Mayor of Paris

{{Short description|Head of the executive branch of the Government of Paris}}

{{Infobox official post

| post = Mayor

| body = Paris

| native_name = Maire de Paris

| insignia = File:Flag of the Mayor of Paris.svg

| insigniasize = 150px

| insigniacaption = Flag of the Mayor of Paris

| image = Anne Hidalgo, février 2014.jpg

| imagesize = 150px

| incumbent = Anne Hidalgo

| incumbentsince = 5 April 2014

| residence = {{Lang|fr|Hôtel de Ville|italic=no}}

| appointer = Elected by the Council of Paris

| termlength = 6 years, renewable once

| formation = 15 July 1789
20 March 1977

| inaugural = Jean Sylvain Bailly

| salary = 8,650 (monthly)

| website = {{URL|https://www.paris.fr/pages/anne-hidalgo-2252|www.paris.fr}}

}}

The mayor of Paris ({{langx|fr|Maire de Paris}}, {{IPA|fr|mɛʁ d(ə) paʁi|}}) is the chief executive of Paris, the capital and largest city in France.

The officeholder is responsible for the administration and management of the city, submits proposals and recommendations to the Council of Paris, is active in the enforcement of the city's ordinances, submits the city's annual budget and appoints city officers, department commissioners or directors, as well as members of city boards and commissions. During meetings of the Council of Paris, the mayor serves as the presiding officer, as it is the case in any other commune in France. Since Paris doubles as a department as well, the mayor also has the rank of a departmental council president.

Since 5 April 2014, Anne Hidalgo of the Socialist Party has been Mayor of Paris.

History

When the French Revolution began after the storming of the Bastille on 14 July 1789, the city insurgents murdered the last Provost of Paris (Provost of the Merchants), Jacques de Flesselles. Because the Provost's office was abolished as one of the first moves with the dissolution of the Ancien Régime, the insurgents established a revolutionary government called the "Commune of Paris", initially led by Jean Sylvain Bailly, the first titled "Mayor of Paris". The mayor's office was very important during the critical phases of the Revolution, and during Robespierre's Reign of Terror (1793–1794) it was decisive in the discovery and execution of all suspected counter-revolutionaries.

In July 1794, after the 9th Thermidor, the coup d'état that deposed and executed Robespierre and his cronies, the office of Mayor was abolished since it was perceived to be too powerful.

After the February Revolution of 1848, the July Monarchy ended in favor of a new Republic, that restored the mayor's office. This renewal was however short, as the June Days uprising of the same year ended the possibility of creating a strong mayorship. The Executive Commission—charged to provisionally rule the country—preferred to transfer the mayor's powers to the Seine Prefect, appointed by Ministry of the Interior.

In 1870, once again, the office of Mayor of Paris was re-established and again did not survive long. The occasion for the re-creation was the fall of the Second Empire after the defeat in the Franco-Prussian War. The provisional Government of National Defense of Louis-Jules Trochu believed that a strong leadership in Paris would prevent sedition during the Prussian siege. After the definitive conquest of Paris by Prussians, popular discontent erupted in a new insurrectionary Commune which held socialist beliefs. Also, in case the Commune was finally suppressed, the new national government preferred to divide Paris into several distinct mayorships (one for each arrondissement) to prevent the city's total loss in the event of further revolts.

Thus, for all but 14 months from 1794 to 1977, Paris was the only commune of France without a mayor, and had less autonomy than even the smallest village. For most of the time from 1800 to 1977 (except briefly in 1848 and 1870–71), it was controlled directly by the departmental prefect (the prefect of the Seine before 1968 and prefect of Paris after 1968). In 1975 Parliament passed a bill re-establishing an elected mayor for Paris, beginning in 1977. The bill was signed by President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing on 31 December 1975. In March 1977, after the first formal municipal election, former Prime Minister Jacques Chirac was chosen as Mayor of Paris, a position he held until 1995, when was elected President of France.

List of officeholders

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Notes

Died in office

{{-}}

class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"

! {{Abbr|No.|Number}}

! colspan=2 | Mayor

! colspan=2 | Term in office


Elections

! Previous office

! Party

! Deputy

rowspan=2 style="background:#808080; color:white" | 1

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Jean Sylvain Bailly
1736–1793
(Aged 57)

| 15 July 1789

| 18 November 1791

| rowspan=2 | President of the
National Assembly

(1789)

| rowspan=2 | Patriotic

| rowspan=12 bgcolor=#EEEEEE | Office did not exist

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1789
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Girondin}}; color:white" | 2

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Jérôme Pétion de Villeneuve
1756–1794
(Aged 38)

| 18 November 1791

| 1 December 1792

| rowspan=2 | Representative
to Estates General

for the Third Estate
(1789)

| rowspan=2 | Girondin

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1791
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Girondin}}; color:white" | 3

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Henri Lefèvre d'Ormesson
1751–1808
(Aged 56)

| 21 November 1792

| 8 December 1792

| rowspan=2 | Judge in the
6th arrondissement
(1790–1792)

| rowspan=2 | Girondin

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1792 (November)
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Girondin}}; color:white" | 4

