The left alliance requires to form government - warns of "cutting attempts"
The Left Alliance The New People's Front requires "immediately" to form government, reports France Info.
As the largest block after the parliamentary elections, the NFP Alliance expects the government initiative, despite internal contradictions and lack of majority support in Parliament. Macron has said that he wants to get the National Assembly's structure ready before he appoints a new prime minister and lets Gabriel Attal resign.
Holding Attal, which belongs to Macron's party Renaissance, "may look like an attempt to eradicate Sunday's election results". This is what NFP writes in a press release, continuing: "We warn the president of all attempts to cut the institutions".
The Left Alliance The New People's Front requires "immediately" to form government, reports France Info.
As the largest block after the parliamentary elections, the NFP Alliance expects the government initiative, despite internal contradictions and lack of majority support in Parliament. Macron has said that he wants to get the National Assembly's structure ready before he appoints a new prime minister and lets Gabriel Attal resign.
Holding Attal, which belongs to Macron's party Renaissance, "may look like an attempt to eradicate Sunday's election results". This is what NFP writes in a press release, continuing: "We warn the president of all attempts to cut the institutions".
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Macron's election: Centralians, left -wing government or temporary technocracy
According to the French Constitution, the president will appoint a prime minister to form government based on a clear political majority. But the new election did not give Emmanuel Macron any clear candidate, so now he is facing three elections, according to The Economist.
The first alternative is to let the left alliance NPF try to form government. But the parties within NPF are divided into many issues and the leader of the Alliance's largest party LFI, Jean-Luc Mélenchons, can be considered radical to get coveted broad support, writes Politico.
The second alternative, according to The Economist, is to form a center coalition and try to reach a compromise between the more moderate left parties and the right parties.
The third alternative is to appoint a technocrat, an unpolitical bureaucrat, as prime minister who may govern the country until it is possible to announce new elections again after 12 months.
According to the French Constitution, the president will appoint a prime minister to form government based on a clear political majority. But the new election did not give Emmanuel Macron any clear candidate, so now he is facing three elections, according to The Economist.
The first alternative is to let the left alliance NPF try to form government. But the parties within NPF are divided into many issues and the leader of the Alliance's largest party LFI, Jean-Luc Mélenchons, can be considered radical to get coveted broad support, writes Politico.
The second alternative, according to The Economist, is to form a center coalition and try to reach a compromise between the more moderate left parties and the right parties.
The third alternative is to appoint a technocrat, an unpolitical bureaucrat, as prime minister who may govern the country until it is possible to announce new elections again after 12 months.
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