(Paris) The French left put aside its divisions on Ukraine or the Middle East to present on Friday a common program of “rupture” in the anticipated legislative elections and prevent the arrival in power of the extreme right, which promised a government of “national unity” in the event of victory.
On the eve of a weekend of demonstrations across France, rallies against the far right have already taken place in several cities, notably in Lyon (south-east) where incidents left four people injured.
After the defeat of the presidential camp in the European elections and the dissolution of the National Assembly decided by President Emmanuel Macron, the main left-wing parties met on Friday in Paris to celebrate a hard-fought union and detail their roadmap in the event of success in the early legislative elections of June 30 and July 7.
Hastily formed against the National Rally (RN, far right) after its triumph in the European elections, the “New Popular Front” promises to increase the minimum wage, to reverse the very unpopular pension reform and to reinstate the tax on the wealth.
The result of tense negotiations, its common program also outlines a compromise on international issues which divided the left and exploded its previous coalition.
On the Middle East, he thus calls “to act for the release of hostages held since the Hamas terrorist massacres […] and for the release of Palestinian political prisoners”.
The main force on the left, La France insoumise (LFI, radical left) has so far refused to assimilate Palestinian Hamas to a terrorist movement, breaking with the position of France and the European Union.
On the war in Ukraine, another point of tension, the coalition is committed to “unwaveringly defending the sovereignty and freedom of the Ukrainian people” and to ensuring “necessary” arms deliveries to Kyiv.
However, there remains the debate on who, on the left, could become prime minister.
Arriving in the lead on the left in the European elections, social-democrat MEP Raphaël Glucksmann called on Friday to reject the Jean-Luc Mélenchon hypothesis, tribune of the radical left. The former LFI presidential candidate recently created controversy by asserting that anti-Semitism was “residual” in France, despite official figures showing an outbreak of anti-Jewish acts.
In its common program, the New Popular Front affirms on the contrary that “racist, anti-Semitic and Islamophobic acts […] are experiencing a worrying, unprecedented explosion”.
Expected to be prime minister in the event of victory, RN president Jordan Bardella on Friday made this united left “his main adversary” in the legislative elections, while the Macronist camp is left behind in the polls.
Credited with more than 30% of voting intentions, the RN is seeking to broaden its support in order to gain power for the first time in its history.
Its leader, Marine Le Pen, promised Friday that the party would form “a government of national unity” to “get France out of the rut” and announced “a number of surprises on Sunday,” the deadline for submitting proposals. applications.
The party, heir to the National Front co-founded in 1972 by a Waffen-SS, however, continues to worry part of the country. Several thousand people marched against the far right on Friday in several cities, on the eve of a weekend of mobilization across the country.
“We already “tried” in 1940! » or “We don’t play with fire”, in reference to the logo of the National Rally, said the banners in Lyon (south-east) where 3,500 demonstrators were counted by the prefecture. In Montpellier (south), 4,000 people demonstrated according to the prefecture, and more than 10,000 according to the organizers. At the end of the evening in Lyon, clashes left three police officers and one demonstrator injured, according to the prefecture.
Jordan Bardella on Friday denounced “extremely dangerous” calls for “insurrection,” while saying he was “very attached to freedom of expression.”
On the political level, his party has recently garnered several rallies, including that of Eric Ciotti, president of the main right-wing party, Les Républicains (LR), plunged into a deep crisis.
For having allied with the RN, Mr. Ciotti was excluded by his party’s authorities, but the Paris judicial court invalidated his exclusion on Friday.
Faced with this accelerated political restructuring, Prime Minister Gabriel Attal denounced “boutique agreements” on both the right and the left.
The uncertainty in the country worries the markets: the Paris Stock Exchange signed its worst week since March 2022 (-6.23%) and erased its gains for the year.