Early beginnings At the age of sixteen, Bertrand volunteered for the
Rally for the Republic (RPR) and quickly went into politics. In 1992, Bertrand led the campaign for the 'no' to the
Maastricht Treaty in his department, the
Aisne in the region of
Picardy. He was at the time assistant to the mayor of
Saint-Quentin, Aisne. He was one of the pioneers of the 'Saint-Quentin beach', an event similar to Paris-Plage. From 1997 to 2002, he was parliamentary assistant to
Jacques Braconnier,
Senator for the Aisne, and he was elected to the National Assembly on 16 June 2002 for the 18th legislature (2002–2007), representing the second constituency of the Aisne Department. In 2003,
Alain Juppé, President for the
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), put him in charge of leading the debate and explaining the subject of pensions reform during a "Tour of France". He was chosen to defend this draft bill in the National Assembly. At the same time he was part of the 'Club de la boussole,' a group of deputies who declared their loyalty to then-President
Jacques Chirac and Prime Minister
Jean-Pierre Raffarin.
Career in government During this period, Bertrand received favourable attention in the right-wing political milieu. On 31 March 2004, when Raffarin appointed his third government, Bertrand was named Junior Health Minister for Health Insurance. Under his Senior Minister,
Philippe Douste-Blazy, he led the reform on health insurance. Later on, he pronounced himself strongly in favour of a
European Constitution for the
referendum on 29 May 2005. After the majority of the French electorate answered "no" to the referendum, Raffarin resigned as Prime Minister. Under his successor
Dominique de Villepin, Bertrand became the Senior Minister for Health, when Douste-Blazy was reappointed Foreign Affairs Minister. His mandate as Health Minister was marked by the
chikungunya epidemic and the law against smoking in public places, ratified in 2004. Bertrand announced his support to UMP presidential candidate
Nicolas Sarkozy on 29 September 2006. He was named Sarkozy's official spokesperson on 15 January 2007. He quit the government on 26 March to devote himself fully to the campaign. On 18 May 2007, he was named Minister of Labour, Social Affairs and Solidarity in the Prime Minister
François Fillon's government. On 19 June 2007 Bertrand was appointed Minister of Labour, Social Affairs and Solidarity in Fillon's second government after the first one had handed in its resignation the day before. He later served as Minister of Labour, Employment and Health from 2010 to 2012.
Later career Following the
2012 French legislative election, Bertrand announced his candidacy for the post the UMP parliamentary group's chair. Having been endorsed by
François Fillon, he lost an internal vote against
Christian Jacob. In the
2015 regional elections, Bertrand won over
Marine Le Pen and became the president of the
Regional Council of Hauts-de-France. Amid the
Fillon affair, in March 2017, Bertrand joined
Valérie Pécresse,
Christian Estrosi and others in calling for
Alain Juppé to replace
François Fillon as the party's candidate in the
2017 French presidential election. In 2020, Bertrand publicly expressed interest in challenging incumbent
President Emmanuel Macron in the
2022 French presidential election. By early 2021, Betrand was widely tipped by French and international media to be the center-right's candidate. According to 2021 polls, he would be in 3rd position behind Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen. At the party's
2021 congress, however, he only came in fourth after
Éric Ciotti,
Valérie Pécresse and
Michel Barnier; he subsequently endorsed Pécresse. In the
2021 regional elections, Bertrand was re-elected. He obtained 52.37 percent of the vote in the Hauts-de-France region, against 25.65 percent for
Sébastien Chenu of the
National Rally. In late 2021, Bertrand launched Nous France, a conservative movement. Ahead of the Republicans' 2022 convention, he endorsed
Bruno Retailleau as the party's chairman. He renewed his endorsement of Retailleau in the Republicans' 2025 leadership election. == Political positions ==