Defection robs Macron party of majority

By AFP
|
May 20, 2020

PARIS: Left-leaning lawmakers defected on Tuesday to rob President Emmanuel Macron’s party of its outright majority in France’s National Assembly in a symbolic but non-paralysing setback for the embattled reformist leader.

Seventeen members of Macron’s La Republique En Marche (LREM) party said they had formed a new political grouping named “Ecology, Democracy, Solidarity” (EDS) to pursue greener policies, “modernise” the political system, and reduce social inequalities.

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“After Covid-19, nothing will be like before,” they said in a statement and insisted: “we can do more and better in the National Assembly.” The 577-member assembly is the lower house of parliament, but has the final say on most legislation over the upper house or Senate.

Macron’s then brand-new LREM took 308 seats in 2017 elections that saw the centrist leader swept to power from relative obscurity. Lawmakers have quit the party at a trickle since then, and it was finally left with 288 seats on Tuesday—one fewer than the 289 required for an outright majority.

The governing party insisted that Tuesday’s loss was not “cataclysmic”, as it could continue to rely on smaller, allied parties for a voting majority in the assembly.

Macron’s popularity has zigzagged as he has fought a succession of political battles starting with the so-called “yellow vest” rebellion of 2018-2019 that was sparked by widespread anger against a leader seen by critics as the president of the rich and out of touch with ordinary people.

That was followed early this year by France’s longest continuous transport strike over the former investment banker’s plans to reform the country’s pension system. This month, an opinion poll showed only about a third of French people had confidence in Macron to manage the country’s problems.

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