Jean Lassalle

Politician

Birthday May 3, 1955

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Lourdios-Ichère, France

Age 68 years old

Nationality France

Height 6′ 2″

#60919 Most Popular

1955

Jean Lassalle (Jan de Lassala ; born 3 May 1955) is a French politician who represented the 4th constituency of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the National Assembly from 2002 to 2022.

1977

Lassalle, who held the mayorship of the commune of Lourdios-Ichère from 1977 to 2017, also sat on the General Council of Pyrénées-Atlantiques from 1982 to 2015, elected in the canton of Accous.

1991

He was one of the general council's vice presidents from 1991 to 2001 under François Bayrou.

2002

Lassalle was elected to the National Assembly in the 2002 legislative election, where he represents Pyrénées-Atlantiques's 4th constituency.

Since 2002 Lassalle has led the World Mountain People Association, an international network of mountain-dwellers active in more than 70 countries.

He also leads a Haut-Béarn cultural association.

2003

On 3 June 2003 Lassalle stood up in the National Assembly during questions to Minister of the Interior Nicolas Sarkozy and sang the Occitan anthem Se Canta in protest at an announcement by Sarkozy concerning the housing of 23 gendarmes tasked with guarding the Somport tunnel, which links France with Spain through the Pyrenees.

The village closest to the French end of the tunnel is Urdos, but it was announced that the gendarmes would be housed in the nearby town of Oloron-Sainte-Marie, on the grounds that their wives would become bored in Urdos.

As he explained in an interview with France 3 later that day, Lassalle took exception to what he saw as a slur on the Pyrenean village and decided to interrupt the minister with his song.

The protest was met by laughter from other deputies, disapproval from the President of the National Assembly and bemusement from Sarkozy.

2006

Lassalle undertook a 39-day hunger strike in March and April 2006, in protest at a threat to jobs in his constituency.

Japanese firm Toyal, which owned a paint factory near Accous in the Vallée d'Aspe and employed 150 of Lassalle's constituents, announced plans to open a factory 60 km away.

The firm claimed that this relocation of its investment would not result in the closure of the Accous site, but Lassalle's concerns were not assuaged and he embarked on a hunger strike on 7 March.

The strike ended on 14 April, when Toyal offered an assurance to Minister of the Interior Nicolas Sarkozy that the factory would not close and that it would continue investment in the area before expanding elsewhere.

Earlier the same day, Lassalle had been admitted to hospital in Garches, in the western suburbs of Paris, prompting intervention by President Jacques Chirac, Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin and Sarkozy.

Lassalle had lost 21 kg of weight over the course of the strike.

2013

In 2013, Lassalle walked around France for eight months from April to December to meet people.

He was afterwards quoted, "Everywhere I went I witnessed a crisis in the standard of living, a loss of identity and the loss of a sense of a common destiny".

He found the situation equally bad in the cities and the countryside.

Scepticism about globalisation, distrust of politicians and latent racism were common among people he spoke to, he said.

2016

Lassalle ran under the banner of Résistons! (RES), a party he founded and has led since he left the MoDem in 2016.

In the 2022 presidential election he received 1.3 million votes constituting over 3% of those cast.

2017

A former member of the Democratic Movement (MoDem), he was a candidate in the 2017 presidential election, in which he received 435,301 votes (1.21%).

In 2017, Lassalle ran for President of France.

He received support from the Association des maires ruraux de France (Association of rural mayors of France).

His platform was centre-right, with tenets of agrarianism, protectionism and ecological preservation.

His campaign spots included, among other things, him mowing his lawn shirtless.

In the 4 April 2017 televised debate on BFM TV, he introduced himself as the "son of a shepherd, brother of a shepherd, [former shepherd] myself".

After he arrived late at the television studio, several news outlets took a critical stance at his performance.

However, following the debate he quickly became the most searched candidate on the Google search engine.

Lassalle ultimately received 435,301 votes, 1.21% of the electorate, which ranked him seventh out of eleven candidates.

Lassalle's support disproportionately came from rural and southwest constituencies.

His campaign cost €230,000, the least of any candidate.

The bank from which he borrowed the money took his credit card as a guarantee, forcing his mother-in-law to provide groceries for the family during Lassalle's campaign.

In the 2017 legislative election, Résistons!

fielded 21 parliamentary candidates, but only Lassalle was elected.

In a 2017 interview with Jean-Jacques Bourdin, Lassalle stated President Emmanuel Macron had offered him to be Minister of Territorial Cohesion but he turned the offer down, citing policy differences.

2018

In November 2018, Lassalle disrupted the National Assembly by wearing a yellow vest in solidarity with the yellow vest movement, resulting in a €1,500 fine.

2019

Lassalle explored a candidacy for the 2019 European Parliament election, on a platform of Eurosceptism and "a Europe of nations and peoples", but ultimately did not stand in that election, citing financial difficulties.

On 16 March 2021, Lassalle stated his intention to run again for the presidency in the 2022 presidential election.