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presidential election

  • 1 élection présidentielle

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > élection présidentielle

  • 2 élection présidentielle

    Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > élection présidentielle

  • 3 élection

    élection [elεksjɔ̃]
    feminine noun
    élection partielle ≈ by-election
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    Presidential elections are held in France every seven years, while legislative elections (for the « députés » who make up the « Assemblée nationale ») take place every five years.
    On a local level the most important elections are the « élections municipales » for the « Conseil municipal » (or the « Conseil d'arrondissement » in Paris, Marseille and Lyon).
    All public elections take place on a Sunday in France, usually in school halls and « mairies ». → CANTON  COMMUNE  DÉPARTEMENT
    * * *
    Public elections are held on Sundays, with a week's delay (two weeks in the élections présidentielles) between first and second rounds if absolute majority is not achieved immediately. Voters, who must present their carte d'électeur and proof of identity, collect slips and in the privacy of the polling booth choose the slip containing the name of their preferred candidate or list and place it in an envelope and then in the polling box or urne
    * * *
    elɛksjɔ̃
    1. nf
    1) POLITIQUE election
    2) (= choix)
    2. élections nfpl
    POLITIQUE election(s)
    * * *
    1 Pol election (à to); se présenter aux élections to stand in the elections GB, to run for office US, to run in the elections; des élections libres free elections; élection présidentielle presidential election; élections primaires/législatives/locales primary/legislative/local elections; élections générales general election; élection partielle by-election GB, off-year election US; le premier tour des élections the first ballot; après son élection after being elected;
    2 ( choix) choice; mon pays d'élection my chosen country.Élection Public elections are held on Sundays, with a week's delay (two weeks in the élections présidentielles) between first and second rounds if absolute majority is not achieved immediately. Voters, who must present their carte d'électeur and proof of identity, collect slips and in the privacy of the polling booth choose the slip containing the name of their preferred candidate or list and place it in an envelope and then in the polling box or urne.
    [elɛksjɔ̃] nom féminin
    1. [procédure] election, polls
    se présenter aux élections to stand in the elections (UK), to run for office ou as a candidate (US)
    élections cantonaleselections held every three years to elect half the members of the Conseil général
    élections sénatorialeselections held every three years to elect one third of the members of the Sénat
    2. [nomination] election
    ————————
    d'élection locution adjectivale
    [choisi - patrie, famille] of one's own choice ou choosing, chosen
    All French citizens aged eighteen or over are entitled to vote in elections, after they have registered on the electoral rolls. Elections usually take place on a Sunday and polling stations are often set up in local schools. Voters go to a booth and put their voting slip in an envelope which is placed in the ballot box ( l'urne) supervised by an assesseur, who then utters the words a voté !

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > élection

  • 4 fam.les présidentielles

    Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > fam.les présidentielles

  • 5 présidentiel

    présidentiel, -ielle [pʀezidɑ̃sjεl]
    adjective
    presidential → ÉLECTIONS
    * * *
    - ielle pʀezidɑ̃sjɛl adjectif presidential
    * * *
    pʀezidɑ̃sjɛl présidentiel, -le
    1. adj
    (élections) presidential
    2. présidentielles nfpl
    presidential elections, presidential election
    * * *
    A adj presidential; l'entourage présidentiel the president's entourage.
    B présidentielles nfpl presidential election (sg).
    ( féminin présidentielle) [prezidɑ̃sjɛl] adjectif
    1. [du président] presidential, president's
    2. [centralisé - régime] presidential
    ————————
    présidentielles nom féminin pluriel
    presidential election ou elections
    Under France's Fifth Republic, the president is elected directly for a renewable five-year term ( le quinquennat). Candidates are usually nominated by the main political parties, but anyone who collects the requisite number of sponsors can run. If no candidate wins the absolute majority in the first round of voting, a runoff between the two frontrunners is held two weeks later.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > présidentiel

  • 6 amnistie

    amnistie [amnisti]
    feminine noun
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    There is an amnistie in France when a new president takes office. Penalties for minor offences (especially parking fines) are waived.
    * * *
    amnisti
    nom féminin amnesty ( en faveur de for)
    * * *
    amnisti nf
    * * *
    amnistie nf amnesty (en faveur de for); loi d'amnistie amnesty law.
    Amnistie It is usual after the election of the Président de la République for an amnesty to be granted in which certain categories of offenders have their penalties reviewed. This can mean suspension of fines, reduced sentences or early release.
    [amnisti] nom féminin
    l'amnistie des contraventionstraditional waiving of parking fines by French president after a presidential election
    Until 2002 parking fines were traditionally waived by the French president immediately after a presidential election. This is known as l'amnistie des contraventions.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > amnistie

