Texarkana Gazette

Macron’s party dominates

Parliament­ary elections give mandate to France’s new leader

- By Elaine Ganley and Sylvie Corbet

PARIS—French voters gave President Emmanuel Macron’s upstart party a solid victory in Sunday’s parliament­ary election, handing the centrist a strong mandate to reshape French politics and overhaul the country’s restrictiv­e labor laws.

Polling agency projection­s suggested that Macron’s Republic on the Move! party could take 355 to 365 seats in the 577-seat National Assembly, the powerful lower house.

That’s far more than the 289 seats needed for an absolute majority to carry out his program.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, a center-right politician who joined Macron’s movement, said “through their vote, a wide majority of the French have chosen hope over anger.”

With 82 percent of the vote counted, the Interior Ministry said Macron’s party had 42 percent of the vote, the conservati­ve Republican­s had 22 percent and the far-right National Front captured 10 percent. The Socialists, who ruled the nation before Macron’s independen­t presidenti­al victory in May, were decimated and only won six percent of the vote.

Republican­s leader Francois Baroin declared his party the main opposition and wished Macron “good luck” because he said he wants France to succeed. He said conservati­ve lawmakers are going to have a strong bloc in the lower house to be able to voice their views.

However, some prickly opponents vowed to do their best to counter Macron’s plans.

Far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen registered a massive victory in her northern bastion of Henin-Beaumont, defeating Macron’s candidate as she won her first French parliament­ary seat. Le Pen was handily defeated by Macron in the May 7 presidenti­al vote.

Le Pen said she would “fight with all necessary means the harmful projects of the government,” especially what she called Macron’s pro-European, pro-migrant policies.

She said her National Front party had won at least six seats—with not all votes counted—an increase from the two seats it held in the outgoing legislatur­e.

 ?? Pool photo via AP ?? French President Emmanuel Macron, left, shakes hands with a polling station official Sunday after casting his ballot in the second round of the French parliament­ary elections in Le Touquet, northern France.
Pool photo via AP French President Emmanuel Macron, left, shakes hands with a polling station official Sunday after casting his ballot in the second round of the French parliament­ary elections in Le Touquet, northern France.

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