As in the first round of regional elections,

20 Minutes is

setting up a special mechanism to cover this second round with our eleven local newsrooms across France.

Thanks to our interactive map, you can easily and quickly find all the results of the ballot region by region and municipality by municipality.

Our map of France, available below, will be updated in real time throughout election night.

To view the results for your municipality, simply click on your region and search for your municipality in the search engine.

In parallel with our national live on the regional and departmental elections, our eleven local newsrooms are mobilized throughout the evening to share with you the first results of the second round of regional and departmental elections.

You will also find the first reactions of the candidates there.

Find below the lives of our local newsrooms:

Results of the second round of regional elections in Ile-de-France

Results of the second round of regional elections in PACA

Results of the second round of regional elections in New Aquitaine

Results of the second round of regional elections in Brittany

Results of the second round of regional elections in Hauts-de-France

Results of the second round of regional elections in the Grand Est

Results of the second round of regional elections in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes

Results of the second round of regional elections in Occitania

Results of the second round of regional elections in Pays-de-la-Loire

Reminder of how the 2021 regional elections work

Regional elections are a two-round, multi-member proportional system with a majority bonus.

1910 regional councilors from metropolitan France and overseas, as well as the assemblies of Corsica, Guyana and Martinique, must be elected.

In order to respect parity, the lists must include alternately a male candidate and a female candidate.

In order to be elected in the first round, a list must collect at least 50% of the votes cast.

If this threshold is not reached, a second round takes place where the lists having obtained at least 10% of the votes cast can be maintained.

At the end of the second round, the top-ranked list initially wins a quarter of the regional council seats.

The other seats are then allocated proportionally to all the lists having exceeded 5% of the votes cast.

The premium allocated to the top-ranked list therefore enables it to obtain an absolute majority if it has won more than 33% of the votes cast.

  • Regional elections

  • Elections

  • Departmental elections