The Herald (South Africa)

Macron’s party tops early polls

- Guy Jackson

FRENCH President Emmanuel Macron’s party topped the first round of voting in yesterday’s parliament­ary elections, putting him on course for an overwhelmi­ng majority to implement his programme of ambitious reforms.

Estimates based on partial results showed Macron’s year-old Republique en Marche (Republic on the Move, REM) and its ally MoDem on 32.2-32.9%, ahead of the right-wing Republican­s on 20.9-21.5%

The far-right National Front (FN) was seen third with 13.1-14%.

Seat projection­s showed Macron’s camp going on to win between 390 and 445 seats in the 577-member National Assembly after next Sunday’s second round, continuing his centrist revolution which has left France’s traditiona­l parties in tatters.

Both the Republican­s – who had hoped to upstage Macron in the parliament­ary election – and the Socialists of Macron’s predecesso­r Francois Hollande appeared set for steep losses.

Marine le Pen’s FN party was left disappoint­ed as she struggled to rebound from her bruising defeat by Macron in the presidenti­al run-off, with the party’s result largely unchanged from the first round of the 2012 vote.

Turnout was markedly down yesterday compared with the last parliament­ary election, reflecting a degree of fatalism among Macron’s opponents in the face of his advance as well as a degree of election fatigue, experts said.

About 49% of the electorate cast a ballot -one of the lowest levels in such an election in decades.

The results showed Macron continuing to impress the French, a month after being elected France’s youngest-ever president on May 7.

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