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Macron angers French left, far right insists no NATO exit

AFP – French President Emmanuel Macron on yesterday faced accusations after lashing out at the snap election manifesto of a new left-wing coalition, while the far-right party leader insisted he would not question France’s international commitments including on North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

With less than two weeks before the first round of polling in the snap elections called by Macron in response to his party’s defeat by the far right in European polls, the president is struggling to make up ground.

His ruling alliance is forecast by opinion polls to come only third in the legislative elections on June 30 – followed by a second round on July 7 – behind the far-right National Rally (RN) and a new left-wing alliance.

This could put RN leader Jordan Bardella in a position to become prime minister in an awkward “cohabitation” with Macron, although the 28-year-old has insisted he will only accept this if his party and allies win an absolute majority of seats.

Visiting a major defence show outside Paris, Bardella insisted that he “doesn’t plan to question the commitments France has made on the international stage” on defence if he takes power.

French President Emmanuel Macron. PHOTO: AP

“Our credibility towards our European partners and NATO allies is at stake,” he said at the Eurosatory arms trade show outside Paris, moderating the far right’s historic hostility to the Atlantic alliance.

The RN’s three-time presidential candidate Marine Le Pen said in 2022 that if she were elected, France would quit NATO’s integrated command in the name of “independence”.

A massive loan the RN received from a Russian bank in 2014, which it has since repaid, became a stick for its opponents to beat the RN with and point to the past warm relationship between Le Pen and the Kremlin.

The emergence of the New Popular Front, which groups left-wingers from Socialists to Communists, has been an unwelcome development for Macron since he called the snap elections in the hope of rallying moderates across the spectrum.

But Macron said Tuesday on a visit to western France that he had “confidence in the French” not to choose either extreme on the left and right.

“They see well what is on offer. The RN and its allies offer things which may make people happy but in the end we are talking EUR100 billion a year,” he said.

“And on the other side, with the extreme left it’s four times worse – there is no more secularism, they will go back on the immigration law and there are things that are completely farcical like changing your gender at the town hall,” he added.

The left-wing coalition’s programme includes a proposal allowing the change of civil status.

Macron’s remarks appeared to cause disquiet even in the ranks of his own ruling Renaissance party.

Macron’s comments also sparked an immediate counter-attack from left-wing opponents.

“We were waiting for Jupiter but we got Nero,” sniped Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure.

Macron, before he became head of state in 2017, once said France needed a “Jupiterian” presidency in reference to the Roman king of the gods. Nero was one of the Roman emperors most notorious for tyrannical rule.

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