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1893 French legislative election

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FieldValue
countryFrench Third Republic
typeparliamentary
previous_election1889 French legislative election
previous_year1889
election_date20 August and 3 September 1893
next_election1898 French legislative election
next_year1898
seats_for_electionAll 566 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
majority_seats284
image_size130x130px
image1Jean Casimir-Perier(1847-1907) (cropped).jpg
leader1Jean Casimir-Perier
party1Moderate Republicans (France, 1871–1901)
seats1**279**
popular_vote1**3,187,670**
percentage1**44.60%**
image2Georges Clemenceau 1893.jpg
leader2Georges Clemenceau
party2Radicals
seats2143
popular_vote21,443,915
percentage220.20%
image3Albert de Mun by Isidore Alphonse Chalot.jpg
leader3Albert de Mun
party3Conservatives
seats376
popular_vote31,178,007
percentage316.48%
color31F497D
titlePrime Minister
before_electionCharles Dupuy
before_partyDemocratic Union
after_electionJean Casimir-Perier
after_partyDemocratic Union

Legislative elections were held in France on 20 August and 3 September 1893. The Republicans were victorious and gained an increased majority, which resulted in President Sadi Carnot inviting Jean Casimir-Perier to form a government. However, there was increasing tension between the Radicals and the Moderates in the ruling coalition, which had manifested itself in the passage of a protectionist tariff law with right-wing support in January 1892.

After the elections, following the bombing of the Chamber of Deputies by the anarchist Auguste Vaillant on 9 December 1893, Casimir-Perier rushed through the lois scélérates with the support of the Right.

Casimir-Perier was elected to the presidency on 24 June 1894, following the assassination of President Carnot by the Italian anarchist Sante Geronimo Caserio. In January 1895, however, he resigned, and was replaced by Félix Faure, again with the support of the Right.

Casimir-Perier's government was followed by a series of moderate governments with right-wing support under Charles Dupuy, Alexandre Ribot and Jules Méline – with the short-lived exception of the government of Radical Léon Bourgeois (November 1895 – April 1896).

Results

References

References

  1. Gildea, R., ''Children of the Revolution'', London, 2008, pp. 270–272
  2. [[Dieter Nohlen]] & Philip Stöver (2010) ''Elections in Europe: A data handbook'', pp690–703 {{ISBN. 978-3-8329-5609-7
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