French
election: Rivals unite against Le Pen’s far right
Hundreds of
candidates from Macron’s camp and the left-wing alliance withdraw in an effort
to keep the National Rally out.
Centrist and
left-wing candidates have reluctantly banded together to try to stop Marine Le
Pen's National Rally from taking power for the first time. |
JULY 2, 2024 7:31 PM CET
BY GIORGIO LEALI
https://www.politico.eu/article/french-election-marine-le-pen-far-right-national-rally/
PARIS — The chances of an outright victory for the far right
in the dramatic French election fell on Tuesday, as centrist and left-wing
candidates reluctantly banded together to try to stop Marine Le Pen’s National
Rally from taking power for the first time.
At least 200 candidates from both the left-wing alliance and
President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist coalition pulled out of the contest ahead
of a crucial deadline, in order to unite behind those remaining contenders with
the best chance of beating Le Pen’s nationalists, according to estimates from
AFP and Le Monde.
Their decisions could determine the outcome of the second
round vote on Sunday — and whether France will have a far-right government for
the first time in the modern republic’s history.
Tactical withdrawals have divided the presidential camp
since the first round, with political heavyweights refusing to toe the line
after both Macron and his Prime Minister Gabriel Attal called for a large
number of pullouts.
The French electoral system usually does not produce such a
complicated picture — but Macron’s shock decision to dissolve parliament for a
snap vote after losing the EU election to the far right last month has thrown
the country’s politics into chaos.
Voters are choosing lawmakers for the French National
Assembly’s 577 electoral districts, with 289 seats needed for an absolute
majority.
In the second-round vote last time there was an election, in
2022, only a handful of districts offered voters a choice of three or more
candidates. It was almost always a runoff involving the top two candidates from
the first round of voting.
But this time, there are more than 300 constituencies where
at least three candidates qualified for the second-round runoff, which is
taking place on July 7. They usually include one from the far right, one from
the leftist alliance, and one from Macron’s centrist bloc.
That led to frantic discussions behind the scenes among
candidates and party officials over whether to drop out and unite against the
anti-Le Pen vote. They had until 6 p.m. CEST on Tuesday to decide. Many have
now chosen to drop out.
So far, 130 candidates from the left-wing New Popular Front
(out of 446 who qualified for the second round), according to estimates by Le
Monde, and 81 candidates from Macron’s camp (out of 319 who qualified),
according to the presidential party, withdrew from the race, Official figures
aren’t available until the data is centralized by France’s Interior Ministry.
The wave of withdrawals means there will now be fewer than
100 districts with three candidates standing in the second round.
The first round of voting on Sunday put Le Pen’s far-right
National Rally party in the lead, ahead of the left-wing alliance, with
Macron’s centrist coalition lagging behind in third place.
On Sunday night, the de facto leader of the left-wing
alliance, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, called on third place finishers from his camp to
pull out of local races to stop the National Rally.
Attal sent a similar message to his camp. “In such
circumstances, France deserves that we not hesitate,” Attal said on Sunday
evening, calling on third-place finishers to withdraw when standing could “have
the National Rally elected.”
‘Grotesque’
But Macron’s camp struggled to stick to the official line.
Key figures refused to rally behind far-left candidates whose platform includes
massive public spending in an already deeply indebted country.
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For some centrists, the left-wing France Unbowed party and
its leader Mélenchon pose an equal or even greater danger than Le Pen. Macron
himself has spent much of this campaign slamming the policies of the New
Popular Front alliance as “grotesque” and destructive for France.
Opponents have slammed the far left, warning that its
spending policies would lead France to bankruptcy. The pro-Macron camp has also
zeroed in on France Unbowed for its hard-line opposition to Israel’s war in
Gaza, which has led to accusations of antisemitism.
The far right, meanwhile, is often accused of being
unprepared for government and incoherent on economic policy, while pushing
divisive measures on immigration.
Economy and Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, who is not
running for reelection, said he didn’t support voting for France Unbowed, even
when facing a runoff with a National Rally candidate.
Others, like outgoing Minister of Local Authorities and
Rural Affairs Dominique Faure, followed the government’s instructions, but made
clear that they disagreed. “Maintaining my candidacy was for me the best
solution to fight the extremes,” Faure wrote in a note on Tuesday, announcing
her withdrawal after intense pressure from the French president and the prime
minister.
This story has been updated.
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