French President Emmanuel Macron announces new right-wing government

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c8rd52zl018o

33 Comments

  1. Amazing, nuke your own government due to trying to call the bluff on the far right. Then form a new government without those that helped you stop them, in fact now basically calling upon them to be an unofficial partner of your government by voting through your laws.

    Next presidential election is cooked

  2. BreakfastFluid9419 on

    This teetering between left and right in government gets awfully exhausting. Be cool if they could just act like adults and make decisions that are best for the whole of the population regardless of who it will offend. Unfortunately people are too entrenched in their preferred ideology and politicians will play into that to ensure maintaining power while ultimately achieving little.

  3. Preference-Inner on

    ELI5, is this good or bad? I honestly don’t know asking a genuine question as I don’t know much about French politics 

  4. The Daily did an episode on this saying it’s Macrons way of calling their bluff. In his mind he thinks giving them some power will show the people they’re not fit to lead and will go back to how it was. Or if can blow up in his face 🤷🏻‍♂️

  5. He used the left to accomplish his own goals, they essentially get nothing or next to it; a party that won the most seats. He got them good; the so-called Left had a major weakness. They only thought about keeping the right out at any cost. Now their internal fracture will surface, and Macron will play segments of it like a fiddle.

    This is what was going to happen to the hodge podge party the so-called left who came together for one purpose and that has now ended. The right and the conservative are gaining, the left, next to nothing, in fact they are getting a further right conservative government.

  6. If they solve some of the immigration stuff and not turn to Russia, then it will be amazing.

    But given how much every western government been, being left or right, I don’t have much hope for the french people

  7. Well it was a choice to govern with either RN or Mélenchon’s troupé who are expicitly known for being unable to co-operate in anything. It’s even in their name.

  8. It’s been hilarious seeing ‘left wing’ Americans praise Macron and view him as some hero when he’s been fiscal conservative for years and is an ex-banker and has ran a right wing government for years now.

  9. Is the French “far-right” a moderate view us Americans would gladly settle for at this point? Asking for a friend.

  10. France has a habit of numbering its republics for a reason. Expect the number to go one up in the coming years.

  11. EasyButterscotch5018 on

    Yeah, this is the last time i ever vote for the center. Bunch of libertarian, from now on it’s either the left or the far right for me, as long as economic liberalism is stopped i dont care who does it

  12. LongLiveLiberalism on

    What was the point of calling the election in the first place? The only way it makes sense is if you want the far right to win to expose their incompetence but now you just keep doing the incumbent fatigue cycle till they win

  13. Bunch of Americans / liberals in here acting like this is some huge deal. The left do NOT have over 50%. It’s about a 3rd each and the left refused to work with the middle. 

    Also, all this fear mongering of how the right is so evil and facist with no mention of how a lot of left wing radicals in the past have also been just as evil. Castro, Stalin, etc. 

    In reality the center is trying to have a somewhat functioning government and making compromises as SHOULD happen.

    Look at America’s two party system and how they can barely ever have a bipartisan bill. It’s shameful.

  14. Looking at the composition of the Barnier government, it seems to be primarily made of lawmakers from Les Républicains, Renaissance, Mouvement démocrate, and UDI. These parties are on the lines of centre, centre-right, and right-wing. By and large, Macron’s government is still largely centrist, but leaning a bit more to the centre-right. I wouldn’t necessarily call it a “right-wing government” (unlike Israel or Türkiye, for example).

  15. it is interesting how often in Europe the Prime Minister ends up being from the fourth or fifth place party. Of course in France the PM is not that powerful a role.

  16. Someone French correct me if I got something wrong.

    The far right made significant gains in the EU elections beating out Macron’s coalition which made Macron call a snap election.

    In said election, the far right got more votes. The French election system is too complicated for me but as far as I can comprehend in the final tally, approximately, the far right had 37%, Macron’s centre alliance had 25%, the left also had 25%.

    Now of the remaining 13%, a party called Republicans (but blue) got 5.4% and they allied with the far right. To avoid a far right government, Macron and the left negotiated but couldn’t agree on terms to form a government for reasons that are too complicated for me to understand. So Macron has now offered to form a government with the far right and Republicans which they did.

    Is this what happened? This is all I could get my head around reading Wikipedia for 15 min. If this is indeed what happened isn’t this just democracy running its course? If anything both Macron and the left were too uncompromising which is what has caused this mess.