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World

France’s Le Pen urges fresh polls next year

PARIS: The parliamentary leader of France’s far-right National Rally party on Saturday called for fresh elections...
Published September 14, 2024

PARIS: The parliamentary leader of France’s far-right National Rally party on Saturday called for fresh elections next year, just months after snap polls threw the country into political deadlock.

“It’s untenable,” three-time presidential candidate Marine Le Pen told fellow RN members.

“The great country that is France cannot function this way,” said the leader of the largest single party in parliament after elections this summer produced a hung legislature.

France faces coalition puzzle after left-wing surge in election

President Emmanuel Macron dissolved parliament in June after the RN trounced his centrist alliance in European elections.

The move has plunged the country into a political impasse, but under French law he cannot enact another dissolution for at least a year from the vote.

“There are 10 months left and I am convinced that at the end of those 10 months there will be new parliamentary elections,” Le Pen said.

Le Pen is largely expected to run again for president in 2027, when Macron’s second and final mandate ends.

The president had hoped to re-assert his relative majority in parliament by calling for the elections in late June and early July, but the plan backfired.

A left-wing alliance nabbed the most seats in the lower house National Assembly, but does not have a working majority.

Macron’s centrist faction is now the second largest block.

The anti-immigration RN is third but emerged from the election as the single largest party.

Macron last week appointed conservative Prime Minister Michel Barnier to lead a new government, appearing to be counting on Le Pen’s acquiescence to keep him in power.

His appointment has sparked outrage from the left.

Barnier, a 73-year-old former foreign minister who recently acted as the European Union’s Brexit negotiator, has said he would complete forming a government next week.

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