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Nicolas Chambon
1748–1826
(Aged 78)

| 8 December 1792

| 14 February 1793

| rowspan=2 | Paris Financial Administrator
(1790–1791)

| rowspan=2 | Girondin

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1792 (December)
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Jacobin Club}}; color:white" | 5

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Jean-Nicolas Pache
1746–1823
(Aged 77)

| 14 February 1793

| 10 May 1794

| rowspan=2 | Minister of War
(1792–1793)

| rowspan=2 | Jacobin

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1793
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Jacobin Club}}; color:white" | 6

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Jean-Baptiste Fleuriot-Lescot
1761–1794
(Aged 33)

| 10 May 1794

| 27 July 1794

| rowspan=2 | Public Prosecutor of the
Revolutionary Tribunal
(1793–1794)

| rowspan=2 | Jacobin

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1794
colspan=8 bgcolor=#EEEEEE | Office abolished (1794–1848)
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Moderate Republicans (France)}}; color:white" | 7

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Louis Antoine Pagès
1803–1878
(Aged 75)

| 24 February 1848

| 9 March 1848

| rowspan=2 | MP for Eure
(1846–1848)

| rowspan=2 | Constitutionalist
Republican

| rowspan=4 bgcolor=#EEEEEE | Office did not exist

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | N/A
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Moderate Republicans (France)}}; color:white" | 8

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Armand Marrast
1801–1852
(Aged 50)

| 9 March 1848

| 19 July 1848

| rowspan=2 | MP for Haute-Garonne
(1848–1849)

| rowspan=2 | Constitutionalist
Republican

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | N/A
colspan=8 bgcolor=#EEEEEE | Office abolished (1848–1870)
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Republican Union (France)}}; color:white" | 9

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Étienne Arago
1802–1892
(Aged 90)

| 4 September 1870

| 15 November 1870

| rowspan=2 | MP for Pyrénées-Orientales
(1848–1851)

| rowspan=2 | Radical Republican

| rowspan=4 bgcolor=#EEEEEE | Office did not exist

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | N/A
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Opportunist Republicans}}; color:white" | 10

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Jules Ferry
1832–1893
(Aged 60)

| 15 November 1870

| 18 March 1871

| rowspan=2 | MP for Seine
(1869–1870)

| rowspan=2 | Moderate Republican

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | N/A
colspan=8 bgcolor=#EEEEEE | Office abolished (1871–1977)
rowspan=6 style="background:{{party color|Rally for the Republic}}; color:white" | 11

| rowspan=6 | 100px

| rowspan=6 | Jacques Chirac
1932–2019
(Aged 86)

| 20 March 1977

| 13 March 1983

| rowspan=6 | Prime Minister of France
(1974–1976)

| rowspan=6 | Rally for the Republic

| rowspan=2 | Christian de La Malène

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1977
13 March 1983

| 19 March 1989

| rowspan=4 | Jean Tiberi

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1983
19 March 1989

| 16 May 1995

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1989
rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|Rally for the Republic}}; color:white" | 12

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Jean Tiberi
1935–2025
(Aged 90)

| 22 May 1995

| 25 March 2001

| rowspan=2 | MP for Paris
(1976–2012)

| rowspan=2 | Rally for the Republic

| rowspan=2 | Jacques Dominati

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 1995
rowspan=4 style="background:{{party color|Socialist Party (France)}}; color:white" | 13

| rowspan=4 | 100px

| rowspan=4 | Bertrand Delanoë
Born 1950

| 25 March 2001

| 16 March 2008

| rowspan=4 | Senator for Paris
(1995–2001)

| rowspan=4 | Socialist Party

| rowspan=4 | Anne Hidalgo

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 2001
16 March 2008

| 5 April 2014

scope=row style="text-align:center" colspan=2 class=nowrap | 2008
rowspan=6 style="background:{{party color|Socialist Party (France)}}; color:white" | 14

| rowspan=6 | 100px

| rowspan=6 | Anne Hidalgo
Born 1959

| 5 April 2014

| 3 July 2020

| rowspan=6 | Deputy Mayor of Paris
(2001–2014)

| rowspan=6 | Socialist Party

| rowspan="2" | Bruno Julliard

scope=row style="text-align:center" rowspan=2 colspan=2 class=nowrap | 2014
rowspan="2" |Emmanuel Grégoire
rowspan="2" | 3 July 2020

| rowspan="2" | Incumbent

rowspan="2" |Patrick Bloche
scope=row style="text-align:center" rowspan=2 colspan=2 class=nowrap | 2020

See also

References

  • A list of provosts of the merchants (deleted from this article in 2017) is found in La Grande Encyclopédie, volume 25, page 1063, published in 1899. See [http://gallica.bnf.fr/scripts/catalog.php?Mod=i&Titre=grande+encyclop%E9die scan] of the full text at Gallica.
  • The list of mayors since 1789 comes from Paris city hall's website. See [https://web.archive.org/web/20090710152458/http://www.paris.fr/portail/accueil/Portal.lut?page_id=96&document_type_id=5&document_id=7999&portlet_id=10575 Historique des maires de Paris].

{{Paris}}

Paris

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Mayors