1951 French legislative election in Algeria

Elections to the National Assembly of France were held in France, including Algeria, on 17 June 1951. There were 30 seats for Algeria out of 625 at the National Assembly.[1]

As for the Algerian Assembly elected in 1948 and for the previous French legislative elections in 1945 and 1946, there were two electoral colleges, one for the 1.5 million "French citizens" (Europeans, plus the Algerian Jews since Crémieux Decree, and a few thousand Algerian Muslims who had been granted this statute at their request), and one for 8 million people ruled by the Indigénat statute. Each college elected 15 deputies.

The 1951 legislative elections among the Muslim College, like the Algerian Assembly election of 1948, were rigged by the colonial administration to the detriment of the three anticolonial parties, the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties, the Democratic Union of the Algerian Manifesto and the Algerian Communist Party.[2] The last one got two deputies in the European College, one in Alger and one in Oran.

These legislative elections were the last ones organized in Algeria under the Fourth Republic, in 1956 it was impossible to organize elections in the midst of the Algerian War.

The last French legislative elections organized in Algeria before independence were held in 1958.

List of Algerian deputies

Alger

Party First college Second college Total
seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Union algérienne29,7271--01
Union list of Independents and of the Rally of the French People72,13247.2%4--04
Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties--031,22510.6%00
Democratic Union of the Algerian Manifesto--013,2044.5%00
French Section of the Workers' International00
Liste communiste et d’union démocratique (Algerian Communist Party)31,71420.7%101
Concorde et entente républicaine---231,76955
Total153,0176295,640511
Registered voters228,101--453,075---
Sources: Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly

First College

Second College

First College

List Votes % Seats
liste d'Union républicaine et de Rassemblement des gauches républicaines
René Mayer
Paul Pantaloni
31,94239%2
liste de Rassemblement des gauches républicaines (RGR) et indépendants français
Jules Valle
17.7%1
Rally of the French People
Léon Haumesser
14,28417.4%1
Rassemblement des populations algériennes0
Total81,959100%4

Second College

Party First district Second district Third district Total
seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Indépendants progressistes153,72991,7%2------2
Républicains indépendants---109,73174.5%3---3
Union démocratique (MRP)-----31%11
Union républicaine (RGR)------36%11
Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties0000
Democratic Union of the Algerian Manifesto0027,55226,6%00
Total167,632100%2147,232100%3103,411100%27
Registered voters--219,809--183,507---
Sources: Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly

First district

Second district

Third district

Oran

Party First college Second college Total
seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Liste de réconciliation républicaine et de sauvegarde de l’Algérie française (Independents and Radicals)12.3%101
Rally of the French People32,38522.8%101
Rally of Republican Lefts000
List of Republican Democrats (Popular Republican Movement)000
Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties000
Democratic Union of the Algerian Manifesto000
French Section of the Workers' International101
Liste communiste et d’union démocratique (Algerian Communist Party)134,13626,5%101
Liste démocratique indépendante d'Union franco-musulmane---154,38577%33
Centre républicain d'action paysanne et sociale et des démocrates indépendants23,21017.3%101
Total134,136100%5200,364100%38
Registered voters198,098
Sources: Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly

First College

Second College

References

  1. Algeria also was represented at the Council of the Republic (Senate) but its 14 members were not at stake.
  2. see e.g. a French official source from 1988: Ahmed Aït-Ali, in Dictionnaire des parlementaires français de 1940 à 1958, La documentation française (Paris), vol. 1. A, 1988
  3. Adolphe Aumeran, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  4. Georges Blachette, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  5. Paulin Colonna d'Istria, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  6. Pierre Fayet, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  7. Marcel Paternot, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  8. Marcel Ribère, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  9. Ahmed Aït-Ali, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  10. Abderrahmane Bentounès, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  11. Ali Ben Lakhdar Brahimi, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  12. Menouar Saïah, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  13. Amar Smaïl, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  14. Léon Haumesser, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  15. René Mayer, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  16. Paul Pantaloni, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  17. Jules Valle, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  18. Mohamed Bengana, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  19. Abdelkader Cadi, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  20. elected at the second round with 53,868 votes on 96,981; more than 50% of the registered voters did not vote
  21. Ali Cadi, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  22. Mostefa Benbahmed, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  23. Mohamed Bendjelloul, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  24. Youcef Kessous, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  25. Amar Naroun, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  26. Allaoua Ben Aly Chérif, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  27. Abdelmadjid Ourabah, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  28. Henri Fouques-Duparc, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  29. François Quilici, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  30. Maurice Rabier, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  31. Roger de Saivre, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  32. Alice Sportisse Gomez-Nadal, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  33. Djilali Hakiki, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  34. Ahmed Mekki-Bezzeghoud, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  35. Chérif Sid Cara, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly
  36. Djelloul Ould Kadi, Biographies of former deputies, website of the French National Assembly

See also

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