Michèle Peyron

Michèle Peyron (born 22 July 1961) is a French politician of Renaissance (RE, formerly La République En Marche!) who has represented the 9th constituency of the Seine-et-Marne department in the National Assembly since the 2017 legislative election.[1]

Michèle Peyron
Member of the National Assembly
for Seine-et-Marne's 9th constituency
Assumed office
21 June 2017
Preceded byGuy Geoffroy
Personal details
Born (1961-07-22) 22 July 1961
Nîmes, France
Political partyRenaissance (2016–2020, 2022–present)
Other political
affiliations
Socialist Party (prior to 2016)
Territories of Progress (2020–2022)
Residence(s)Brie-Comte-Robert,
Seine-et-Marne

Political career

In the 1995 municipal election, Peyron first became a municipal councillor in Le Pradet, Var, in Southern France, at the time representing the Socialist Party (PS).[2] In May 2016, she joined En Marche! (later La République En Marche!) and became head of the movement's local branch in Seine-et-Marne.[3]

She successfully ran for the National Assembly in the 2017 legislative election in which she succeeded outgoing The Republicans representative Guy Geoffroy. In Parliament, Peyron serves as member of the Committee on Social Affairs. In addition to her committee assignments, she is part of the French-Vietnamese Parliamentary Friendship Group.[4] In 2018, she also joined a parliamentary working group on the G5 Sahel, which is studying how to help Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger confront terrorist groups in the region.[5]

In March 2020, LREM group chairman Gilles Le Gendre appointed Peyron and Mickaël Nogal as the parliamentary majority's rapporteurs on economic and health emergency measures amid the COVID-19 pandemic in France.[6] In 2020, Peyron joined En commun (EC), a group within LREM led by Barbara Pompili.[7]

In the 2022 legislative election, Peyron successfully ran for reelection to a second term in office under the Ensemble (ENS) coalition.

Following Fadila Khattabi's appointment to the government amid a 2023 cabinet reshuffle, Peyron became one of the two candidates (alongside Charlotte Lecocq of Nord) to succeed her as chairwoman of the Committee on Social Affairs.[8]

Political positions

In a 2017 parliamentary debate on extending immunisation coverage in France, Peyron publicly recounted her personal experience of losing a child at birth in 1986 due to lack of prior immunisation.[9]

Personal life

Peyron has two children.[9]

References

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