Emmanuel Macron believes that introducing “a proportional element” to the legislative elections “would be good for democracy”

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French President Emmanuel Macron during a press conference at the Élysée Palace in Paris, Tuesday April 30, 2024. CHRISTOPHE ENA / AP

In an interview given to Provence and to La Tribune Sunday published Saturday May 4, Emmanuel Macron addressed the question of institutions. On this occasion, he repeated that introducing “a proportional part” in the legislative elections “would be good for democracy”.

A subject which divides within its camp and which then calls into question its implementation. Could he? “If a majority emerges to introduce a proportional part, yes. This is the commitment I made. I think it would be good for democracy”replied the head of state.

Emmanuel Macron promised in 2017 to introduce a “proportional dose” in the legislative elections. During the 2022 campaign, the president once again said he was in favor of proportional representation, even opening the door to full proportional representation, with a number of seats proportional to the total votes obtained.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers Reform of institutions: a project launched quietly by Emmanuel Macron

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The President of the National Assembly, Yaël Braun-Pivet, in favor of a proportional share, has launched consultations on the subject. But the presidential camp is divided on the issue. The leader of the Renaissance deputies, Sylvain Maillard, is against it, as is the Minister of Relations with Parliament, Marie Lebec, while the allies of the MoDem have long campaigned in favor of this voting method.

Successive presidential terms

In the interview, Emmanuel Macron also mentions the limitation to two of the number of successive presidential mandates. This rule “is there and I am not going to change the Constitution”but “if you ask me my personal opinion: I think it’s always better when we leave the choice to the voters”he blurted.

“I’m not necessarily telling you that I would have liked to be a candidate for a third term”but “when we put prohibitions in the law, we somehow capture part of the freedom of voters, who are sovereign”.

The President of the Republic also expresses certain regrets after seven years in power. “I would have liked to carry out the point-based pension reform promised for the first five-year term. The yellow vest crisis then the Covid prevented us from doing sohe emphasizes. It was more difficult to carry out than the one we did last year [le report de l’âge légal à 64 ans] because it more fundamentally overhauled the system. I think this is an element that would have profoundly changed things. »

Emmanuel Macron would have “also enjoyed completing the institutional reform stopped in 2018”, hit by the Benalla affair. It notably provided for the reduction in the number of parliamentarians and the introduction of a dose of proportional representation.

Also read the survey (2022): Article reserved for our subscribers Proportionality or the dream of a Parliament “mirror of the nation”

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Asked about the situation of relative majority which has prevailed in the Assembly since 2022, Mr. Macron believes that this has not “not prevented from making reforms”even if it could “confuse things because the parliamentary debate is diluted by political considerations”. “But it’s up to us to clarify”, he said. The French wanted “something more like a proportional system” and that “forces us to find compromises”he still judges.

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And if by chance a motion of censure were to be voted on, as the oppositions threaten, Mr. Macron will [tirerait les conséquences] political and institutional which will depend on the circumstances”he assures.

Read also | Article reserved for our subscribers Public deficit: in the National Assembly, the RN and LFI confirm that they want to table a motion of censure before the European elections

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