Chaos in France after Macron refuses to name prime minister from leftwing coalition
Chaos in France after Macron refuses to name prime minister from leftwing coalition

Political chaos in France after Macron refuses to name PM from leftwing coalition

Chaos in France after Macron refuses to name prime minister from leftwing coalition
Political chaos in France after Macron refuses to name PM from leftwing coalition
bullshit : i'm french. there is NO chaos at all. Just political entertainement as usual.
I'm amazed that "chaos" there in France is more like "normal". I remember some riots that happened couple of years ago and one commenter said France might verge into collapsing. I thought to myself that those who think that are not aware how France works, and rioting is a tradition since the French Revolution.
riots may happen in france, but for what is mention in the post, there is absolutely no riot, no chaos or anything else. It's just a political event without consequence.
It's still riots. But on TV and with ties on.
Literally every time I've been to France there has been a riot. Edit: actually that's not true, one of the times I was there it was only a riot watch, they were waiting for sentencing in some trial of righty separatists.
pass the Gauloises to gauche hand side
Political embarrassment rather
I know fuck all about French politics, but it seems strange that he doesn't just appoint the candidate from the left. It sounds like it's a fucked up non-functional situation, so he should just let them try to do the impossible and then fail. He's probably worried that she might actually succeed and is holding out hope for some way to cobble together something as close as possible to the centrist coalition that shit the bed in the first place.
Agreed. His excuse rings a little hollow. If there would be a no confidence vote, so be it. Give the left their PM, and if they get thrown out, then move forward with your compromise candidate.
but it seems strange that he doesn't just appoint the candidate from the left.
From which part of the left? The New Popular Front is actually an amalgamation of broad left wing coalition of various parties. So Macron had to pick from the far-left communist leader Jean Luc Melenchon, or from the centre left Socialist party led by Olivier Faure.
The French legislative assembly works very differently compared to US Congress or the parliamentary system. There isn't really one, or two, or only five parties getting votes. The French system is much more pluralistic and it is more like a hodge podge of various parties forming a grand coalition that represents an ideology. Even the current French president Emmanuel Macron's so-called "party", Ensemble, is a coalition of centrist parties.
If you want to find out more about France's current deadlock, here is a good succinct video explaining it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5Q5nCCF5ck
Not a choice he had to make. The NFP parties agreed on a consensus candidate - Lucie Castets.
It's amazing all the credit we gave him for that snap election decision is being completely erased.
Well it's not like he deserved any of that credit in the first place 🤷
I thought people credited Macron with the error and poor timing of the election. But credited the French voters with saving the election (against the far right and polling, quickly uniting with a practical strategy).
Hey! It's the part where the "centrists" betray the left and cede power to the facists! Damn. You'd think someone would write a new script or something.
So fucking tired of world shaking events always having a played out joke as the top comment.
If only world shaking events weren't always the same mistakes as before. Then we wouldn't be able to use the same jokes.
So tired of once-in-a-lifetime historical events happening every couple weeks.
He's going to make a deal with the nazis, isn't he.
AFAIK he's not talking to RN either, and if you look at actual parties and not groups then RN is the strongest party. It looks more like he's trying to break the NFP to get the support of some of the parties like social democrats or greens, because in such a coalition his party would be the strongest. In a coalition with RN his party wouldn't be the strongest and would have a hard time claiming the prime minister position.
No, he won't.
Time to break out a uniquely French solution?
Ask Robespierre how that works out in the end.
The president had hoped consultations would break the political deadlock caused by the election that left the Assemblée Nationale divided into three roughly equal blocks – left, centre and far right – none of which has a majority of seats.
So, in parliamentary systems -- which, for these purposes, France is similar to -- typically this is dealt with via multiple factions making concessions to each other and forming a coalition. Is that an option?
kagis
France’s aversion to coalitions means any new government risks early collapse
In France, however, political leaders from left and right have lined up to rule out a coalition government after Sunday’s snap election produced a parliament of three roughly equal blocs – none with a majority, and all with wildly differing platforms.
Well.
What a fucking shit stain...
What a fucking trace de pneu
If that's what I think it is, we use "skid marks" as a euphemism in English too.
What a macaroon...
