Gérard Larcher

Politician

Birthday September 14, 1949

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Flers, France

Age 74 years old

Nationality France

#43925 Most Popular

1949

Gérard Philippe René André Larcher (born 14 September 1949) is a French politician serving as president of the Senate since 2014, previously holding the office from 2008 to 2011.

1974

After he graduated from the National Veterinary School of Lyon (ENVL), Larcher worked from 1974 to 1979 in the France team of equestrian sports.

1976

In 1976, Larcher joined, as a high school student, the movement of young Gaullists, because he admired Charles de Gaulle and supported the policy orientations of the founder of the Fifth Republic.

1983

Larcher also served as mayor of Rambouillet from 1983 to 2004 and again from 2007 until 2014.

Larcher was born in Flers, Orne to a Roman Catholic family.

He is the son of Philippe Larcher, director of a textile factory and former Mayor of Saint-Michel-des-Andaines, a small town in Orne.

Upon his second marriage with Christine Weiss, a dentist, he converted to Protestantism.

From this union were born three children: Aymeric, Dorothée and Charlotte.

In the 1983 municipal election, he was elected Mayor of Rambouillet, in Yvelines.

Two years later, he was elected regional councillor of Île-de-France.

1986

A member of The Republicans, he has been a Senator for the Yvelines department since 1986, with an interruption between 2004 and 2007, when he was Minister for Employment, Labour and Professional Integration of Young People under President Jacques Chirac.

On 28 September 1986, for the first time, Larcher was elected to be Senator for Yvelines, under the banner of the Rally for the Republic (RPR).

Aged 37, he was one of the youngest French Senators.

1989

Appointed Secretary of the Senate in 1989, he was re-elected as a Senator in 1995 and elected as Vice President of the Senate in 1997.

2001

In 2001, he was appointed as President of the Senate's Economic Affairs Commission.

2004

In March 2004, after the defeat of the right in regional elections, Larcher was appointed Junior Minister to the Minister of Social Affairs in the cabinet of Jean-Pierre Raffarin.

2005

He retained his place in the government in June 2005, after the appointment of Dominique de Villepin as Prime Minister.

2007

In May 2007, the new President, Nicolas Sarkozy, suggested Larcher enter the government of François Fillon as Minister of Agriculture, but Gérard Larcher declined and preferred to sit in the Senate.

In the following months, he prepared his candidacy for President of the Senate, to succeed Christian Poncelet.

2008

On 31 July 2008, he was declared a candidate for the UMP primary to elect the President of the Senate, against former Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin.

On 24 September, he was elected as the UMP's candidate for the Presidency of the Senate with 78 votes, against 56 votes for Raffarin and 17 votes for Senator Philippe Marini.

Larcher was elected as President of the Senate on 1 October 2008 receiving 173 votes against 134 votes for Socialist candidate Jean-Pierre Bel.

2011

The left won a Senate majority in the September 2011 Senate election, and Jean-Pierre Bel was elected as President of the Senate on 1 October 2011.

He received 179 votes against 134 votes for Larcher, who was the right's candidate; a centrist, Valerie Letard, received 29 votes.

2014

After the victory of the right in September 2014 Senate elections, Larcher was again nominated for the post of President of the Senate by members of the UMP group, and he was elected as President of the Senate on 1 October 2014.

Governmental function

Senate mandates

Senate of France

Regional Council

Municipal Council

2019

In 2019, Larcher argued that wearing the Islamic headscarf in the public space is "a freedom that he wants to defend" and considers Islam "compatible with the Republic, provided that it is neither radical nor political."

Ahead of the 2022 presidential elections, Larcher publicly declared his support for Xavier Bertrand as the Republicans’ candidate.

Ahead of the party's 2022 convention, he endorsed Bruno Retailleau as chairman.