discover the composition of the ten political groups within the hemicycle

After the legislative re-entry, the composition of the teams. The detail of the parliamentary groups of the new legislature was published in the Official Journal, Wednesday, June 29, as well as on the site of the National Assembly. A new important step, after the election to the perch, Tuesday, of Yaël Braun-Pivet.

There are ten political groups in the renewed hemicycle, as many as during the previous parliamentary term. The most represented is that of the macronists, Renaissance (ex-LREM), with 172 members, including 4 relatives. It is chaired by Aurore Bergé, MP for Yvelines. With the Democrat group (48 members, including the elected MoDem), and that of Horizons (30 deputies). These three parties make up the presidential majority, which therefore has 250 seats. Note that Damien Abad, current Minister of Solidarity, who left Les Républicains shortly before the legislative elections, is integrated into the Renaissance group as a relative.

Next comes the Rassemblent national, the leading opposition parliamentary group in terms of seats with 89 elected. It is chaired, unsurprisingly, by Marine Le Pen. Nicolas Dupont-Aignan has not joined this group and will remain as unregistered.

On the left of the hemicycle, the alliance of Nupes has 151 deputies but it is broken down between the “rebellious” (75 elected, chaired by Mathilde Panot), the socialists (31, chaired by Borris Vallaud), the ecologists (23 , chaired by Julien Bayou) and the Democratic and Republican Left group (22 members, whose president is André Chassaigne).

The Republican group has 62 members, led by Olivier Marleix, deputy for Eure-et-Loir since 2012, who succeeds Damien Abad in this function. The Liberties, Independents, Overseas and Territories group brings together 17 elected officials, including those from Corsica and some from overseas. Finally, 9 deputies are not registered in a group, like Olivier Falorni, of the center-left, or Emmanuelle Ménard, who was close to the extreme right.

The political groups in the National Assembly are decisive during a parliamentary mandate. They allow their members to benefit from material facilities such as offices and to have their own employees. Committee seats and speaking time are distributed proportionally among these groups.


To find out the exact composition of the groups, to find out which formation your MP is in, or to consult the list of presidents of these groups, franceinfo provides you with the search engine below. You can type the name of your constituency, your MP or a group to consult the information.


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