The president-elect had made several conditions for candidates to sign up to (AFP)
The party of French President-elect Emmanuel Macron has selected a diverse list of 428 candidates for parliamentary elections next month.
Only 24 of those chosen are outgoing MPs from the current parliament.
Some 52% come from civil society and exactly half are women, the secretary-general of La République En Marche (Republic on the Move) said.
Richard Ferrand said the choices marked “the definitive return of citizens to the heart of our political life”.
Mr Macron still needs to select more than 100 candidates for the 577-seat parliament and the party says its door is open to politicians from other parties to join.
Youngest is 24
The movement received more than 19,000 applications, Mr Ferrand said at a news conference, with 1,700 telephone interviews conducted with candidates.
The average age of the list is 46 “compared to 60 years for the average of outgoing MPs”, he said.
The youngest candidate is 24 years old, while the oldest is 72. Around 10 candidates are unemployed, double that are retired and a handful are students.
All of the outgoing MPs chosen to run come from the Socialist Party of departing President François Hollande.
Mr Ferrand confirmed that Mr Macron’s ex-cabinet colleague Manuel Valls – the former prime minister who has now burned his boats with his Socialists – had not been selected.
He said that he did “not meet the criteria” because he had already served three parliamentary terms.
But the party will not be running a candidate against him in his constituency in Essonne, south of Paris.
France had been waiting to see if the party list would live up to Mr Macron’s pledge to clean up France’s public life.
Who are they?
Many of the candidates are unknown to the public and there are few well-known personalities on the list.
Among the diverse candidates are Cédric Villani, a famous mathematician with a penchant for flamboyant bow-ties and spider brooches. He won the Fields Medal – seen as one of the highest honours in mathematics – in 2010.
François Hollande’s communications advisor Gaspard Gantzer, former judge Eric Halphen and former bullfighter Marie Sara are also on the list.
Although no MPs of the Republican party are candidates, at least two former allies of Alain Juppé – who lost the centre-right party’s presidential primary – have been selected.
Some of the names previously announced include:
Jean-Michel Fauvergue, a police commander who led the elite RAID unit’s response to several jihadist attacks including the Bataclan massacre in Paris
Laetitia Avia, a Paris barrister involved in solving corporate disputes and active in projects in sub-Saharan Africa
Farmer Jean-Baptiste Moreau, who heads a co-operative
Head teacher Mireille Robert, also involved in campaigns to tackle unemployment
Alexandre Aïdara, public servant who founded Citizen Regeneration think tank, ex-adviser to justice ministry
French media are already reporting errors on the list – including one candidate with a criminal record (the party said no-one with a criminal record would be eligible). Several people on the list have also denied they are candidates.
Why are the candidates being unveiled now?
Mr Macron was only elected on Sunday and the two-round parliamentary vote takes place on 11 and 18 June. But with only one month to go, every political party is now focusing on the race for the National Assembly.
His recently rebranded party is only 13 months old and Mr Macron needs to show he will have not just a mandate but the power in parliament to push through his programme.
How are the candidates chosen?
Nearly 20,000 people applied and a few thousand only added their names in the last few days following the election.
We know the Macron team set out five conditions:
Renewal for France (half will come from outside politics) Gender equality (half will be women)
Clean criminal record – as part of commitment to clean up politics Cross-section of political views – so there may be defectors from other parties
Sign up to the Macron reform programme as well as joining the party itself While candidates can be members of other parties, they cannot run for them (apart from centrist party MoDem)
What’s wrong with Manuel Valls?
When the Socialist ex-prime minister announced this week that his own party was dead and he wanted to be a candidate for the new president’s party, the initial response was lukewarm – and then he was turned down for not yet “meeting the criteria”.
Opponents have seized on the decision as treachery, and by Wednesday Twitter was alive with the hashtag #VallsEnMarcheVersPoleEmploi (Valls on the move to the job centre).
Republican party leader François Baroin said the way Mr Valls had been treated “revealed a great deal about the sectarian spirit of a movement that wanted to be modern but in three days in its methods already belonged to the past”.
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