PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron’s Ukraine strategy was to be put to a symbolic vote in parliament’s lower house on Tuesday as political tensions rage in the run-up to June’s European Parliament elections.
Macron has been seeking to hammer home the importance of greater support for Ukraine, which is running out of ammunition, insisting that Europe’s security is at stake.
Following a debate, the National Assembly lower house will hold a non-binding vote on the government’s Ukraine strategy, including a bilateral security agreement signed by Macron and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky last month.
With the symbolic parliament vote, Macron is forcing political parties to take a public stance on the conflict as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine stretches into its third year.
The far-right National Rally (RN), which leads Macron’s alliance by a wide margin ahead of the June European elections, said it would abstain, while the far-left France Unbowed party (LFI) said it would vote against.
With the support of the conservative Republicans party (LR), the outcome of the vote could still offer backing to Macron’s strategy.
Prime Minister Gabriel Attal will start the debate at around 4:30 p.m. (1530 GMT) and the vote is expected at around 8:00 pm.
The upper house, the Senate, was set to hold similar debates on Wednesday.
The LFI said it would vote “against war” and the possibility of Ukraine joining NATO and the European Union in the future.
For his part, Jordan Bardella, the 28-year-old leader of the RN, said his party would abstain because of its “red lines.”
“We need to be very careful,” Bardella told broadcaster France 2. “Yes to support for Ukraine but no to war with Russia.”
The RN opposes the dispatch of Western ground troops, which Macron has refused to rule out, and the possibility of Ukraine becoming a member of NATO and the EU.
Allies of Macron at the weekend lambasted the RN at the launch of their European election campaign, accusing the far-right party of flirting with the Kremlin and betraying the interests of France and Europe.
But public support for France’s continued aid for Ukraine is waning, according to some pollsters.
An Elabe poll released on Sunday showed that 39 percent of French people support France’s continued economic and financial aid for Ukraine, 11 percentage points down from June 2023.
Just 14 percent of French people believe France should ramp up military aid for Ukraine according to the study.
Emphasising that his ruling party is prepared for war with Russia is a “risky bet” ahead of the elections, the Eurointelligence think tank said.
It added that Macron’s “narrow focus” on the RN made his party an “easy target” for others.
Macron’s hardened stance, which has included not ruling out the sending of Western troops to Ukraine, represents a turnaround for a leader who had for many years sought to position himself as a top mediator between Russia and Ukraine.
Speaking to French broadcaster BFM TV on Monday, Ukrainian leader Zelensky said there was no need for French ground troops in his war-torn country as long as “Ukraine holds.”
“Your children are not going to die in Ukraine,” he said.
French parliament to vote on Macron’s Ukraine strategy
https://arab.news/wbnka
French parliament to vote on Macron’s Ukraine strategy
- Macron has been seeking to hammer home the importance of greater support for Ukraine
- With the symbolic parliament vote, Macron is forcing political parties to take a public stance on the conflict as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine stretches into its third year
Philippine lawmakers start VP Duterte impeachment hearings
- The revived impeachment bid leans heavily on allegations that the younger Duterte misused public funds
MANILA: A Philippine congressional committee began impeachment hearings Monday that could dash Vice President Sara Duterte’s run for the country’s top job.
The daughter of former president Rodrigo Duterte, who recently announced her candidacy for the 2028 presidential election, was impeached by the country’s House of Representatives last year only to see the Supreme Court toss the case out over procedural issues.
The revived impeachment bid leans heavily on allegations that the younger Duterte misused public funds while in office and will see the House justice committee debate three such complaints.
A fourth case was dropped by complainants who hoped to speed up the process.
Duterte also stands accused of making a death threat against her former ally and current President Ferdinand Marcos, with whom she is engaged in an explosive political feud.
Under the Philippine constitution, an impeachment triggers a Senate trial. A guilty verdict would result in Duterte being barred from politics and sidelined from the 2028 presidential race.
The latest impeachment bid faces a changed environment with the vice president ahead in recent polls, analysts told AFP.
“The political context will be very different, especially now that Sara declared her candidacy,” University of the Philippines political science professor Jean Franco said.
“It’s definitely going to weigh on the minds of the members of the House of Representatives,” Franco said, adding that a vote for impeachment would effectively see a lawmaker’s career “marked for death.”
Anthony Lawrence Borja, an associate professor of political science at De La Salle University agreed saying: “It is ultimately a question of whether the patronage of the current administration outweighs their fear of Duterte’s condemnation.”
The same committee hearing the case against Duterte last month tossed out a pair of impeachment complaints against Marcos, ruling that allegations of corruption over a scandal involving bogus flood control projects lacked substance.
Michael Wesley Poa, spokesman for Duterte’s defense team, told AFP they were closely monitoring deliberations and trusted “the same standards” used in the Marcos hearing would be applied.










