Phrasal Verbs:* * *asɑ̃ble nf1) (= réunion) meeting2) (= public, assistance) gathering3) POLITIQUE assemblyl'Assemblée nationale — the National Assembly (of France)
4) RELIGION* * *assemblée nf1 ( foule) gathering; Relig assemblée (de fidèles) congregation; une grande or nombreuse assemblée a large gathering; à la fureur de l'assemblée to the fury of those present;2 ( réunion convoquée) meeting; se réunir en assemblée to assemble for a meeting; convoquer une assemblée générale/extraordinaire to call a general/an extraordinary meeting;l'Assemblée européenne the European Assembly; assemblée générale, AG general meeting; assemblée générale ordinaire ordinary general meeting; assemblée générale extraordinaire extraordinary general meeting; l'Assemblée nationale the French National Assembly.ⓘ Assemblée nationale The lower house of the French parliament, in which 577 députés are elected for a five-year term. A member, who must be at least 23 years old, has to be elected by at least 50% of the votes cast and, if necessary, a second round of voting is held to ensure this. Party affiliation is indicated by a député's allocation to a seat within a left-right gradation in the semi-circular chamber. The Assemblée nationale passes laws, votes on the Budget, and questions ministers (who cannot be députés).[asɑ̃ble] nom féminin2. [réunion] meetingassemblée générale/annuelle general/annual meetingassemblée (générale) ordinaire/extraordinaire ordinary/extraordinary (general) meeting3. POLITIQUE [élus]assemblée fédérale [en Suisse] (Swiss) federal assembly4. [bâtiment]l'Assemblée ≃ the HouseThe National Assembly is the lower house of the French Parliaments. Its members (the députés) are elected in the élections législatives held every five years. -
11 parité
parité [paʀite]feminine noun* * *The law of parité, passed in early 2000, stipulates that political parties should put forward an equal number of male and female candidates at all elections, from municipal to European levels. Parties failing to comply are subject to financial penalties which take the form of a reduction in their public funding. The law however only applies to communes with over 3500 inhabitants* * *paʀite nf1) (parité hommes-femmes) male-female parity, equal numbers of men and womenla parité hommes-femmes — male-female parity, equal numbers of men and women
2) ÉCONOMIE parity* * *parité nf2 ( en politique) male-female parity.parité du change parity of exchange.ⓘ Parité The law of parité, passed in early 2000, stipulates that political parties should put forward an equal number of male and female candidates at all elections, from municipal to European levels. Parties failing to comply are subject to financial penalties which take the form of a reduction in their public funding. The law however only applies to communes with over 3500 inhabitants.[parite] nom féminin1. [concordance - entre des rémunérations] parity, equality ; [ - entre des monnaies, des prix] parity ; [ - entre des concepts] comparability -
12 succès
succès [syksε]masculine noun• cette pièce a eu un grand succès or beaucoup de succès the play was a great success► à succès [auteur, roman, chanson] successful* * *syksɛnom masculin invariable successvotre succès aux élections/à l'école — your success in the elections/at school
avoir du succès, être un succès — [produit, livre, opération] to be a success ( auprès de with); [disque, chanson] to be a hit ( auprès de with)
avoir du succès — [artiste] to be a success
avoir du succès auprès de quelqu'un — [personne] to be a hit with somebody
faire le succès de quelqu'un/quelque chose — to make somebody/something successful
à succès — [acteur, pièce, film] successful
* * *syksɛ nm1) (= réussite) successavoir du succès — to be a success, to be successful
2) (= chanson) hit* * *succès nm inv success; une série de succès a string of successes; succès scolaires/universitaires scholastic/academic success; un nouveau succès diplomatique pour another diplomatic success for; votre succès aux élections/à l'école/en politique your success in the elections/at school/in politics; le succès du mois this month's big success ou hit; avoir du succès, être un succès [produit, livre, opération, formule] to be a success (auprès de with); [disque, chanson] to be a hit (auprès de with); avoir du succès [artiste] to be a success; avoir du succès auprès de qn [personne] to be a favouriteGB ou a hit with sb; avoir un succès fou [personne, produit] to be a big hit (auprès de with); leur proposition n'a eu aucun succès their proposal met with no success; connaître un grand succès to be a great success; remporter un succès to score a success; remporter des succès to achieve success; faire le succès de qn/qch to make sb/sth successful; à succès [acteur, pièce, film] successful; auteur à succès best-selling author; avec succès successfully; avec un égal succès equally successfully; sans succès unsuccessfully; sans grand succès without much success.succès d'estime succès d'estime, critical though not popular acclaim.