Le Pen’s
lawmakers in line for key French parliament jobs — thanks to Macron’s allies
Centrists
who support the president are having second thoughts about the far right’s
exclusion.
August 8,
2025 4:01 am CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont and Anthony Lattier
PARIS —
Emmanuel Macron supporters are pushing to replace leftist MPs with far-right
lawmakers in leadership positions in the French parliament — in a further sign
that Europe’s mainstream is prepared to do deals with those it once shunned.
Together
for the Republic, the largest parliamentary group that backs the French
president, wants to address what it now sees as the “problem” of there being
“too many” left-wing MPs in the National Assembly’s leadership, according to
one of the group’s senior officials who spoke to POLITICO.
That
group, like Macron, is centrist. They are divided over how to handle Marine Le
Pen’s ascendant far-right National Rally, which stands its best chance yet of
winning the presidency in 2027.
The
Macron-backing group’s latest move is seen as a way of negating the far right’s
argument that its voters are not being heeded. The exclusion of National Rally
lawmakers from parliamentary jobs only fuels the party’s narrative of being a
victim of the system, a pro-Macron MP said.
Any
effort to bring in far-right MPs would further erode the so-called firewall or
cordon sanitaire, invoked in many Western European countries and the European
Parliament to keep the far right away from key institutional roles despite its
growing electoral clout.
According
to French parliamentary convention, the allocation of leadership positions —
which include vice-presidents, quaestors and secretaries — is supposed to
reflect the makeup of the lower house. These leadership positions form the
Bureau of the National Assembly — the body that manages internal discipline,
sanctions unruly lawmakers, and oversees revisions to the chamber’s rulebook.
The left
holds a disproportionate number of Bureau seats relative to its electoral
strength, according to the Macron-allied official. Currently, most of the posts
are held by left-leaning lawmakers, while National Rally holds none.
Howls of
protest
The
debate over whether the National Rally should hold institutional power in
parliament dates back to 2022, when Macron lost his majority for the first time
and Le Pen’s party secured a record number of seats.
That
year, the far right managed to clinch two of the six vice-president positions,
thanks to votes from centrist and conservative MPs — despite howls of protest
from the left-wing opposition.
After
Macron stunned the country by dissolving parliament immediately after the
National Rally’s crushing victory in the European election last June, National
Rally MPs were shut out entirely from parliamentary leadership, as centrists
declined to support their candidates. The left secured a majority of Bureau
roles.
At the
time, Macron described it as “not a good thing.” He said National Rally MPs
were “legitimate,” adding: “There’s no such thing as a sub-MP.”
Macron
ally François Bayrou, now prime minister, was similarly critical and called the
exclusion “unacceptable.”
The
French aren’t the only ones grappling with these questions. In Germany, the
inclusion of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) sparked internal
debate within the center-right Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) after the AfD
secured a second-place finish in national elections earlier this year. But in
that case, the firewall ultimately held.
Nette
Nöstlinger contributed to this report.

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