France breaks record, elects 233 women to Parliament
The French government on Sunday evening voted a record number of 233 women into parliament, after President Emmanuel Macron's decision to field a gender-balanced candidate list for his victorious Republic on the Move (LREM) party.
Of the 577 newly elected lawmakers, 233 were female, beating the previous record of 155 set after the last election.
The
new record saw the French country leapfrogging from 64th to 17th in the
world rankings of female parliamentary representation and to 6th place
in Europe, overtaking Britain and Germany, according to
Inter-parliamentary Union data compiled at the start of June.
The
report also revealed that Female representation in the National
Assembly has risen steadily, from 12.3 percent at the 2002 election to
38.6 percent this time.
LREM, which won an overwhelming majority in Sunday’s ballot, had the highest proportion of women elected, at 47 percent.
“For
the first time under the (postwar) Fifth Republic, the National
Assembly will be deeply renewed, more diverse, younger,” the party’s
acting president, Catherine Barbaroux, said.
“But
above all, allow me to rejoice, because this is a historic event for
the representation of women in the National Assembly', she added.
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