The final results of France’s surprise parliamentary elections suggest that voters have declared a resolute “no” to Marine Le Pen’s far-right Rally National party.
Bloomberg
French President Emmanuel Macron, a die-hard gambler, has won the right to continue gambling.
The results of France’s hastily organised parliamentary runoff elections showed voters giving a firm “no” to Marine Le Pen’s far-right Rally National party, while giving only hesitant “maybes” to its left-wing and centre rivals. As President Macron prepares to bring together the Greens and Socialists, there are faint signs of moving closer to Keir Starmer’s path in the UK, but it will not be easy. And there is a big risk that the eurozone’s second-largest economy will continue to be divided in politics.
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If the election itself felt like something fit for a Netflix drama, the results look even more so. Macron may display his trademark complacency as he sees his arch rival Le Pen trailing with 143 seats. A strategic alignment between Macron’s centrist bloc and the left-wing Popular Front in the second round clearly helped strengthen the so-called “Republican Front,” but Le Pen’s vague policies and the inexperience of her candidates also made it harder for her to win more votes.
Still, he managed to keep his coalition in the game as a potential partner in a coalition government. In the end, the victorious left-wing coalition, with policies clearly influenced by firebrand Jean-Luc Mélenchon, won just 182 seats, short of a majority.
As the centre-left politician Raphaël Glucksmann has said, we can build a parliamentary arc that is neither Jupiter nor Robespierre, nor Macron or Mélenchon. Other centre-left voices seem to agree. François Hollande, whose return to parliament marked an extraordinary comeback for the former president, said Mélenchon should “remain silent” for the sake of the left.
That would mean tough decisions like raising taxes at a time when budget deficits are soaring and growth trajectory is below the euro zone average, leaving little room to tackle deeper problems like productivity, innovation and a declining population.Christopher Dembick, a strategist at Pictet Asset Management, also expects a coalition government to weaken some of the impact of Macron’s reforms, from pensions to welfare payments.
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