Born in Belley (in the Ain department) on 14 October 1963, Clapot moved to La Roche-de-Glun (Drôme department) in 1990. She is the mother of three children.[1] Clapot went to the Lycée du Parc in Lyon, then was accepted to the École Centrale de Paris.
Early career
Clapot worked for 25 years in various industrial companies in the Rhône-Alpes region, at first as a Marketing Department employee at Bonnet Cuisines in Villefranche sur Saône, at BSN Emballage (now Owens-Illinois) in Villeurbanne, at Markem Imaje in Bourg-lès-Valence, and at Pavailler in Portes-lès-Valence. She subsequently joined the Purchasing Department at Thalès Avionics, and then at the SNCF in Lyon. In 2007, she quit her position as the Human Resources and Operations Director at Decalog in Guilherand Granges to join the Valence city administration as Purchasing Manager. In 2013 she began working as the Director of Development and Company Relations at the École Centrale de Lyon.
She stopped working at the start of her term as a representative in 2017.[2]
Political career
Early beginnings
Clapot has been a part of Amnesty International since 1990. She has repeatedly stated that she "owes her intellectual development to this organization that struggles to defend human rights". In 1992 she co-founded the Drôme-Néva-Volga association, a Franco-Russian friendship organization. In 2015, she founded the Mobili-Tain-Tournon association, which strives to increase access to transportation, internet and culture in the area surrounding Tournon-sur-Rhône.
Between 2009 and 2013, Clapot was the cabinet director of mayor Alain Maurice (Socialist Party) of Valence.[3]
In October 2017, Clapot was elected vice-president of the Committee on Foreign Affairs.[5] She was reelected to this position in October 2018. She is also vice-president of the Franco-Russian Parliamentary Friendship Group and secretary of the Franco-Croatian Parliamentary Friendship Group.[6]
She wa reelected in the 2022 election. In the 2024 election, she came fourth in the first round, and lost her seat.[9]
Political positions
Foreign policy
In April 2018, as a rapporteur of the "women's rights abroad" fact-finding mission, Clapot published the "100 propositions for a feminist diplomatic policy" report.[10]
Since May 2019, Clapot has been publicly advocating for a French equivalent to the Magnitsky Act in the United States.[11][12]
On Clapot's initiative, a group of sixty-six French MPs and MEPs from different political groups co-signed a 2020 op-ed in Le Monde calling for the release of Ramy Shaath and other human rights defenders arbitrarily detained in Egypt.[14]
Domestic policy
In July 2018, Clapot introduced a bill (which has now passed into law) against street racing and other dangerous uses of motorized vehicles for recreational purposes. The bill created a special status for this type of violation, allowing law enforcement to seize the vehicle and enabling the immediate appearance in court of the perpetrators.[15]
On immigration, Clapot is considered to be part of her parliamentary group's more liberal wing. In late 2019, she was among the critics of the government's legislative proposals on immigrations and instead joined 17 LREM members who recommended, in particular, greater access to the labour market for migrants, but also "specific measures for collaboration with the authorities of safe countries, such as Albania and Georgia, in order to inform candidates for departure, in their country of origin, of what the asylum application really is."[16]
In 2020, Clapot was one of the LREM members who endorsed an animal welfare referendum calling for a ban on some hunting practices that are deemed “cruel.”[17] Also in 2020, Clapot went against her parliamentary group's majority and abstained from an important vote on a much discussed security bill drafted by her colleagues Alice Thourot and Jean-Michel Fauvergue that helps, among other measures, curtail the filming of police forces.[18][19]
Bibliography
Mireille Clapot, De l'île Diomède, j'édifierai ce pont (novel), ThoT, 2018.