France: Last days of campaigning before hot legislative elections

France: Last days of campaigning before hot legislative elections
France: Last days of campaigning before hot legislative elections

Last days of campaigning before hot legislative elections

Published today at 4:42 a.m.

Subscribe now and enjoy the audio playback feature.

BotTalk

France begins its last week of campaigning on Monday before the first round of legislative elections described as the most important since 1945, of which the far right is today the favorite ahead of a fragile union of the left.

The majority camp of President Emmanuel Macron, criticized from all sides for having dissolved the National Assembly, appears to be the most weakened of the three forces called upon to compete, the day after the second round of July 7, for the formation of a government .

The National Rally (RN, far right) and its allies would obtain between 35.5 and 36% of the votes, two Elabe and Ipsos polls indicated on Sunday. They are ahead of the New Popular Front, an alliance of left-wing parties (27 to 29.5%), united for the occasion despite deep fundamental differences. The majority in power only comes in third position (19.5 to 20%), to which are added the Republicans opposed to the RN (7 to 10%).

Mélenchon, “let him be silent”

The far right is pleading for a “political alternation” with an “absolute majority”, according to the RN mayor of Perpignan (south-east) Louis Aliot on public radio France Inter. Otherwise, “there will be measures which will not be applicable immediately”.

Marine Le Pen’s party must unveil on Monday the “priorities of the government of national unity” that it intends to establish. The left alliance remains mired in speculation around its very divisive candidate for the post of prime minister, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, head of the radical left La France Insoumise (LFI).

“If he wants to be of service to the New Popular Front, he must step aside, he must be silent,” squeaked the former socialist president François Hollande, candidate in Corrèze (center). The appointment of Jean-Luc Mélenchon as prime minister “was never the subject of an agreement,” said the national secretary of the French Communist Party, Fabien Roussel.

“Social choice”

Accused of being disconnected from the concerns of the French, the Macronist camp for its part promises more collaborative governance. Emmanuel Macron seemed to rule out any resignation, promising to “act until May 2027”, the end of his mandate, and admitting that “the way of governing (should) change profoundly”.

“The coming government, which will necessarily reflect your vote, will bring together, I hope, the republicans of various sensibilities who will have known how to (…) oppose the extremes,” he pleaded in a letter to the French distributed in the press.

“There will be (…) a before and an after,” insisted Gabriel Attal in unison on the set of the RTL/M6/Le Figaro Grand Jury. Appointed only in January, the head of government argues that his bloc is “the most dynamic in this campaign”, after having collected only 14.6% of the votes in the European elections.

“It is a choice of government and society,” he insisted, waiting for “additional legitimization” to remain in his post. The majority is seeking a path between a unifying tone at the center and offensive remarks against the economic programs of its adversaries.

One month before the Olympics

Édouard Philippe, former prime minister of Emmanuel Macron, calls on “those who want to come, from the conservative right to the social-democratic left”, while Gabriel Attal warns against “economic and social carnage” which would result “in a tax bludgeoning on one side or the other.

The outcome of the vote, between the specter of the first far-right government in the history of the country, and a National Assembly dominated by three irreconcilable poles for a minimum of a year, worries in France and abroad, on against the backdrop of a gloomy economic situation and war in Ukraine, and one month before the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

Tens of thousands of people demonstrated on Sunday in several cities in France against the “danger” for women’s rights that an RN victory would represent.

Newsletter

“Latest news”

Want to stay on top of the news? “Tribune de Genève” offers you two meetings per day, directly in your email box. So you don’t miss anything that’s happening in your canton, in Switzerland or around the world.

Other newsletters

To log in

AFP

Did you find an error? Please report it to us.

0 comments

-

-

PREV AI Secretly Infiltrates University Exam Sessions and Gets Better Grades Than Students
NEXT A municipal candidate murdered in Mexico, more than twenty in total