Sacrebleu!
So call a second election. The people will solve the impasse. Either a majority emerges or eventually the parties, exhausted by campaigning, will learn to compromise and make a coalition. Democracy will find a way.
will learn to compromise and make a coalition
Lol. You're new to French politics?
French Unity is when deGaulle has you dragged out back and shot for disagreeing.
How are your trash cans looking? Are any of them on fire yet? Y'all really know how to protest
As a Greek I have some familiarity. Our politics is just as adversarial (if not more) and there is no tradition of coalitions. But when push came to shove, they figured it out, if only for a bit.
The parties aren't the problem. Macron holds the presidency and appoints the PM. The largest (coalition) party is giving him a candidate AFTER compromises and he's refusing STILL because he only wants a PM from his own party, who came in second (edit: not third, my bad, they did beat National Rally. They did come in third in the first round of voting though).
Macron holds the presidency and appoints the PM.
The big debate is on whether he "appoints" the PM or "picks" the PM.
The constitution doesn't exactly specify which, and usage was that he would appoint the one issued from the majority vote (but there's no majority, there's just one group that's a wee bit larger). So he's having his fun, pretending to have a chat with everybody, while knowing all the time that they can really all fuck off and the he'll do as he pleases.
In the end he'll most likely have what they call a "technical" government made of non political ministers that will just do as they're told, because the chambers will be too busy infighting to do anything about it.
It sounds like the candidate PM would not have the confidence of the Assembly though because the center doesn't want to play ball with the left and the left doesn't have a majority.
That's why I'm suggesting elections. Keep going until either a majority is elected (in which case I assume the president is obligated to appoint its leader) or the parliamentary math changes.
If Macron and the center are serious about keeping the cordon sanitaire against the far right, they should obviously play ball with the left. The fact that they are not tells me that they are not serious. The left should be able to make that argument to the electorate and hope to convince a majority.
Edit: not only is Macron showing lack of seriousness in keeping the far right at bay, he is also undermining the legitimacy of the presidency by playing parliamentary shenanigans and triggering such a constitutional crisis. I never really understood the fundamentals of France's semi-presidential system, but in a parliamentary republic like Germany, or Ireland, or Greece for example, the president does not get to play politics with the parliament's confidence like this. I don't understand why the French think this is a good system.
the parties, exhausted by campaigning, will learn to compromise and make a coalition
Good luck with that.
But then he risks losing again.
"Chaos in France"
Just... Can these people exercise any restraint when it comes to sensationalist headlines?
"Chaos in France" doesn't really mean much either. As far as France is concerned that's just a normal day.
They should add a new word then.
I hate headlines like this. There is no "chaos". A bunch of politicians are arguing and having meetings. Bureaucracy chunters along as usual. Paralympics are happening.
If the politicians were having shootouts in the Champs Elysées and disrupting traffic then yes, a bit of chaos in Paris. But they're not. Sigh.
Yeah, It's fucking France. People set fire to police cars because it's Tuesday. This is not a big deal.
It's the Guardian so you get what you expect. Inflammatory headlines for clicks.
It's sooo clickbaity - I didn't even click because I knew how boring the actual story would be.
"Democracy" at work.
It is, presumably the elected havent decided yet
So he's pulling a Maduro. No kind of interest paid to the first place party, but I guess we won't hear any neolibs complain about that.
So he’s pulling a Maduro.
Oh, I didn't realize he was falsifying elections. You do have a reason for accusing Macron of that, right, and aren't just throwing around accusations to try to lessen the seriousness of Maduro's actions, right?
Macron was bailed out by cooperation from the left-wing, and now he wants to play fuckwad games. How predictable. I hope they ream his ass out for trying this.
This deserves a riot. Hopefully the public sets him straight. I wish our own public would flip cars over politicians' lies and anti-citizen rulings.
Fr*nch be like: we don't even need a reason to riot
The alternative here would have been to let the far-right win.
The issue isn't that the left did cooperate with liberals to prevent fascism. That's wholly laudable. One simply shouldn't expect one's enemies to be anything except temporary allies against worse foes (and I'm not accusing the French left of naivety here, mind, they probably understood and are prepared for this scenario).