San Francisco Chronicle

Macron poised to sweep seats in parliament

- By Elaine Ganley Elaine Ganley is an Associated Press writer.

PARIS — Candidates in the runoff of French parliament­ary elections hit the campaign trail on Monday, shaken by record low turnout in the first round and the prospect of a sweep by President Emmanuel Macron’s new party that would shatter the political landscape.

Less than half of registered voters — 48.7 percent — cast ballots on Sunday, the Interior Ministry said in its final count the morning after. Those who did gave Macron’s Republic on the Move party over 28 percent of the vote — more than 12 points ahead of its closest rival, the mainstream conservati­ves.

If the sweep holds as expected in next Sunday’s final round, lawmakers for Macron’s party, many of them new to politics, could take more than 400 seats in the 577-seat National Assembly, the lower house — unpreceden­ted in the Fifth Republic.

Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Front fell flat with 13 percent of the vote. Le Pen, who had Europe on edge until she lost the May 7 presidenti­al race, was trying to save herself and her party in the legislativ­e contests. She herself made it to the second round in her northern bastion of Henin-Beaumont, but some ranking party members were eliminated outright, notably campaign director Nicolas Bay, the party’s secretary-general.

“Lots of voters thought that (the election result) was played out in advance,” Bay said Monday on CNews television, reflecting a sense expressed by others that the huge presidenti­al win by Macron’s party demotivate­d many potential voters. Macron, an upstart centrist, formed his On the Move movement less than 14 months ago and then turned it into a political party, promising to return politics to the people.

Now, Macron’s rivals fear the elections will eliminate any effective opposition to counter an all-powerful president. He wants, within weeks, to start reforming French labor laws to make hiring and firing easier, and legislate a code of ethics in politics to end the scandals that over decades have eroded voter trust in the political class.

The Socialist Party of the deeply unpopular former President Francois Hollande was shredded in the first round, with its leader, Jean-Christophe Cambadelis, eliminated along with Benoit Hamon, the party’s presidenti­al candidate. The party took less than 7.5 percent of the vote.

Party leaders and others of all stripes appealed to the French to vote next week, some saying a democracy needs more than one voice.

Guy Tremollier­es, a 51-yearold Parisian, was pessimisti­c. “I think people don’t trust the politician­s anymore,” he said.

 ?? Lionel Bonaventur­e / AFP / Getty Images ?? French President Emmanuel Macron (left) escorts his Senegalese counterpar­t Macky Sall after meeting in Paris.
Lionel Bonaventur­e / AFP / Getty Images French President Emmanuel Macron (left) escorts his Senegalese counterpar­t Macky Sall after meeting in Paris.

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