[syksɛ] nom masculin1. [heureux résultat, réussite personnelle] successêtre couronné de succès to be crowned with success, to be successful2. [exploit, performance] success[en amour] conquestaller ou voler de succès en succès to go from one success to anothera. [œuvre, artiste] to be successfulb. [suggestion] to be very well receivedavoir du succès auprès de quelqu'un: sa pièce a eu beaucoup de succès auprès des critiques mais peu auprès du public his play was acclaimed by the critics but the public was less than enthusiasticil a beaucoup de succès auprès des femmes/jeunes he's very popular with women/young peopleeh bien, il a du succès, mon soufflé! well, I see you like my soufflé ou my soufflé appears to be a success!4. [chanson] hit[film, pièce] (box-office) hit ou successsuccès d'estime critical acclaim, succès d'estimel'ouvrage a été un succès d'estime the book was well-received by the critics (but not by the public)sa comédie musicale a été un immense succès commercial his musical was a box office hit ou a runaway successa. [film] a big successb. [livre] a best-sellerc. [disque] a hità succès locution adjectivale[auteur, chanteur] popularchanson à succès hit record ou songromancier à succès popular ou best-selling novelistavec succès locution adverbialesans succès locution adverbiale -
13 commune
commune2 [kɔmyn]feminine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━The commune is the smallest administrative subdivision in France. There are 38,000 communes, 90% of them having less than 2,000 inhabitants. Several small villages may make up a single commune. Each commune is administered by a « maire », who is elected by the « conseil municipal ». The inhabitants of the commune vote for the « conseil municipal » in the « élections municipales ». → ARRONDISSEMENT CANTON DÉPARTEMENT ÉLECTIONS MAIRE* * *The smallest administrative unit, headed by a maire and a conseil municipal. Each village, town and city is a commune, of which there are 36,000 nationwide* * *kɔmyn1. nfADMINISTRATION commune, district, (urbaine) borough2. adj fSee:* * *[kɔmyn] féminin→ link=commun commun————————[kɔmyn] nom féminin1. [agglomération, ADMINISTRATION] communea. [en ville] ≃ the urban districtb. [à la campagne] ≃ the rural district2. [habitants]a. [en ville] people who live within the urban districtb. [à la campagne] people who live within the rural district3. [administrateurs]4. HISTOIRE5. [en Grande-Bretagne]A commune is an administrative district in France. There are 38,000 communes, some with less than 25 inhabitants. Each commune has an elected mayor and a town council.A revolutionary government set up in Paris from March 18th to May 28th 1871 after the Prussian siege was lifted. It was brutally put down by soldiers sent in by the Thiers government in Versailles and remains an important landmark in the history of European socialism. -
14 échéance
échéance [e∫eɑ̃s]1. feminine nouna. ( = date limite) [de délai] expiry date ; [d'emprunt] redemption date ; [de loyer] date of payment ; [de facture, dette] due dateb. ( = règlement à effectuer) faire face à ses échéances to meet one's financial obligationsc. ( = laps de temps) term2. compounds* * *eʃeɑ̃s1) ( date d'exigibilité) (de dette, facture) due date; (d'action, assurance) maturity date; ( d'emprunt) redemption datearriver à échéance — [emprunt] to fall due; [assurance, placement] to mature
2) ( date d'expiration) expiry date3) ( délai) currencyà longue/brève échéance — [bon, prévision] long-/short-term (avant n); [renforcer, changer] in the long/short term
4) ( somme due) ( de facture) payment; ( d'emprunt) repayment5) ( d'événement) date; ( date limite) deadlineéchéance électorale — polling GB ou election day
* * *eʃeɑ̃s nf1) (= date) [paiement] settlement date, (= date butoir) deadlineà brève échéance (projets) — short-term, [se produire, compter faire] in the short term
à longue échéance (projets) — long-term, [se produire, compter faire] in the long term
