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SATURDAY, JULY 12, 2025
Macron the gambler wins chance to play kingmaker

Panorama

Lionel Laurent, Bloomberg
09 July, 2024, 12:35 pm
Last modified: 09 July, 2024, 12:34 pm

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Macron the gambler wins chance to play kingmaker

French voters’ “non” to Le Pen sets up a duel for a new coalition

Lionel Laurent, Bloomberg
09 July, 2024, 12:35 pm
Last modified: 09 July, 2024, 12:34 pm
French President Emmanuel Macron, the inveterate gambler, has won the right to keep playing. Photo: Bloomberg
French President Emmanuel Macron, the inveterate gambler, has won the right to keep playing. Photo: Bloomberg

French President Emmanuel Macron, the inveterate gambler, has won the right to keep playing. Exit polls for the final round of France's snap parliamentary election suggest voters have delivered an emphatic "non" to Marine Le Pen's far-right National Rally, but only a hesitant "maybe" to her rivals on the left and in the center.

The faintest contours of something approaching Keir Starmer's path in the UK are visible as Macron prepares to rally Greens and Socialists to his cause, but it won't be easy — and the broader risk is that fragmented politics in the euro area's No. 2 economy is here to stay.

Just as the snap election itself felt worthy of a Netflix drama, the results look even more so. While pollsters' projections are far from final, Macron might allow himself a trademark wink of self-satisfaction at seeing arch-nemesis Le Pen trail the pack with an expected 113 to 152 seats. A tactical alliance in the second round between Macron's centrists and the left-wing Popular Front clearly worked to strengthen the so-called "republican front", but Le Pen's vague policies and her party's inexperienced candidates also made it harder for her to win a bigger slice of the vote.

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Higher up the leaderboard, things are much less clear. Macron's centrist bloc is expected to come second, with around 150 to 180 seats, also well short of the 289 needed for a majority. While tactical voting limited the damage, he remains deeply unpopular — with even his own camp feeling betrayed — and has no more political capital left to ram through his reforms. And yet he's still managed to keep his bloc in the game as a potential coalition partner: After all, the winning left-wing bloc, whose program bears the obvious influence of firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon, is tipped to only get 210 seats in the best scenario.

In other words, Macron has gone from king to kingmaker, and he'll likely be looking to the left rather than the right for a first shot at a coalition. Financial markets, no doubt relieved that no party has the freedom to implement their most unrealistic and costly policies, may have to shift their thinking: What initially seemed to be a Giorgia Meloni scenario for the French far right could now be a Starmer scenario for the French far left. Just as Labour became more electable after ejecting Jeremy Corbyn, the Popular Front's path to power might involve breaking with Melenchon to build a more centrist coalition — combining Macron's group with the Greens and Socialists could get quite close to 289 seats.

As center-left politician Raphael Glucksmann put it, there's a parliamentary arc that can be built that's neither Jupiter, nor Robespierre — neither Macron, nor Melenchon.

This is all risky stuff. Even successfully emulating Starmerism won't bring the kind of big majority his party currently enjoys. Whatever coalition ends up being cobbled together will take time and will be vulnerable to a level of political division that is virtually unprecedented in the Fifth Republic's history. At a time of spiraling deficits and a growth trajectory that's below the euro area average, that will mean tough decisions – like tax increases – and little capacity to address deep-seated issues like productivity, innovation and demographic decline. Christopher Dembik, strategist at Pictet Asset Management Ltd., also expects any coalition to water down some of the impact of Macron's reforms, from pensions to welfare benefits.

For now, there's an audible sigh of relief that the European Union's No. 2 economy has chosen to defer its right-wing populist "moment." But what comes next may prove rather fragile. With only three years to go before presidential elections, and Le Pen relishing the chance to keep attacking Macron from the opposition benches, France is far from back to normal.


Lionel Laurent is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering the European Union and France. He worked previously at Reuters and Forbes.

Disclaimer: This article first appeared on Bloomberg, and is published by special syndication arrangement.

Analysis / Bloomberg Special / Top News

Emmanuel Macron / French election

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