Opposition to Macron sweep may end up in French streets
PARIS — President Emmanuel Macron’s barely year-old party is set to upend politics as France knows it. But the rosy glow of a likely massive victory in next Sunday’s final round of French legislative elections could be dimmed without a robust opposition to debate controversial initiatives like far-reaching labour law reforms that scare some, anger others and risk sending those who want none of it into the streets.
France’s new leader, at 39 the youngest-ever and just getting his feet wet in politics, aimed from the start to remake the political landscape, much of it populated with old- school career politicians. Based on results from Sunday’s first-round of voting, he is shattering it.
His fledgling Republic on the Move — fielding many candidates with no political experience — won 28 per cent of the vote, putting it on course to take as many as 450 seats in the powerful 577-seat National Assembly, an unprecedented feat in France. Opponents occupying the remaining seats would represent a fragmented opposition, most without the 15 seats needed to even get speaking time, funding or other ways to weigh on policy.
Macron’s party decimated the Socialist Party that governed France for the past five years and got less than 7.5 per cent of Sunday’s vote. It flattened the far-right National Front whose leader, Marine Le Pen, was vying with him for the presidency last month. The party got just over 13 per cent of the vote. Macron’s closest rival, the mainstream conservatives, took less than 16 per cent.


