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- French Campaign Kicks Off Amidst Tensions Over Snap Election
French Campaign Kicks Off Amidst Tensions Over Snap Election
French President Emmanuel Macron has called snap parliamentary polls three years early, a move seen as a gamble to shake up politics in France after his centrists were trounced by the far-right in EU elections. However, this decision may backfire, according to a recent poll by Ifop for the Journal du Dimanche, which suggests that the far-right RN party will receive 35% of the votes in the first round on June 30. Macron's ruling coalition is still behind and has little chance of winning an outright majority itself. Macron has urged moderate voters to band together in support of his alliance, stating that "the masks have come off and the battle of values is out in the open." Official campaigning begins at midnight for the June 30 first round, with candidates having filed until Sunday evening. The snap election comes just weeks before France hosts the Olympics, leaving many baffled as to why Macron made this decision.
There's the alliance led by (hard-left) LFI, there's the alliance led by the (far-right) RN -- extremes that would be a disaster for the country.
Things are simple today: we have unnatural alliances at both extremes, who agree on nothing except the jobs to be shared.
I think the French are intelligent, they see what's being done, what's coherent and what's not, and they know what to do.
Emmanuel Macron, who triggered this dissolution to trap the parties, has ended up trapping himself.
The aim is to create a new parliamentary majority.
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sources
perspectives
- 1.Election
- 2.French Foreign Policy
- 3.Immigration to Europe
- 4.France under Emmanuel Macron
- 5.Rise of Far-Right in Europe
- 6.French Politics
- 7.French Economy
- 8.BREXIT
- 9.National Debt
countries
organizations
- 1.National Rally
- 2.La France Insoumise party
- 3.Republican Party
- 4.EU Parliament
- 5.Nouveau Front Populaire
- 6.Socialist Party
- 7.Conseil d'État
- 8.Elysée Palace
- 9.European Central Bank
- 10.European Union
- 11.French Football Federation
- 12.Green Party
persons
- 1.Marine Le Pen
- 2.Emmanuel Macron
- 3.Eric Ciotti
- 4.Gabriel Attal
- 5.Jean-Luc Mélenchon
- 6.Kylian Mbappé
- 7.Nicolas Sarkozy
- 8.Jean-Marie Le Pen
- 9.Jordan Bardella
- 10.Lionel Jospin
- 11.Adrien Quatennens
- 12.Bruno Le Maire