Le Pen’s National Rally wins seats, airtime and
money in French vote
The far-right party gained enough seats to present a
no-confidence vote and exceeded even its own expectations in the voting booth.
BY JULES
DARMANIN
June 20,
2022 12:17 pm
Marine Le
Pen’s National Rally shattered a glass ceiling in Sunday’s French legislative
elections — with an elevenfold increase to 89 seats that gives the party
unprecedented power in the incoming National Assembly.
With 89
MPs, not only has Le Pen been resurrected — after keeping a low profile
following her loss to President Emmanuel Macron — but the resurgent far-right
party will become a parliamentary group for the first time since 1986.
“The people
have chosen to send a very powerful group of National Rally MPs to the assembly
… by far the most numerous of our political history,” a jubilant Le Pen told
supporters and constituents in the northern town of Hénin-Beaumont on Sunday
night. She announced Monday morning she wouldn’t take the helm of the party
itself, in order to stay focused on her role as upcoming president of the
parliamentary group, where she’ll sit as a one of the major forces in
opposition.
The
far-right party, which only had eight MPs in the last makeup of the French
lower chamber, had fallen short of the 15-seat threshold political parties have
to reach to form a parliamentary group in its last term. MPs who are not in
groups have less speaking time, less means and less say in how the assembly
operates. Groups also get office space and meeting rooms.
For more
polling data from across Europe visit POLITICO Poll of Polls.
With 89
seats, the National Rally will also be able to put forward a no-confidence
vote. This could prove risky for Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne’s government,
which has a majority of MPs against it. It is also above the 60-seat bar needed
to refer a passed bill to the Constitutional Court, which is able to censor
texts it deems anti-constitutional.
Le Pen’s
party has also bagged an actual jackpot, as the French state gives more money
to parties that do well in elections. The party will receive about €10 million
every year until 2027. At the end of 2020, the party had close to €24 million
in debt, according to an official transparency report.
Even if Le
Pen’s formation was expected to make significant gains in this election, the
National Rally has beaten polls and its own expectations. Early Sunday, party
members were aiming for about 40 seats, POLITICO’s Playbook Paris reported. The
election’s single-constituency, two-round system is usually thought to benefit
parties closer to the center, but it also makes seat projections somewhat
hazardous, as individual races often depend on a few hundred, or even dozens of
votes.

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