MOSCOW, Sept 8 – Thousands of people took to the streets across France on Saturday at the call of left-wing parties to protest the appointment of right-wing Michel Barnier as the new prime minister, reported Sputnik.
The left-wing French parties of the New Popular Front alliance, which gained the most seats in the latest snap parliamentary elections, have called on the citizens to hold protests across the country after French President Emmanuel Macron refused to appoint their candidate, Lucie Castets, as the head of the government.
The bloc’s largest left-wing France Unbowed party earlier announced that at least 138 demonstrations were to be held in different French cities.
About 2,000 protesters have gathered in France’s western city of La Rochelle, while about 300 people walked out on a demonstration in the neighbouring city of Saintes, the France Bleu radio broadcaster reported. Another demonstration is scheduled for 1300 GMT in the city of Angouleme.
About 600 people joined protests in the western department of Dordogne, while between 300 and 400 people protested outside the prefecture building in the southwestern city of Pau, France Bleu said. Some 600 people have gathered near the prefecture’s building in the northwestern city of Le Mans.
“I am shocked by such a rejection of democracy, this rejection of the voters’ voices. The left is in the lead and the most right-wing of all possible people is appointed prime minister,” one of the protesters in Le Mans told the radio station.
On Thursday, 73-year-old Barnier was appointed by Macron to the top post in the French Cabinet 60 days after the country’s snap parliamentary elections. Barnier is the oldest French politician in the role, taking over from 35-year-old Gabriel Attal, who was the youngest to be appointed.