French leftist parties yesterday pitched potential candidates to head a minority government, with parliament adrift following an election in which no one political force claimed a clear majority.
Defying expectations, the New Popular Front (NFP) alliance of left-wing parties won the most seats in Sunday’s second-round National Assembly runoff.
Combined, it holds 193 out of 577 seats in the National Assembly but is well short of the 289-seat threshold for a majority.
As newly elected members of parliament showed up to visit their workplace ahead of a first session on July 18, the coalition of Greens, Socialists, Communists and the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) insisted they should form the next government.
The alliance was abuzz with debate over who to put forward as a potential prime minister, and whether the alliance should seek a broader coalition.
Olivier Faure, the boss of the Socialist party — a moderate member of the NFP coalition — threw his hat in the ring yesterday, saying he was “willing to accept” the job, on the basis of “dialogue” with the other coalition members.
The Socialist party’s secretary-general, Pierre Jouvet, had prepared the ground earlier, saying that “Faure alone has the profile to reassure and be prime minister”.
This, observers said, was an open invitation to the hard-left LFI party to back the Socialist as a consensus choice rather than LFI’s own highly divisive boss Jean-Luc Melenchon.
Some party members, meanwhile, have suggested that LFI deputy Clemence Guette, 33, could be a promising alternative from within their own ranks.
Either way, NFP members plan to name a potential prime minister “by the end of the week,” leading LFI figure Mathilde Panot said.
In the French system, the president nominates the prime minister, who must be able to survive a confidence vote in parliament — a tricky proposition with three closely balanced political forces in play.
Macron’s camp came second in Sunday’s vote, taking 164 seats after voters came together to block the far-right National Rally (RN) from power.
This left the anti-immigration, anti-Brussels outfit in third place with 143 lawmakers.
The president has kept Prime Minister Gabriel Attal’s government in place for now, hoping horse-trading in the coming days and weeks could leave an opening for him to reclaim the initiative.
Members of Macron’s camp have been eyeing both the centre-left Socialists and conservative Republicans as possible allies of convenience for a new centrist-dominated coalition, which would leave them at least partly in charge.
“None of the three leading blocs can govern alone,” Stephane Sejourne, head of Macron’s Renaissance party, wrote in daily Le Monde.Red lines including that coalition members must support the European Union and Ukraine and maintain business-friendly policies, he said.
These requirements, he warned, “necessarily exclude LFI” and the caustic Melenchon.
Markets are paying close attention to the European Union’s second-largest economy.
Ratings agency Moody’s warned it could downgrade its credit score for France’s more than €3tn debt pile if a future government reverses Macron’s widely-loathed 2023 pension reform, echoing a Monday warning from S&P on the deficit.
Even as politicians struggle to define the immediate path ahead, eyes are also already turning to the next time French voters will be called to the polls.
Macron’s term expires in 2027 and he cannot run a third time — potentially leaving the way open for his twice-defeated opponent, RN figurehead Marine Le Pen, to finally capture the presidency.
The far-right outfit has been digesting a disappointing result after polls suggested it could take an absolute majority in parliament. Party sources told AFP its director-general Gilles Pennelle had resigned.
In an unrelated development, French investigators said yesterday they were looking into Le Pen’s 2022 campaign finances following allegations of embezzlement, forgery, fraud, and that a candidate on an electoral campaign accepted a loan.
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