The French far right was defeated in regional elections.
Regional election results a blow to far-right party
PARIS — Mainstream candidates delivered a stinging setback to France’s far-right in regional elections Sunday, thwarting its hopes of winning control of a region for the first time and slowing its momentum ahead of the presidential contest next year.
National Rally leader Marine Le Pen quickly conceded that the far-right, anti-immigration party failed to win any of mainland France’s 12 regions. She immediately looked forward to next year’s presidential vote, saying it “appears more than ever to be the election that allows for changes of politics and politicians.”
Le Pen complained that the organization of the two rounds of voting over successive weekends had been “disastrous and erratic.” Still, the
National Rally’s showing in Sunday’s decisive runoffs suggested that the party remains anathema to many voters. It accrued no more than 20 percent of votes nationally, the Ifop polling agency calculated, trailing both the mainstream right and the combined showing of green and leftist candidates.
Most notably, the National Rally was roundly beaten in the southeast, the region that had been seen as its best chance of securing a breakthrough victory in the balloting for regional councils.
As in previous national and local elections, voters put political differences aside in coming together to prevent a National Rally breakthrough.
Mainstream candidates crowed that they had delivered painful blows to the far-right party previously named the National Front. No region changed camps, with the right keeping the seven it had previously and the left still in control of the other five, according to official results and polling agencies’ projections.
On the right, winning incumbent Xavier Bertrand crowed that the National Rally wasn’t only “stopped” in his region, the Hauts-de-france in the north, but “we made it retreat greatly.”
Although focused on local issues and marked by record-low turnout, the regional voting was scrutinized as a test of whether the National Rally is gaining in acceptability. Le Pen has spent a decade trying to cast off the extremist reputation that repelled many French voters in the party’s previous guise as the National Front. The party’s renewed failure to win a region suggested that Le Pen and her party remain unpalatable to many before the 2022 presidential vote.
But voter interest was also tepid, at best, with only one-third turning out. Among the few who cast ballots, some lamented that young voters, in particular, appeared to be squandering the last voting opportunity before the 2022 presidential poll.