Cape Breton Post

Rout by Macron’s party in French election vote

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PARIS — Voters gave President Emmanuel Macron’s fledgling party a solid victory in parliament­ary elections Sunday, handing the upstart centrist a strong mandate to overhaul the country’s labour laws, among the most sensitive issues for the French. Polling agency projection­s suggested Macron’s Republic on the Move! Party could take 355 to 425 seats in the 577seat National Assembly, the powerful lower house. That’s far more than the 289 seats needed for an absolute majority to carry out his program. The president “has all the power,’’ said Jean-Christophe Cambadelis, who resigned from his post as head of the Socialist Party, which dominated the outgoing Assembly but was flattened by the unpopulari­ty of former President Francois Holland.

With its allies, the Socialists could get fewer than 50 seats, projection­s showed. Voters showed little enthusiasm for the election in what could be a record low turnout. At the end of the afternoon, turnout stood at only 35 per cent — below last week’s record low.

Experts partly blamed voter fatigue following the May 7 election of Macron, plus voter disappoint­ment with politics.

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