2) (= somme due) payment* * *échéance nf1 Fin, Comm ( date d'exigibilité) (de dette, facture, loyer, quittance, traite) due date; (d'action, assurance, de bon) maturity date; ( d'emprunt) redemption date; payer avant l'échéance to pay before the due date; payable à (l')échéance payable when due; il attend toujours l'échéance pour payer son loyer he never pays his rent until it is due; échéance fin courant due at the end of the month; arriver or venir à échéance [loyer, traite, emprunt] to fall due; [assurance, placement] to mature;2 ( date d'expiration) expiry date; arriver or venir à échéance to expire;3 ( délai) currency; d'une échéance de 2 mois with a currency of 2 months; à longue/brève échéance [bon, prévision] long-/short-term; [renforcer, changer] in the long/short term; la loi devrait être votée à brève échéance the law should be passed shortly; à plus ou moins brève échéance sooner or later;4 ( somme due) (de facture, loyer) payment; (d'emprunt, de dette) repayment; l'échéance est de 800 euros the payment due is 800 euros; payer ses échéances to make one's payments; faire face à de lourdes échéance to have a lot of payments to make; l'échéance de fin de trimestre the end of term payment;5 (d'événement, de changement) date; ( date limite) deadline; l'échéance de la mort the advent of death; échéance électorale polling GB ou election day; échéance européenne/présidentielle European/presidential elections.[eʃeɑ̃s] nom féminin1. [date - de paiement] date of payment ; [ - de maturité] date of maturity ; [ - de péremption] expiry date2. [somme d'argent] financial commitment3. [moment] termnous sommes à trois mois de l'échéance électorale there are three months to go before the date set for the electionà brève échéance locution adjectivale,à courte échéance locution adjectivaleà brève échéance locution adverbiale,à courte échéance locution adverbialeà longue échéance locution adjectivaleà longue échéance locution adverbiale -
15 Cresson, Edith
(born 1934)Prime minister of France 1991-1992. The first (and only) woman to have been appointed Prime minister of France, Edith Cresson is also the shortest-serving prime minister of the Fifth Republic. As prime minister, she rapidly lost popularity, and led the Socialists to a resounding defeat in the 1992 regional elections. She was later appointed European commissioner, but resigned four years later amid allegations of corruption directed against her personally, and against the Santer commission, of which she was a member. In 2006, the European court of Justice found her guilty of favouritism during her time in office.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Cresson, Edith
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16 Extremism
Compared to most of its European neighbours, France is a country with a surprising level of tolerance of extremism. For instance, in the first round of the 2002 Presidential elections, virtually a third of all votes cast went to an extremist candidate in the first round of voting, on a turnout of 71% of the electorate. Almost 20% of votes went to the extreme right-wing Front National or ex-FN candidates, and 13.81% was split among four trotskyist or communist candidates. While this can be seen in part as a form of protest vote, or lack of confidence in mainstream political parties, it also illustrates the degree to which France remains a polarised society.Extremism has long historic roots in France, going back to absolutism and the collaboration of the Vichy régime on the one hand, and the excesses of the French Revolution on the other. However its current vigour can also be attributed to the fact that mainstream political parties in modern France, on the left and on the right, have done their bit to strenghten the position of extremist parties. Conservative parties have a long history of assimilating centre-left and socialist parties with the Communists and other far-left parties, while the Socialists have persistently sought to make political capital by portraying the mainstream conservative parties as the natural bedfellows of the far right. The paradoxical result has been to give credence and respectability to extremist parties and leaders such as Jean Marie Le Pen of the National Front, or Arlette Laguiller of Lutte Ouvrière.Furthermore, in their keenness to demonstrate even-handedness, French television stations and the media have persistently given coverage to charismatic politicians of the left and the right, turning people such as Le Pen, Laguiller or more recently Olivier Besancenot, into popular chat-show guests.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Extremism
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