French Greens conquer major cities in local
elections
Prime Minister Edouard Philippe also notches up
victory in polls marked by low turnout.
Incumbent Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo, a Socialist, was
handily reelected, winning nearly 50 percent of the vote, according to
estimates, with Macron's candidate, former Health Minister Agnès Buzyn only
gathering 13 percent of the vote.
By RYM
MOMTAZ 6/28/20, 9:43 PM CET Updated 6/28/20, 9:44 PM CET
PARIS —
France's Green party won big in Sunday's second round of local elections,
conquering cities including Strasbourg, Lyon, Bordeaux and Besançon, according
to initial estimates by polling institute Ipsos.
While Prime
Minister Edouard Philippe was handily reelected mayor of the northern city of
Le Havre, President Emmanuel Macron
expressed his "concern for the low turnout," according to an Elysée
official.
Turnout was
historically low at 41 percent, according to estimates by Ipsos, with multiple
factors discouraging voters such as the coronavirus pandemic, the unusual three
months lapse between the first and second round of the elections due to the
virus, and the good weather.
While
results for a number of big cities were yet to come, the Green party was off to
a promising start with some unprecedented wins.
"A
woman in Besançon it's very new and a very important signal," said Anne
Vignot, the Green mayor-elect of the eastern city. "We need something else
politically... I hope it will be the signal of politics that will be done in a
different way."
Incumbent Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo, a Socialist, was
handily reelected, winning nearly 50 percent of the vote, according to
estimates, with Macron's candidate, former Health Minister Agnès Buzyn only
gathering 13 percent of the vote.
Philippe
won 59 percent of the vote in Le Havre, with a 19 point lead over his
challenger from the Communist Party, according to first estimates.
Philippe is
facing an uncertain future at national level as he waits for Macron to decide
whether he wants him to continue leading the government. Nevertheless, he has
been enjoying his highest national approval ratings since July 2017, according
to a recent Harris-Interactive poll.
Macron
called Philippe after his win to congratulate him on his "beautiful
win," according to an Elysée official.
The
far-right National Rally won Perpignan, the biggest city it has conquered since
the 1990s, but failed in its goal of winning smaller towns in the North and
Southeast.
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