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FRENCH ELECTIONS

French PM and far-right chief clash in ill-tempered TV debate

French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal and the chief of the main far-right party Jordan Bardella clashed in an ill-tempered debate on Tuesday night that exposed fierce tensions less than a week ahead of the most polarising election in decades.

French PM and far-right chief clash in ill-tempered TV debate
From left - La France Insoumise's Manuel Bompard, Prime minister Gabriel Attal and Rassemblement National president Jordan Bardella . the three will take party in a TV debate on Tuesday evening. Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP

Attal, Bardella and hard-left MP Manuel Bompard, representing the left-wing coalition, exchanged accusations in a sometimes bruising live TV encounter where discussion of issues was often drowned by a cacophony of voices.

Bardella’s Rassemblement National (RN) still has a clear lead in opinion polls ahead of Sunday’s first round of voting in the parliamentary elections, followed by the left-wing Nouveau Front Populaire (NFP) coalition with President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist alliance lagging in third.

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At just 28, Bardella could become the first far-right prime minister in France’s modern history after the second round on July 7th, although he has said he will only take the job if the RN wins an absolute majority in parliament.

Bardella vowed that “if the French give me their confidence I will be the prime minister of purchasing power”, pledging cuts to VAT and tax breaks for the under 30s.

“I am prime minister. The difference with me is that I do not want to lie to the French,” retorted Attal.

“Jordan Bardella says every time that he will reduce VAT as if by magic but without saying how he will finance it,” he added.

Bompard meanwhile told the premier “you are badly placed to give lessons on the economy, given your record.”

Attal, 35, portrayed himself as safe pair of hands with experience of the realities of power, repeatedly asking Bardella “how will you finance it?” and saying “I will remain serious”.

“Excuse me Mr Teacher!” Bardella bristled at one point, while adding that “if you were credible we would not be here at all” — a reference to Macron’s dissolution of parliament following his party’s third place in European elections.

“Mr Attal be humble tonight, please,” Bardella said. “Stop your cinema please. You are not at the level of your office.”

Attal also rounded on Bardella for his controversial proposal to ban French dual nationals from public sector jobs, asking what message it sent to children growing up in France as dual nationals.

“The message that you send is dual nationals are half nationals,” he said.

READ ALSO What is Le Pen’s party policy on dual nationals?

The RN leader said for his part he would “drastically reduce migratory flows” if he becomes prime minister.

“There are millions of French who do not recognise the France that they grew up in,” he said.

Referring to the origins of Bardella, who is himself of Italian and also Algerian ancestry, Bompard said: “When your personal ancestors arrived in France, your political ancestors said exactly the same thing. I find that tragic.”

Regardless of the result, Macron has vowed to stay on as president until the end of his second term in 2027.

He has been criticised from all sides for his decision to call the snap election after his party received a drubbing in the European election earlier this month.

A warning issued by Macron Monday that the programmes of the two “extremes” on left and right could spark a “civil war” also sparked disquiet even within his own ranks.

Parliament speaker Yael Braun-Pivet, a senior member of the ruling Renaissance party, acknowledged that the French “have found it hard to understand” the dissolution. Former premier Edouard Philippe, who leads an allied centrist party, said simply that Macron had “killed the presidential majority”.

An Ifop poll has the RN on 36 percent support, the left-wing NFP on 29.5 percent and Macron’s camp on 20.5 percent, leading the unpopular president’s allies to beg him to step back from the campaign.

Bardella said France would have a new government after the elections and now faced the “historic choice” of whether it would be from the left or far-right.

Powerful Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin told BFMTV he wanted to leave the government after the election, sit as an MP and “build a new project”.

“We are at the end of the cycle, we need to build another,” he said.

Meanwhile, Bardella and Attal had both requested that the left-wing slot in Tuesday’s debate be taken by La France Insoumise founder Jean-Luc Mélenchon rather than Bompard.

A former presidential candidate, Mélenchon is the most recognisable but also the most divisive figure on the left due to his radical positions.

Mélenchon himself has refused to rule himself out of the running, saying his name “opens doors in working-class neighbourhoods” but many on the left hope an alternative figure will emerge.

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ELECTIONS

French elections: Deadline for candidates to drop out in order to block far-right

Candidates in France face a Tuesday deadline to register for the run-off round of a high-stakes parliamentary election, as President Emmanuel Macron's centrist camp and the left-wing alliance scrambled to prevent the far right from taking power.