  • 7 Jospin, Lionel

       (adj Jospiniste) - born 1937
       Socialist Prime Minister of France from 1997 to 2002. Jospin served as Minister of Education under Prime Minister Michel Rocard from 1988 to 1992; before and after this period, he was first secretary (leader) of the French Socialist party. In 1995, he was selected as socialist candidate in the Presidential election, and was only narrowly defeated in the second round by Jacques Chirac. In 1997, Jospin led the socialists to a decisive victory at the general election, and was subsequently called by Chirac to form a Socialist government.
       Though once a Trotskyist, and reputed as a left-winger, Jospin proved to be a very middle-of-the -road Prime Minister. His government introduced the much maligned principle of the official 35-hour working week, but also oversaw the privatisation of a number of state industries and tax reductions. In 2002, he was beaten into third place by the National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen in the first round of the presidential election.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Jospin, Lionel

  • 8 Chirac, Jacques

       born 1932.
       (adj. Chiraquien)
       Former conservative (Gaullist) President of France, from 1995 to 2007. Chirac's reelection in 2002 was an unexpected twist of fortune, caused by the elimination of the front-runner, socialist Lionel Jospin, pipped into third place in the first round of the election by a surge in the vote for the far right wing leader of the French National Front, Jean Marie Le Pen.Facing Le Pen in the second round, Chirac was reelected with a massive majority in what was in essence a contest between the the extreme right and everyone else. Had the second round of the election been a classic left-right contest, Chirac's re-election would not have been guaranteed.
       Jacques Chirac was a highly ambitious career politician, who worked his way rapidly up the ranks of the Gaullist movement; yet his first steps in politics were actually as a militant for the Communist party, and as a student he sold the communist newspaper l'Humanité on the streets of Paris. After graduating from "Sciences Po", he changed tack, married into Parisian high society, studied at the elite ENA (Ecole Nationale d'Administration), and then began a career in politics, working for the office of the prime minister, Georges Pompidou. In 1976, he was appointed junior minister for employment in the third Pompidou government, and from then after he remained one of the most omnipresent of conservative politicians in France. From Gaullist, he became a supporter of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing during Giscard's 1974 bid for the presidency - against the Gaullist Chaban-Delmas - and was appointed Prime Minister when Giscard won. Two years later, he resigned, complaining that Giscard was cramping his style.
       This was the start of his rise to the top. No longer prime minister, in 1977 he set about building his own power base, or rather his own two power bases, firstly as leader of a new political party, the RPR, created out of the old Gaullist UDR, and secondly by becoming elected Mayor of Paris. In 1981, he challenged Giscard for the presidency, but came third in the first round of the election, which was won by François Mitterrand. By 1986 he was clear leader of the conservative opposition. When the conservatives won the general election of that year, he was appointed prime minister, ushering in the first period of cohabitation (see below) between a president and a government of different political persuasions.
       In 1988, he was again a candidate in the presidential election, and again lost; but with his power base in Paris and in the RPR, he then had seven years in which to prepare his third, and first successful, challenge for the presidency.
       He served two terms as president, the first of seven years, the second of five - though as already stated, his reelection in 2002 was more due to the failure of the Socialist campaign and the surprise presence of Le Pen in the second round, than in his own popularity. It is still rather early to judge the Chirac presidency in a historic perspective, but early appraisals suggest that it will not be remembered as a great period in French history. It was a time during which France dramatically failed to adapt to the changes in the modern world - the end of the Cold War and the challenge of globalisation - and failed to push through the social and economic reforms that were allowing other developed nations such as France, Germany or Spain, to find their place in the new world order.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Chirac, Jacques

  • 9 Front National

    , FN
       Extreme 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 France

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Front National

  • 10 présidentielles

    pʀezidɑ̃sjɛl
    nom féminin pluriel presidential election (sg), presidential elections

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > présidentielles

  • 11 UMP

       Currently (2011) the main conservative political party in France. Initially founded as the Union pour une Majorité Présidentielle, to support the candidacy of Jacques chirac in the 2002 presidential election, the name was later changed to Union pour un Mouvement Populaire. In 2004, Nicolas Sarkozy was elected chairman of the party, a position from which he was able to launch his successful bid for the presidency. See Political Parties in France. After his successful presidential bid, Sarkozy relinquished his role as president of the UMP. Today the UMP has no president, but a secretary general, Jean-François Copé.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > UMP

