Chirac quits frontline politics
France’s president will not seek re-election, ending 45-years in politics.

Related article |
But on the domestic front he introduced few meaningful reforms and leaves behind a difficult legacy for his successor, with the French economy underachieving and social tensions simmering in deprived suburbs.
French election timetable |
Mar 16: Deadline for presidential candidates to get at least 500 mayors or other elected representatives to sponsor them. Without these, candidates cannot stand. Apr 9-20: Official campaign period. Apr 21: First round presidential voting in overseas territories and departments. Guadeloupe, Martinique, Guyana, Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon and French Polynesia. Apr 22: First round of voting on mainland France, the Indian Ocean islands of Reunion and Mayotte and in New Caledonia. May 5: Second round of overseas voting. May 6: Second round of mainland voting. May 17: End of President Chirac’s mandate. Jun 10: First round of parliamentary voting. Jun 17: Second parliamentary round. Jun 19: End of out-going parliament. |
All three leading contenders to succeed Chirac, Segolene Royal, the presidential candidate for the Socialists, Francois Bayrou, the head of the Union for French Democracy and conservative Nicolas Sarkozy of the ruling UMP party, are in their 50s and all have pledged to break with the politics of the past 25 years.