Presidents of the National Assembly (List) The French Senate is the Upper House of the French Parliament. ... This page lists Presidents of the Lower Chamber (or only chamber, as the case may be) of the French parliament. ...
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The Minister of Social Affairs and Employment is a cabinet member in the Government of France. In its current state, the position was brought back in 1981 (after almost a decade) under the presidency of François Mitterrand -- as a result of the economic situation of France in the 1980s -- to oversee issues of social exclusion, unemployment, racism, sexism and social justice. French government ministers are members of the Prime Ministers cabinet, although in French the term cabinet is rarely used to describe the gouvernement, even in translation (as it is used in French to mean a ministers private office, composed of politically-appointed aides). ... Symbol of the French government The government of France is a semi-presidential system based on the French Constitution of the fifth Republic, in which the nation declares itself to be an indivisible, secular, democratic, and social Republic. The constitution provides for a separation of powers and proclaims Frances... â¶(?) (October 26, 1916 â January 8, 1996) was a French politician. ...
Its current title is Minister of Employment, Social Cohesion and Housing; the position is held by Jean-Louis Borloo. Jean-Louis Borloo is currently the Minister for Social Cohesion in France. ...
Nevertheless, it is not an independent or autonomous agency and its officials are employees of the labour and socialaffairs administrations.
This procedure is carried out in close cooperation with the labour administration and socialaffairs administrative directorates and with all the central and regional services falling within the domain of labour and socialaffairs.
The social partners are not involved with the operation of IGAS on an organizational level.
In the Fifth Republic the chief political figure in France is the President of the Republic with the Prime Minister having secondary importance.
When the President and the Prime Minister are of the same party, the Prime Minister often plays the role of a "fuse": that is, citizens lay the blame of the failures of governmental policy on him or her, and when the Prime Minister is unpopular, he or she resigns in order to protect the President.