Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne and other senior Macron backers have been trying to win over individual right-wing and moderate left parliamentarians to bolster their ranks
France’s new lower house of parliament meets for the first time on Tuesday with centrist allies of President Emmanuel Macron little closer to building a stable majority after suffering an upset in elections earlier this month.
Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne and other senior Macron backers have been trying to win over individual right-wing and moderate left parliamentarians to bolster their ranks. “The phones are running hot,” one MP told AFP.
Olivier Marleix, head of the conservative Republicans group seen as most compatible with Macron, met Borne on Tuesday. “We’ve told her again there is no question of any kind of coalition,” he said.
But he added that the prime minister “really showed that she wanted to listen to us. That’s quite a good sign.
“We’re here to try and find solutions,” he added.
“There will be some draft laws where I think we should be able to work together,” including one to boost households’ purchasing power in the face of food and energy inflation.
Pro-Macron candidate Yael Braun-Pivet is expected to be the first woman in French history to claim the speaker’s chair in a series of votes starting at 1300 GMT.
Also on Tuesday, parties with at least 15 members will be able to form official groups, which enjoy more influence and speaking time.
Led by Macron’s defeated presidential opponent Marine Le Pen, the RN would usually have a claim on the post as the largest single opposition party.
It faces a stiff challenge from the NUPES left alliance — encompassing Greens, Communists, Socialists and the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) — who agreed on Tuesday on a joint candidate after some internal jostling.
The president has ruled out both tax increases and higher public borrowing in any compromise deals with other parties.
After Macron promised a “new government of action… in the first few days of July” once he returns from this week’s G7 and Nato meetings in Germany and Belgium, some observers see the compressed calendar as ambitious.
“In all other European countries, when they’re in talks to form a government, it can take months” rather than the days Macron has allowed, political scientist Lazar said.
Even as the government projects business almost as usual, hard-left LFI especially has vowed to try to prevent key proposals, such as the flagship reform to raise the legal retirement age from 62 to 65.
Party deputy chief Adrien Quatennens said Sunday there was “no possible agreement” with Macron, saying cooperation would “make no sense.”
“We haven’t heard (Macron) move or back down one iota on pension reform” or other controversial policies, he added.
More Stories
In some places of India, soaring temperatures force the shutdown of schools.
Bangladesh is 40th on the planet regarding military strength
How Bolsonaro allies went after in spite of tight security