  • 12 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

  • 13 Sarkozy, Nicolas

       born 1955. President of France 2007-2012. Conservative politician. As Minister of the Interior (Home Secretary) under Jacques Chirac, and president of the conservative UMP party, Sarkozy earned a reputation as a tough-talking no-nonsense hard-liner. He became the bugbear of the Socialist opposition, and the bogeyman of the far left, to the extent that the 2007 presidential election was as much about stopping Sarkozy as about electing a president. In the end, Sarkozy emerged as the most convincing candidate, and won the election with a clear majority. The son of a Hungarian immigrant, Sarkozy has a background very different from that or any other recent French president. More Atlanticist, less nationalistic, he has set about strengthening links betwen France and the USA and France and the UK, while reaffirming links with France's continental neighbours. He has also sought to strengthen the links betwen the countries surrounding the Mediterranean.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Sarkozy, Nicolas

  • 14 tanné

    1.
    tannée tane participe passé tanner

    2.
    1) [cuir] tanned
    2) [visage, peau] leathery
    * * *
    tane adj tanné, -e
    (visage) weather-beaten
    * * *
    A pptanner.
    B pp adj
    1 Tech [cuir, peaux] tanned;
    2 [visage, peau] leathery; le visage tanné par le soleil his/her face made leathery by the sun;
    3 Can ( fatigué) exhausted.
    C tannée nf
    1 Tech spent tan;
    2 ( volée de coups) hiding, beating.
    ( féminin tannée) [tane] adjectif
    1. [traité - cuir] tanned
    2. [hâlé - peau] weathered, weather-beaten
    ————————
    tannée nom féminin
    1. [écorce] tanbark
    3. (très familier) [défaite humiliante] drubbing, trouncing
    il a pris ou s'est ramassé une tannée aux présidentielles he got well and truly thrashed in the presidential election

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > tanné

  • 15 élections présidentielles

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > élections présidentielles

  • 16 Aubry, Martine

       b.1950
       Daughter 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

  • 17 Giscard d'Estaing, Valéry

       (adj. Giscardien)
       Born 1926
       President of France from 1974 to 1981. Valéry Giscard d'Estaing succeed Georges Pompidou as French president, thereby putting an end to 16 years of Gaullist presidency. Though a conservative, Giscard was from the UDF, the centre right party in the conservative coalition of the time.
       On becoming president, Giscard promised change after a decade and a half of Gaullist rule: more Atlanticist and pro-European than previous presidents, he nevertheless failed to embody the change that many people wanted, and was not reelected for a second term. He tried to give the French presidency more popular appeal than it previously enjoyed, and make it seem closer to ordinary Frenchmen, but his changes were more symbolic than real, and included walking down the Champs Elysées in a sweater rather than a suit, and inviting himself to dinner with ordinary French families from time to time.
       After his defeat at the 1981 Presidential election, Giscard returned to politics as an ordinary Député (MP), and also became strongly involved in local politics in his region, the Auvergne, becoming President of the Regional Council from 1986 to 2004.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Giscard d'Estaing, Valéry

  • 18 Hollande, François

       born 1954.
       Candidate of the French Socialist Party for the 2012 presidential election. He defeated runner-up Martine Aubry in the second round of an unofficial "primary" for the designation of the socialist candidate.
       French Socialist politician. A graduate of HEC business school and of theENA school of administration, Hollande worked at the Cour des Comptesbefore becoming elected as a député for the Corrèze - the same department as Jacques Chirac - in 1988. In 1997 he was elected first secretary of the Socialist Party, a most he held until 2008. At the time he was considered as rather a soft-liner, the rather dull partner of Ségolène Royale, by whom he has four children.
       However since Hollande and Royale split up, and Hollande was ousted from the leadership of the Socialist party, he has staged a considerable comeback, building an image as a serious candidate with whom the French economy would be in safe hands.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Hollande, François

  • 19 Joly, Eva

       Of Franco-Norwegian origin, Eva Joly was one of France's high profile investigating magistrates before becoming better known as a militant environmental campaigner. In 2011, she was selected to run as the candidate of Europe-Ecologie-les Verts, the French Green party, in the 2012 presidential election. Forthright and outspoken in a manner uncommon in the world of French politics, she caused major stirs in the early days of campaigning, but lost a lot of support as a result, even from supposed allies in the environmental movement.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Joly, Eva

  • 20 Lalonde, Brice

       Born 1946. Lalonde was the first "green" politician in France to gain a position of influence in French government. President of the Student Union UNEF during the events of 1968, he later founded the French branch of Friends of the Earth, and subsequently became a Greenpeace activist, campaiging against French nuclear tests in the south Pacific. He was director of campaign for the first green candidate in a presidential election, René Dumont in 1974, and subsequently ran for president himself. In 1990, he founded the first successful Green party, called Génération Ecologie, and was appointed Minister of the environment in the Socialist government of Edith Cresson, a post he held for just one year.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Lalonde, Brice

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