Delphine Batho
Delphine Batho (French pronunciation: [dɛlfin bato]; born 23 March 1973 in Paris) is a French politician of Ecology Generation who has been serving as member of the National Assembly. She is a former Minister of Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy. As a candidate in the 2021 ecologist primary, she came in third place with 22.32% of the vote, advocating degrowth. She was re-elected as a member of parliament in the 2022 legislative elections.
Delphine Batho
Jean-Luc Drapeau
Jean-Luc Drapeau
Jean-Luc Drapeau
Jean-Luc Drapeau
Function created
Function deleted
Ecology Generation (since 2018)
Socialist Party (until 2018)
Political group:
Ecology Democracy Solidarity (2020)
Early life and education[edit]
Batho is the daughter of French photographers Claude Batho and John Batho.[1] She attended the Lycée Henri-IV in Paris.
Early activism[edit]
President of the FIDL[edit]
Batho began her militant activity in the high-school students' union FIDL (Fédération indépendante et démocratique lycéenne) while attending the Lycée Henri-IV in Paris. She was elected president of the union in 1990 and became well known for her activism on behalf of students' rights and for the means to study. Following nearly two months of strikes the movement obtained from Lionel Jospin, the Minister for Education, a pledge to spend 4.5 million francs[2] on renovating high schools and to protect certain student rights.[3] In 1992 she left high school, and thus the FIDL, to study history.
Vice-President of SOS Racisme[edit]
Batho joined the anti-racist movement SOS Racisme and when its leadership was renewed in September 1992 Fodé Sylla, aged 29, became president and Batho, a representative of the "second generation SOS" in the words of Le Monde,[4] was elected vice-president.
Political career[edit]
Career in the Socialist Party[edit]
Batho joined the French Socialist Party (Parti Socialiste – PS) in the mid-1990s as a militant in the Grigny (Essonne) section. She participated, together with Julien Dray, in the party's Socialist Left tendency. At the party's Grenoble Congress she was elected to the national executive committee of the PS. In 2003, during the breakup of the socialist left, she remained loyal to Dray, who employed her at the Île-de-France Regional Council, where she was responsible for security matters. In 2004 she became National Secretary of the PS in charge of security, where she defended the policy of preventative sanctions.
Her thoughts on security matters were taken into account by Ségolène Royal, the PS's candidate in the French Presidential Election of 2007, who incorporated them into her "just order".[5]
Batho declared her intention to be a candidate for the leadership of the Socialist Party at the Aubervilliers Congress in 2018,[6] but her application was ultimately rejected due to a lack of support.[7] Batho announced in an interview published on 2 May 2018 that she was quitting the Socialist Party to become president of Ecology Generation, and would also quit the New Left group in the National Assembly.[8]