-Advertisement-

-Advertisement-

Left surge threatens Macron majority in France

French President Emmanuel Macron is at risk of losing his outright majority in the National Assembly in elections that put him neck and neck with a left-wing coalition, projections say.

Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s left-green alliance and Mr Macron’s Ensemble (Together) were both polling 25-26% of the vote, said French TV.

The president faces a battle to win 289 seats to retain his outright majority.

Turnout was a historically low 47.3% in the first of two rounds.

Within half an hour of the first projection, a sombre Jean-Luc Mélenchon announced his alliance was in the lead: “The truth at the end of the first round is that the presidential party is beaten and defeated.” He called on voters to turn out in force next Sunday “to reject definitively the disastrous policies of Mr Macron’s majority”.

Centrist Emmanuel Macron won a second term in April, but without a majority in the Assembly he will struggle to push through reforms. He intends to raise gradually the retirement age from 62 to 65, while Mr Mélenchon vows to lower it to 60.

A projection from TV channel TF1 gave both the left and Ensemble 25.9%. Ensemble was projected to win 275 to 305 seats and the green-left alliance 175-205 seats. France Télévisions said Mr Macron’s alliance was heading for a lower 255-295 seats and the left 150-190.

Jean-Luc Melenchon (R) leader of the "NUPES" (Nouvelle Union Populaire Ecologique et Sociale) a coalition of Leftist and Ecologist parties prepares to cast his vote in the first round of the French legislatives elections, at a polling station in Marseille
The left-wing coalition leader voted on Sunday morning in Marseille. (EPA)

Turnout was the lowest in modern French history. Many voters clearly decided to take advantage of the sunny weather across France, with temperatures in Paris hitting 27C. But so far the election campaign has largely failed to spark into life.

Mr Mélenchon has proved the exception, leading a vigorous campaign since he came a close third in the presidential election. He has built an alliance called Nupes, made up of his own far-left party France Unbowed, the Socialists, Communists and greens – with the improbable slogan “Mélenchon prime minister”.

His aim has been to stop the president winning the majority he needs across France’s 577 constituencies. On top of lowering the retirement age, Nupes vows to freeze prices on 100 essentials and create a million jobs.

Meanwhile, Mr Macron has spent the intervening weeks since he won a second term in building a new government under Elisabeth Borne, as France grapples with rising inflation and a cost of living crunch.

The prime minister said the government had one week to convince voters and win a majority. Pointing to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, she said “we cannot risk instability”; France’s values were at risk, she said: “We alone have a project of coherence and responsibility.”

French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne, candidate under the presidential majority "Ensemble", leaves a polling booth in the first round of French parliamentary elections, at a polling station in Vire-Normandie
Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne is one of 15 members of the government being challenged in this election. (REUTERS)

Ms Borne, in common with 14 other ministers, have to win their seats to stay in government. And as each constituency is an individual local race, this election will play out over two weeks. Amélie de Montchalin, the minister in charge of green transition, faces a battle to survive as an MP, as does Europe Minister Clément Beaune.

Unless a candidate wins more than 50% of the vote on Sunday based on a quarter of the electorate, the race goes into a second round in a week’s time, involving the top two candidates and anyone else who wins 12.5% of the vote.

One of Mr Mélenchon’s closest colleagues, Manuel Bompard, was on course for outright victory in the first round in Marseille. But former Macron education minister Jean-Michel Blanquer was an early casualty, heading for defeat in the Loiret area to the south of Paris.

Far-right Marine Le Pen, who was runner-up in the presidential elections, was delighted with her party’s performance. The TF1 projection gave her National Rally 19.2% of the vote with 15-30 seats, higher than her current number of eight. Another far-right leader, Éric Zemmour, was knocked out of the election in the first round.

The mainstream right, which fared badly in the April vote, has focused its campaigning locally. Despite being projected to win only 11.3% of the vote, the Republicans could win 45 to 65 seats.

The fact that one in two French voters had stayed away from the ballot box on Sunday was worrying, said political scientist Olivier Rouquan. People felt they had already expressed their opinions in the presidential election, he believed.

Until 2002, the two elections were kept apart, which meant the government was sometimes led by a different party from the president, in what became known as cohabitation. If Mr Macron loses his majority he could be forced into cohabitation with the left.

Leave A Comment

Your email address will not be published.

You might also like
where to buy viagra buy generic 100mg viagra online
buy amoxicillin online can you buy amoxicillin over the counter
buy ivermectin online buy ivermectin for humans
viagra before and after photos how long does viagra last
buy viagra online where can i buy viagra