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France's socialists agree to left alliance against Macron

2022-05-06T06:10:35.609Z


Resistance is forming in France: the fragmented left camp is forming an alliance against the re-election of French President Macron. The merger could be dangerous for him.


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French President Emmanuel Macron

PHOTO: CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON/POOL/EPA

After negotiations in the left camp, France's socialists have also approved an alliance of the left camp against the re-elected liberal President Emmanuel Macron for the parliamentary elections in June.

The former People's Party will compete together with the Left, Greens and Communists, as its chairman Olivier Faure announced on Friday night after a vote in the party council near Paris.

Previously, there had been difficult negotiations with the left-wing party LFI, which came third in the presidential election with Jean-Luc Mélenchon and is currently the largest force on the left.

The merger of the fragmented left camp is historic and could be dangerous for Macron.

Because he needs a majority in the National Assembly to implement his plans.

Even if he currently has a solid majority together with other center parties and the elected president has always won the majority in parliament since 2002, Macron's frustration and disappointment over his first term in office are likely to cost him votes.

Leftists want Mélenchon as prime minister

The left-wing camp hopes to gain a majority with its alliance Nouvelle Union Populaire Écologique et Sociale (NUPES).

The merger is important because small parties have little chance of winning constituencies simply because of the majority voting system.

Should the alliance win the parliamentary majority, Macron would effectively be forced to appoint a prime minister from among their ranks.

According to the agreements made between the left-wing parties, this should then be Mélenchon.

The agreement was controversial among the socialists.

They had a historically poor result in the presidential election.

Unlike earlier alliances of left-wing parties, they are now not playing the leading role and have had to make some concessions to the Mélenchon party, LFI, which is much further to the left.

The agreement with them said, for example, that you could violate certain rules in the European Union in order to implement your policy.

mfh/dpa

Source: spiegel

All news articles on 2022-05-06

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