Far right hopes to make history as France votes in high-stakes poll
- Published
France is voting in a parliamentary election that could make history, with the far right closer to power than it has ever been in modern times.
The National Rally (RN) of Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella is well ahead in the polls - three weeks to the day since they won European elections. President Emmanuel Macron reacted immediately by calling a national vote and stunning his country.
By midday, more than a quarter of France's 49 million voters had cast their ballot, more than seven points up on the last election, and confirming the high turnout widely expected in such a pivotal election.
This is a two-round election, and most of the National Assembly’s 577 seats will not be decided until the second-round run-off vote next Sunday.
The campaign only lasted 20 days, and that also benefited RN, which quickly refined its existing promises on immigration, crime and insecurity as well as tax cuts to tackle the cost-of-living crisis.
Jordan Bardella wants to be RN’s first prime minister, and his party is confident of winning dozens of constituencies outright in the first round.
He says he will only take the job if the party secures an absolute parliamentary majority of 289 seats. The alternative would be a hung parliament and stalemate.
Exit polls will come out with polls close in the big cities at 20:00 (18:00GMT), and a full picture of how France has voted will be clear by the end of Sunday evening.
National Rally’s opponents will have to decide who to back in run-off battles across France, in a bid to ensure that absolute majority does not happen.
If the polls are right, many of the run-offs will pit the National Rally against a hastily cobbled together left-wing alliance called New Popular Front, which believes it could even win the election.
But because of the expected high turnout, three parties could qualify for the second-round battles in as many as 250 constituencies, according to Brice Teinturier of Ipsos polling institute.
In previous elections, parties from across the spectrum have united to keep the far right out. That raises the question of whether one of the candidates will drop out in those triangular races to unify the anti-RN vote.
RN’s leaders have worked hard for years to shed their extremist image. Alongside policies for giving French citizens “national preference” for jobs and housing, they want to cut VAT on energy and allow under-30s to escape income tax.
In Franconville, north of Paris, a teacher called Agnès complains about the breakdown of discipline in French schools and likes Jordan Bardella’s plans for “a big bang in authority” in education. “I’ll either vote right or far right. I like Bardella’s charisma,” she says.
She also has no problem with RN’s plans to abolish droit du sol, the right to automatic French citizenship for children born to foreign parents if those children have spent five years in France - from the age of 11 to 18 when they are entitled to a apply for French citizenship.
But another teacher called Matthieu said, after voting in the town of Pontault-Combault to the east of the capital, that Mr Bardella had made lots of promises for education without saying how he would pay for them.
President Macron’s Ensemble alliance is widely expected to haemorrhage seats, and Gabriel Attal’s days as prime minister appear numbered, even though polls suggest he remains the most popular politician in France.
“The Macron era is over," François Hollande declared ahead of the vote.
Mr Hollande, the former French president who was Mr Macron's boss and mentor, is standing for parliament again - now as a New Popular Front candidate.
However, even Macron allies are angry with his snap election gamble.
France was not due another election for three more years, and it had far better ways of spending the summer than going through an abbreviated and intense election campaign.
All of France has been gearing up for the Paris Olympics which start on 26 July.
Metro stations like Concorde have been shut, and restrictions are in place close to any of the Games sites.
- Published29 June
The police and military were already stretched and the interior minister has warned of potential violence after the second round.
Mr Macron is set to meet his prime minister and other members of the government on Monday to decide their next move.
Until now their mantra has been “ni-ni” - neither back RN nor the left-wing New Popular Front in the second round, because of the involvement of France Unbowed (LFI), which is condemned by opponents as far-left and some of its members have been accused of antisemitism.
President Macron has said only his Ensemble alliance has the power to block both “the extreme right and the extreme left”. He says the far right categorises people by their religion or origin, while the left judges them by the community they belong to.
Last week, on a hot evening in Meaux, east of Paris, one of LFI’s most senior figures, Mathilde Panot, told supporters they were “the only focus of resistance” remaining to the rise of the far right, accusing the Macron alliance of opening the gates of power to RN.
“We’re not extreme, what is extreme is Mr Macron’s extreme liberalism which has brought about the rise of the extreme right,” she told the BBC.
The New Popular Front also includes more moderate parties, including the Socialists and the Greens, whose leader Marine Tondelier has called for a unified stance to stop Mr Bardella becoming prime minister.
Some of France’s best-known young stars have urged voters to steer clear of the extremes, from NBA sensation Victor Wembanyama and football captain Kylian Mbappé to YouTube influencer Squeezie.
But the divisions between the parties are deep and the time extremely short for any concerted action to keep RN at bay.
“I worry for our country,” said Aurélie, outside a market in Le Plessis Bouchard, to the north of Paris. She is unimpressed by the nationalist policies RN has. “Patriotism isn’t nationalism, it’s not the same.”