Le Pen blames Macron for French government gridlock

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen condemned pre-election deals she said kept her National Rally party from power. (AFP)
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Updated 10 July 2024
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Le Pen blames Macron for French government gridlock

  • Unexpected outcome of Sunday’s snap election has plunged France into uncertainty, with no obvious path to a stable government

PARIS: France’s left-wing alliance and President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist bloc battled to put together rival bids to form a government, as far-right leader Marine Le Pen said on Wednesday that blame for the political impasse lay squarely with Macron.
The unexpected outcome of Sunday’s snap election, in which the leftist New Popular Front (NFP) 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.
To further complicate things, leaders within each camp disagreed on who to reach out to in order to try to cobble together a deal. Internal tensions within parties also grew as members jostled for influence in rebuilding a political landscape blown apart by the snap ballot.
And any government — of the left, center, or a broader coalition — could quickly fall victim to a confidence vote from the opposition if it has not secured sufficient solid support.
“Today, we find ourselves in a quagmire since no one is able to know from what rank the prime minister will come, or what policy will be pursued for the country,” far-right leader Marine Le Pen told reporters as she arrived in parliament.
Le Pen condemned pre-election deals she said kept her National Rally (RN) party from power.
Macron, whose term ends in 2027, called the parliamentary ballot after his party was trounced by the far right in EU elections last month, had said it would clarify the landscape — which has not happened.
“To say the least, this is not a great success for Emmanuel Macron,” Le Pen quipped.
Amid warnings from rating agencies, financial markets, the European Commission and France’s euro zone partners are all watching closely to see whether the impasse can be broken.
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It would be customary for 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.
Phones are ringing constantly, political sources have said, with some centrists now hoping they can reach a deal with the conservative The Republicans and edge the left out.
“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.
Meanwhile, leftist leaders also took to the airwaves to stress that, having topped the election, they should run the government. But without a deal yet on who could be prime minister, they now face growing competition from the right and center.
Carole Delga, from the Socialist Party, stressed that the left on its own cannot govern, and must extend its hand to others — but on the basis of the NFP’s tax-and-spend program.
But others took a harder line.
“The NFP has the greatest number of deputies in the National Assembly, it is therefore up to the NFP to constitute a government ... this is what we are working toward,” Manuel Bompard, from France Unbowed, told LCI TV.


Drone strikes in Ethiopia’s Tigray region kill one, injure another

Updated 6 sec ago
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Drone strikes in Ethiopia’s Tigray region kill one, injure another

  • The senior Tigrayan official said the drone strikes hit two Isuzu trucks near Enticho and Gendebta
  • The Ethiopian National Defense Force launched the strikes but did not provide evidence

ADDIS ABABA: One person was killed and another injured in drone strikes in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region on Saturday, a senior Tigrayan official and a humanitarian worker said, in another sign of renewed conflict between regional and national forces.
Ethiopia’s national army fought fighters from the Tigray People’s Liberation Front for two years until late 2022, in a war researchers say killed hundreds of thousands through direct violence, the collapse of health care and famine.
Fighting broke out between regional and national forces ⁠in the disputed territory of western Tigray earlier this week, according to diplomatic and government sources.
The senior Tigrayan official said the drone strikes hit two Isuzu trucks near Enticho and Gendebta, two places in Tigray about 20 kilometers apart. A humanitarian worker confirmed the strikes ⁠had happened. Both asked not to be named.
The Tigrayan official said the Ethiopian National Defense Force launched the strikes but did not provide evidence.
A spokesperson for the ENDF did not respond to a request for comment.
It was not immediately clear what the trucks were carrying.
TPLF-affiliated news outlet Dimtsi Weyane posted pictures on Facebook which it said showed the trucks damaged in the strikes. It said the trucks ⁠were transporting food and cooking items.
Pro-government activists posting on social media said the trucks were carrying weapons.
Earlier this week national carrier Ethiopian Airlines canceled flights to Tigray, where residents rushed to try to withdraw cash from banks.
The Tigray war ended with a peace pact in November 2022, but disagreements have continued over a range of issues, including contested territories in western Tigray and the delayed disarmament of Tigray forces.