PARIS, July 10 – Leaders from the left-wing bloc that topped France’s legislative election on Sunday and the runner-up centrists continued on Wednesday a frenzied race to try to put together rival bids to form a viable government.
The unexpected outcome of the snap election, in which the left benefited from a surprise surge but no group won an absolute majority, has plunged France into uncertainty, with no obvious path to a stable government.
The New Popular Front (NFP) alliance of the hard-left France Unbowed, Communists, Socialists and Greens and Macron’s centrists both tried to woo lawmakers from each other’s camps and beyond.
“I think there is an alternative to the New Popular Front,” Aurore Berge, a senior lawmaker from Macron’s Renaissance group, told France 2 TV. “I think the French don’t want the NFP’s platform to be implemented; I think they don’t want tax increases.”
“We are the only ones who can extend (our base),” she said, adding that the conservative Republicans could be an option for such a deal.
Meanwhile, leftist leaders also took to the airwaves to stress that, having topped the election, they should run the government, with a prime minister and cabinet that the different parties that constitute the NFP are yet to agree on.
Amid warnings from rating agencies, what France does with its strained public finances will be an early test of whether it can still be governed. Financial markets, the European Commission and its euro zone partners are all watching closely.
It would be customary for President Emmanuel Macron to call on the biggest parliamentary group to form a government, but nothing in the constitution obliges him to do so.
Options include a broad coalition and a minority government, which would pass laws in parliament on a case-by-case basis with ad hoc agreements.
Macron “must allow the left to govern,” leftist leader Francois Ruffin told Le Monde.