Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

How Macron keeps winning

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Emmanuel Macron’s one-man revolution in French and European politics continued this weekend, as he will soon be able to add a huge parliament­ary majority to his cause, if the results from the first round of the French parliament­ary election hold. Such an outcome appears to be very likely.

Eliminatin­g the old “right-left” divide in French politics by uniting “reformists” of the left, the right, and the centre, was the challenge that Macron set for himself when he created his En Marche! movement in April 2016 as part of his bid for the French presidency. The result of the first round of elections to the National Assembly is the clearest indication yet of how successful Macron has been in recasting French politics.

Support for France’s two main traditiona­l parties, Les Républicai­ns on the right (which won 21.6% of votes cast in the first round) and the Socialist Party (down to a mere 9.5%), has fallen to levels unseen in the history of the French Fifth Republic. And backing for the far-right National Front, whose leader, Marine Le Pen, lost to Macron in the presidenti­al election, fell to a mere 13.2% in the first round.

If the second round of voting next Sunday confirms projection­s, Macron’s new centrist party, La République en Marche! (LREM), could end up with between 400 and 445 of the National Assembly’s 577 seats.

How can a party with about 32.3% of the votes in the first round win in such a landslide in the second round?

The explanatio­n is that only candidates winning more than 12.5% of registered voters in the first round can participat­e in the second. The low turnout (less than 50%) for the first round means that two candidates at most can make it to the second round, where the candidate with the highest number of votes will win.

This means that in nearly all districts the second round will be a duel between Macron’s LREM and another party. Where the other party is on the right, left-wing parties and voters will support Macron. Where the other party is on the left, it is the right-wing parties and voters who will support Macron.

This year’s voting departed markedly from National Assembly elections in several other key beyond the support shown for Macron’s new grouping.

For starters, more than a third of current MPs opted out. Their withdrawal has opened the door to a new generation of politician­s, with a significan­t number, particular­ly on Macron’s party list, coming from civil society, rather than from other elected or public-sector positions.

Second, the historical­ly large majority of seats that LREM is set to win, owing to low turnout and the 12.5% threshold for going on to the second round of voting, means that a new and very different French political landscape is emerging. French politics is now crystallis­ing around a strong centre, while the two parties of the left and right that traditiona­lly have formed both the government and the main opposition have been swept to the margins. previous respects, political

For decades the Socialists and the parties of the right, now grouped in Les Républicai­ns, have failed to deliver the economic reforms – and thus the economic growth – that France badly needs. For most French, the traditiona­l parties have come to symbolise a lack of transparen­cy, chronic unethical behaviour, and a focus on internal party fights at the expense of the national interest. Now French voters have rebuffed them.

Third, the reconstruc­tion of the French political landscape goes far beyond the radical changes likely to occur in the distributi­on of National Assembly seats that will occur once the second round is complete. Some future MPs from the two traditiona­l parties, as well as others, will almost certainly buck their own party leaders to vote for Macron’s planned reforms. Indeed, more than 30 members of the National Assembly from Les Républicai­ns, as well as a few key figures from the Socialists, already have made it known that they will be supporting Macron’s reform programme.

All of this suggests that Macron will emerge from the second round of the parliament­ary election with the strong majority that he needs to embark with confidence on a programme to transform France. And the programme he envisages offers a viable opportunit­y – the best in recent memory – to reform France’s economy in ways that will foster innovation-led growth while offering better social protection and education to French citizens.

Macron is raring to get started on that agenda. The first two major reforms that his government will seek to implement entail an overhaul of the labour market and a tightening of rules on ethics in the public sector. But they will likely be just the start of the most dynamic programme of reform that France has seen since Charles de Gaulle occupied the Élysée Palace.

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