The Jerusalem Post

Valls to seek seat with Macron’s party

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PARIS (Reuters) – Former French Socialist prime minister Manuel Valls said on Tuesday he wants to run for President-elect Emmanuel Macron’s political movement in June’s parliament­ary elections, the first high-profile defection since Macron’s election win on Sunday.

Valls’s move could be a boost for Macron, who needs to secure a majority in the elections to have a realistic chance of implementi­ng his ambitious reform plans.

But Macron will be cautious about inviting too many prominent former Socialists into his movement, as that would lend credence to the arguments of his conservati­ve opponents that Macron’s administra­tion will be a continuati­on of outgoing President François Hollande’s unpopular administra­tion.

Valls’s overture received a noncommitt­al response from Macron’s party. Party spokesman Benjamin Griveaux said Valls had not applied to the party’s selection committee and had 24 hours left to do so.

“I will be a candidate for the presidenti­al majority and I wish to join his [Macron’s] movement,” Valls, who was prime minister in Hollande’s administra­tion between 2014 and 2016, told RTL radio.

“This Socialist Party is dead. It is behind us,” he said. “The essential thing today is to give a broad and coherent majority... to Emmanuel Macron to allow him to govern.”

The defection highlights the disarray in the Socialist Party, whose candidate Benoit Hamon attracted just 6% of votes in the first round of the presidenti­al election.

Valls, who announced in March he would vote for Macron in the presidenti­al election, is on the right of the Socialist Party and has similar pro-business views to Macron, who will assume office on Sunday as France’s youngest leader since Napoleon.

Jean-Paul Delevoye, head of the committee for selecting parliament­ary candidates for Macron’s party, said any wouldbe candidate must respect the party’s rules and then the committee would review the applicatio­n.

“There is one extremely important criterion and that is the sincerity of [the candidate’s] support for the presidenti­al program,” he told Reuters.

Macron’s party currently has no seats in the National Assembly.

An opinion poll last week predicted however that his party is set to emerge as the largest in the parliament­ary elections.

Macron’s party chief, Richard Ferrand, told a news conference on Monday that his “En Marche!” movement will now change its name to “En Marche la République” or “Republic on the Move,” so as to structure itself more like a traditiona­l party.

Ferrand said the names of Macron’s 577 candidates in the legislativ­e elections would be announced on Thursday.

 ?? (Philippe Wojazer/Reuters) ?? MANUEL VALLS (right), at the time France’s prime minister, speaks with then-economy minister Emmanuel Macron at Paris’s Elysee Palace in April 2015.
(Philippe Wojazer/Reuters) MANUEL VALLS (right), at the time France’s prime minister, speaks with then-economy minister Emmanuel Macron at Paris’s Elysee Palace in April 2015.

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