French National Assembly

This article concerns the modern National Assembly. For information about the body formed in the French Revolution, see National Assembly (French Revolution).
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The Palais Bourbon, front

The French National Assembly (French: "Assemblée nationale") is one of the two houses of the bicameral Parliament of France under the Fifth Republic. The other is the French Senate ("Sénat").

The National Assembly consists of 577 members ( Members 577) known as députés (deputies), each elected by a single-member constituency. It is presided over by a President (currently Jean-Louis Debré). The term of the National Assembly is at most five years. The President of France may dissolve the Assembly (by i.e.: calling a new election), unless he dissolved it in the preceding year.

The official seat of the National Assembly is the Palais Bourbon on the banks of the river Seine. It is guarded by Republican Guards.

The last legislative elections, held in June 2002 resulted in the following distribution of seats:

357Union for a Popular Movement
140Socialist Party
29Union for French Democracy
21Communist Party of France
7Left Radical Party
23other

See also

External link

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See also: French National Assembly, Communist Party of France, Deputies of the 12th French National Assembly, Deputy, France, French Fifth Republic, French Republican Guard, French Revolution, French Senate