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Macron holds talks on France deadlock but rejects PM resignation

Stuart William and Eleonor Hughes (Agence France-Presse) (The Jakarta Post)
Paris
Wed, June 22, 2022

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Macron holds talks on France deadlock but rejects PM resignation

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rench President Emmanuel Macron held talks on Tuesday with the opposition on ending the deadlock sparked by his failure to secure a majority in the parliamentary elections, after rejecting an offer from the Prime Minister to resign.

Macron was to host far-right leader Marine Le Pen and other political party chiefs for rare talks at the Elysee as he sought solutions to an unprecedented situation that risked plunging his second term into crisis, two months after it began.

The specter of political paralysis and the breakthrough performance by the far right under Le Pen has also raised questions over Macron's leadership in Europe as he seeks to keep a prime role in dealing with the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The Elysee said French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne, blamed by some analysts for heading a lackluster campaign, had offered her resignation to Macron, but the head of state had turned it down.

Macron believes the government needs to "stay on task and act", and the President is now seeking "constructive solutions" to the political deadlock in talks with opposition parties, said a presidential official who asked not to be named.

Macron started Tuesday's flurry of discussions by talking with Christian Jacob, the head of the traditional right wing, the Republicans (LR), a party on the decline in recent months but which the President may now court to give him a majority.

Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure and Communist Party boss Fabien Roussel, members of the New Ecologic and Social People's Union (NUPES) left-wing alliance, are also slated to meet Macron.

'No question of pact'

The options available to Macron range from seeking to form a new coalition, passing legislation based on ad hoc agreements or even calling new elections.

One option would be an alliance with the Republicans, which has 61 parliamentary seats.

But after the talks, Jacob appeared to close the door on such a solution. "I told the President there was no question of entering into what could be seen as betrayal of our voters.

"We will stay in opposition [...] there is no question of thinking about some kind of pact," he said, while vowing the party would not block the work of institutions.

Macron had hoped to mark his second term with an ambitious program of tax cuts, welfare reform and raising the retirement age, all of which are now in question.

"What can he [Macron] do now?" said the headline in the daily, Le Parisien. "Macron in an impasse, NUPES already divided," added Le Figaro.

While Macron's Ensemble (Together) coalition remains the largest party after Sunday's National Assembly elections, it fell dozens of seats short of keeping the absolute majority it had enjoyed for the last five years.

Macron's Together alliance won 245 seats, well short of the 289 needed for an overall majority in a low-turnout vote that resulted in an abstention rate of 53.77 percent. The election saw NUPES, along with its allies, become the main opposition force on 137 seats, according to Interior Ministry figures.

But it appears unlikely the coalition of Socialists, Communists, Greens and hard-left France Unbowed will be able to retain common cause in the legislature.

'Listen to voters'

Jean-Luc Melenchon, the France Unbowed chief who orchestrated the NUPES alliance, proposed on Monday to make NUPES a permanent left-wing bloc, but the offer was immediately rejected by the three other NUPES parties.

Melenchon is believed to be sending deputies to the Elysee talks with Macron on Wednesday in a snub to the President, rather than going himself.

Meanwhile the far right under Le Pen posted the best legislative performance in its history, becoming the strongest single opposition party with 89 seats, up from eight in the outgoing chamber.

Le Pen said changing the prime minister "would not change much", urging Macron to "listen to what the French voters said".

Even if Borne stays in her post for now, a cabinet shake-up is on the horizon.

Macron's health and environment ministers were beaten and will have to resign by tradition, as did the parliament speaker and the head of Macron's parliamentary group.

 

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