IN PICTURES | Hundreds of thousands of French people demonstrate against the far right

IN PICTURES | Hundreds of thousands of French people demonstrate against the far right
IN PICTURES | Hundreds of thousands of French people demonstrate against the far right

At least 250,000 people marched in France on Saturday against the far right, in a position of strength ahead of the legislative elections called by President Emmanuel Macron, while the new left-wing coalition is already experiencing the first cracks.

Unions, associations and left-wing parties had called for a “popular tidal wave” to stave off a new victory for the National Rally (RN, far right) on June 30 and July 7, after its triumph on Sunday in the European elections which led the leader of the State to dissolve the National Assembly.

“I thought I was never going to see the far right come to power and now it can happen,” said Florence David, a 60-year-old trainer in Paris where the procession set off in the early afternoon .



AFP

According to the authorities, the demonstrations brought together 250,000 people in the country, including 75,000 in the capital. The protest union CGT counted 640,000.

“I needed to be with a lot of people to feel like I’m not the only one. The passage of the far right to power scares me,” said Amélie Rouanet, 32, who demonstrated in Toulouse (south-west).

“Democracy can be lost at any moment,” warned Florence Audebert, 40, seen in the demonstration in Rennes (west).

Weekend of events

In total, around 200 demonstrations are planned in the country during the weekend, two weeks before legislative elections which are causing a chaotic recomposition of political life in France.

“We are potentially in a tipping point for democracy,” said Marylise Léon, the head of the CFDT, one of the five unions which called for mobilization.

To block the far right, the main left-wing parties, from La France Insoumise (LFI, radical left) to the socialists and environmentalists, managed to hastily ally themselves by putting aside their differences on Ukraine or the war in Gaza.

But their coalition called New Popular Front experienced its first tensions on Saturday after the LFI decision not to reinvest opponents of the party leader, Jean-Luc Mélenchon.

The sidelined elected officials denounced “a purge” and accused Mr. Mélenchon, an unsuccessful candidate for the presidential election three times and a divisive figure, of “settling his scores”.

Others deplored that Adrien Quatennens, close to this leader of the radical left, was reinvested even though he was convicted in 2022 for domestic violence.

“Extremely shocked” by this “purge”, the boss of the Ecologists Marine Tondelier summoned the authorities of her party. The boss of the socialists Olivier Faure, for his part, judged the “eviction” of the LFI deputies “scandalous”.



AFP

Hollande causes surprise

Defender of the union of the left despite his animosity towards LFI, the former socialist president of the Republic François Hollande (2012-2017) also created a surprise by announcing his candidacy for the legislative elections in Corrèze (center) . “If I made this decision, it is because I felt that the situation was serious, more than it has ever been,” he explained.

President Macron, who is participating this weekend in a G7 in Italy and a summit on Ukraine in Switzerland, described the differences on the left as “a spectacle of great incoherence”: “We are among the crazy, this is not the case. is not serious.

The president of the National Rally Jordan Bardella, who is aiming for the post of prime minister at 28, estimated that only “two political parties” will be able to “compose a government”: his own and this new union of the left.

His party is currently leading the way in opinion polls. An Opinionway poll published on Saturday credits him with 33% of voting intentions, ahead of the New Popular Front (25%) and the presidential majority (20%).

Lagging behind, the Republican right has been tearing itself apart since Republican President Eric Ciotti’s call to ally with the RN. On Friday, the Paris court caused yet another twist by invalidating his exclusion.

Without referring specifically to France, the head of the Italian government Giorgia Meloni, whose country hosted the G7, said she hoped that Europe would take into account the “message” sent to the European elections, marked by a surge in extreme RIGHT.

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