close
Saturday July 06, 2024

French PM urges united front to stop far-right takeover

There is one bloc that is able to have an absolute majority and it´s the extreme right,: PM Gabriel Attal

By AFP
July 04, 2024
French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal and Eric Woerth, Renaissance candidate for the fourth constituency of Oise, campaign before the second round of the early French parliamentary elections, in Senlis, north of Paris, France, on July 3, 2024. — Reuters
French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal and Eric Woerth, Renaissance candidate for the fourth constituency of Oise, campaign before the second round of the early French parliamentary elections, in Senlis, north of Paris, France, on July 3, 2024. — Reuters

PARIS: France´s prime minister on Wednesday urged voters to form a united front to block the far right in legislative elections, warning that the anti-immigration party of Marine Le Pen was within reach of winning an absolute majority.

With four days to go until the second round in the vote, France´s political future remains up in the air as the far-right National Rally (RN) party seeks to take control of government for the first time.

The RN dominated the first round of voting, presenting the party of Le Pen with the prospect of forming a government and her protege Jordan Bardella, 28, taking the post of premier in a tense “cohabitation” with centrist President Emmanuel Macron.

But more than 200 candidates from the left and the centre this week dropped out of three-way races in the second round of the contest, aiming to prevent the RN winning the seats.

While the formation of this so-called “Republican Front” seems to have generally been a success for the government, the key question now is whether voters will respond to the pleas to block the RN.

“There is one bloc that is able to have an absolute majority and it´s the extreme right,” Prime Minister Gabriel Attal told France Inter radio.

“On Sunday evening, what´s at stake in the second round is to do everything so that the extreme right does not have an absolute majority,” he said.