Global Times

Macron wins strong majority for pro- EU, pro- business reform

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President Emmanuel Macron was poised to forge ahead with his pro- EU, pro- business reforms Monday after his centrist party redrew France’s political map with a resounding victory in parliament­ary elections.

Although it fell short of a predicted landslide, Macron’s Republic on the Move ( REM) and its allies won 350 seats in the 577- seat National Assembly on Sunday.

The election was being closely watched in Europe and around the world to see if France’s youngest- ever leader would secure a mandate to push through his pro- EU reform agenda.

The new body will be nearly six years younger on average, have a record 223 women lawmakers, and will be strikingly less politicall­y experience­d.

The trailblazi­ng party that 39- year- old Macron founded just 14 months ago has caused a political earthquake even if the winning score was considerab­ly lower than the 470 seats predicted by some pre- vote surveys.

“A profoundly renewed political generation takes over the reins of legislativ­e power,” wrote editoriali­st Alexis Brezet in the right- leaning daily Le Figaro.

Macron wants to use his majority in parliament to pursue his agenda of loosening labor laws and overhaulin­g France’s social security system.

He has already had little pushback on his stated intention to use executive orders to push through reforms without parliament­ary debate – though street protests over the erosion of cherished workers’ rights such as those seen last year are considered likely.

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