French elections: Deadline for candidates to drop out in order to block far-right

On Sunday, French people go to polls for the decisive final round of the snap election Macron called after his camp received a drubbing in European elections last month.

His gamble appears to have backfired, with the far-right Rassemblement National (RN) of Marine Le Pen scoring a victory in the first round of voting last Sunday.

Macron’s centrists trailed in third place behind the left-wing Nouveau Front Populaire (NFP) alliance.

Listen to the team from The Local discussing all the election latest on the Talking France podcast. Download here or listen on the link below

Faced with the prospect of the far right taking power in France for the first time since the country’s occupation by Nazi Germany during World War II, Macron’s camp has begun cooperating with the NFP.

The rivals are hoping that tactical voting will prevent the RN winning the 289 seats needed for an absolute majority – especially in the ‘triangulaires or three-way second round contests.

Candidates have the right to withdraw between the rounds and in constituencies that face a three-way run-off between candidates are the far-right, the centre and the left the third-placed candidate is being urged to drop out in order to avod splitting the anti far-right vote.

The deadline to decide whether to stand down is 6pm on Tuesday. According to a provisional count by AFP, at least 200 left-wing or centrist candidates have already dropped out.

Although NPF leaders immediately said that they would withdraw candidates, the Macron camp said only that withdrawals would be made on a ‘case by case’ basis.

Speaking to broadcaster TF1 on Monday evening, Prime Minister Gabriel Attal once again urged voters not to give the far-right an absolute majority.

“That would be catastrophic for the French,” he said, adding that the far-right would fuel divisions in society.

Third-place candidates who qualified for the second round have been urged to drop out to present a united front against the far right.

Meanwhile an RN candidate has withdrawn from the race after photos surfaced of her wearing a Nazi cap. Ludivine Daoudi on Sunday came third in her district in the northwestern area of Calvados, but a photo of her allegedly wearing a cap from the Luftwaffe air force of Nazi Germany sparked controversy online.

“Only a strong republican front, uniting the left, centre and conservatives, can keep the far right at bay and prevent France from tipping over,” daily Le Monde said in an editorial.

Le Pen has urged voters to give the RN an absolute majority, which would see Jordan Bardella, the 28-year-old RN chief with no governing experience, become prime minister.

READ ALSO Will the far-right get a majority in the French parliament?

But most projections show the RN falling short of an absolute majority – although the final outcome remains far from certain.

The RN garnered 33 percent of the vote last Sunday, compared to 28 percent for the NFP alliance and just over 20 percent for Macron’s camp.

Speaking on television on Monday night, Bardella derided efforts by Macron’s camp and the left-wing coalition to put up a united front, suggesting that the “dishonourable” alliance had been formed out of desperation.

He accused the French president of coming “to the rescue of a violent extreme-left movement” he himself had denounced just days ago.

Macron convened a cabinet meeting Monday to decide a further course of action.

“Let’s not be mistaken. It’s the far right that’s on its way to the highest office, no one else,” he said at the meeting, according to one participant.

The emotion was palpable, with several ministers dropping out of the race.

“We’ve known happier meetings,” one minister told Le Monde.

France’s Euro 2024 star Jules Kounde was the latest football player to call on voters to block the far-right.

“Obviously I was disappointed to see the direction our country is taking with a big level of support for a party that is against our values of unity and respect, and that wants to divide the French people,” said Kounde, the 25-year-old Barcelona defender.

“Nothing is decided yet, and I think it will be important to block the far right and the RN,” he added, after France beat Belgium 1-0 in Duesseldorf to reach the Euro 2024 quarter-finals.

OPINION: The best France can hope for now is 12 months of chaos

Analysts say the most likely outcome of the snap election is a hung parliament that could lead to months of political paralysis and chaos.

With a total of 76 candidates elected outright in the first round, the final composition of the 577-seat National Assembly will be clear only after the second round.

If the RN takes an absolute majority and Bardella becomes prime minister, this would create a tense period of “cohabitation” with Macron, who has vowed to serve out his term until 2027.

The election results fuelled fresh criticism of Macron’s decision to call the vote in the first place, a move he took with only a tight circle of advisors.

The chaos risks damaging the international credibility of Macron, who is set to attend a NATO summit in Washington immediately after the vote.

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