French
interior minister wins leadership of top conservative party
Bruno
Retailleau has become a well-known figure in French politics since joining the
government in September.
May 18, 2025
7:13 pm CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
PARIS —
French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau won the race to become the next
leader of the country’s main conservative party, Les Républicains, further
raising his profile ahead of a possible presidential run two years from now.
Retailleau,
a staunch conservative likely to push the party further to the right, has seen
his popularity skyrocket since joining the government in September and was
widely expected to unseat current Les Républicains leader Laurent Wauquiez, who
was running for reelection.
Retailleau
obtained upwards of 74 percent of votes, according to the party’s official
figures.
Les
Républicains and its ideological predecessors dominated French politics for
decades, with former presidents like Jacques Chirac and Nicolas Sarkozy among
its ranks. But the conservative force fell into political purgatory after
President Emmanuel Macron’s 2017 election upended the country’s political
balance.
The party
has since endured a series of electoral defeats but made an unexpected return
to government last September by allying with pro-Macron parties to form a
minority government. That move brought Retailleau, 64, into the Cabinet for the
first time.
The party is
now jockeying to reclaim right-wing voters in a potentially wide-open 2027
presidential race without Macron — who is constitutionally barred from seeking
a third term — and possibly without far-right leader Marine Le Pen, whose legal
troubles could derail her candidacy.
An IFOP poll
of 9,128 voters conducted last month showed Retailleau winning around 10
percent of the vote in the first round of the presidential election — a major
improvement over Les Républicains’ previous candidate, Valérie Pécresse, but
still well short of what it would take to advance to the runoff.
During the
internal campaign, Retailleau was criticized for seeking to lead the party
while holding a Cabinet position — a dual role Wauquiez argued would prevent
him from effectively challenging the president and government.
Retailleau
countered by emphasizing that he does not align with Macron and claimed the
president’s political project would fade after his departure — a statement that
sparked frustration among pro-Macron officials, who spoke to POLITICO on
condition of anonymity .
Despite the
tensions, government spokesperson Sophie Primas — a member of Les Républicains
and a Retailleau supporter — insisted on Thursday that the interior minister
planned to stay on even if he won the party leadership.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário