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France Elections: Left-Wing Alliance Surpasses Le Pen’s National Rally

France Elections: Left-Wing Alliance Surpasses Le Pen’s National Rally

Euronews TV: “France’s anti-far right forces have pushed Marine Le Pen’s National Rally from first to third place.”

France’s left-wing alliance is set to emerge as the largest bloc in the second and final round of the parliamentary election, early projections show. The leftist New Popular Front is being followed by President Emmanuel Macron’s Ensemble alliance, pushing Marine Le Pen’s National Rally to the third spot.

New Popular Front, a coalition of leftist and Communist parties, is expected to win 172 to 192 seats, according to exit polls on Sunday evening. President Macron’s pro-EU alliance is set to get between 150 and 180 seats, ahead of the right-wing National Rally, which is set to secure between 120 and 150 seats.

If exit polls prove correct, no party or bloc may be able to get an absolute majority of 289 seats in the 650-member parliament, resulting in a hung parliament, French media reports indicate.

The French TV channel Euronews reported the exit polls released on Sunday evening:

France’s anti-far right forces have pushed Marine Le Pen’s National Rally from first to third place in France’s legislative assembly elections second round, according to poll estimates following the close of voting.

The left-wing coalition, the New Popular Front (NFP), is expected to have between 172 and 192 seats, the IPSOS poll found. Meanwhile, the centrist liberal democrats of President Emmanuel Macron are to reach between 150 and 170 seats, pollsters say, while the centre-right Republicans (LR) could get between 57 and 67 parliamentary seats.

National Rally, the far-right party led by Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella, is predicted to garner between only 132-152 seats, giving it likely third place, trailing recent Ipsos projections that Le Pen and her allies from the Republicans party might win between 230 and 280 seats.

In the first round of the polls held on July 1, National Rally — led by its new leader, 28-year-old Jordan Bardella — emerged as the largest party, winning over 33 percent of the vote and close to winning a majority in France’s lower house National Assembly.

President Macron called the snap elections after his party was trounced by the National Rally in the recent European Union election.

Police, shops owners fear violent leftist mobs

Business owners boarded up their shops in upscale areas Paris to prevent looting and arson by leftist and migrant protesters triggered by the election results.

“Shops on central Parisian streets like the Champs Elysees began boarding up their facades ahead of the results, DW TV reported Sunday evening as polls closed. “Some retailers in the more upmarket streets of central Paris had kept barricades up all week between the two rounds of voting, fearing potential protests or vandalism in the aftermath of the results following a fractious snap election campaign.”

Police has been mobilized to protect the French parliament from potential angry leftist mobs.

“Police vans are now parked outside France’s National Assembly building in Paris as the second round enters its final stages,” Euronews reported Sunday evening. “Politicians have warned of potential violence tonight once the results come out and have urged citizens to take necessary precautions.”

There are reports of celebrations over National Rally’s poor showing in the election.

“People gathered at the Place de la République in Paris and chanted, “Everyone hates fachos (fascists),” following the results of the snap legislative elections,” France24 reported.

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Comments


 
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destroycommunism | July 7, 2024 at 4:08 pm

so the violence from the leftwingers in the streets has given them the edge?


     
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    Chitragupta in reply to destroycommunism. | July 7, 2024 at 6:59 pm

    Several places I’ve read, “French Jews get out while you can.”


       
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      Eric R. in reply to Chitragupta. | July 7, 2024 at 7:21 pm

      This is a horrible day for world Jewry, not just French Jewry. Not only will it be open season to massacre Jews in France, but a vile Jew-hating Nazi like Melanchon will not hesitate to threaten Israel with nuking it if it invades Lebanon.

      It likely sets up a second Holocaust and a civilization=ending nuclear response by Israel.


         
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        Chitragupta in reply to Eric R.. | July 7, 2024 at 9:24 pm

        Eric R.,

        I met a guy about ten years ago and he was about thirty-five years old with dual US/French citizenship. I asked about his two passports and he said when mom was pregnant with each of her kids she came to stay with family here in the USA so they would be granted US citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. At the time I met him the world wasn’t as crazy as it is today so I asked him what gave his parents clairvoyance to see the future of France? He said it was one of many protections their family has been building into their plans ever since the end of WWII so if it ever happens again they have a way to escape. I guess one day all of those pristine French rifles might acutally be shot?


 
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UnCivilServant | July 7, 2024 at 4:09 pm

You can never just flush these grasping power-hungry turds, can you?


 
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Wisewerds | July 7, 2024 at 4:15 pm

The two right wing parties, taken together, got more deputies than the left wing alliance.

The hard leftist Mélenchon, the leader of the left alliance, is now calling on Macron to resign immediately.

Pretty stupid, as the left will need Macron’s support to form a government.


 
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TargaGTS | July 7, 2024 at 4:28 pm

I could be wrong (because I generally find parliamentary elections confusing AF), but it seems that the French system of having two rounds of voting favors the establishment. If an insurgent party – like NR – does surprisingly well in the 1st round, it allows the establishment to work with more favorable parties to marginalize the insurgency in key races. That appears to have worked a treat for the left today.

I would be really curious what the seat count would have been if France had a one-round, first-past-the-post system as exists in the UK.


     
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    Milhouse in reply to TargaGTS. | July 7, 2024 at 5:01 pm

    It favors the voter, not the establishment. First-past-the-post is just fundamentally unfair. Nobody should ever be elected without a majority saying they prefer that person to any available alternative. If the voter has all the information he needs and makes the wrong choice, that’s democracy. Look at Georgia or Louisiana, where they do this regularly.

    Preferential voting (aka, “ranked choice”, or “instant run-off”, or several other names), as has been used in Australia for nearly a century, is the best system, because it gets an accurate snapshot of voters’ wishes on election day, so everyone has the same information and there’s no room for manipulation in between rounds, as happened in France where candidates resigned so as to force their supporters to vote for someone else. Let the voters make those choices, not the candidates. In Australia the candidates recommend how their supporters should allocate their preferences, and have volunteers hand out “how-to-vote” cards with their recommendations, but their voters are free to ignore those suggestions.


       
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      CommoChief in reply to Milhouse. | July 7, 2024 at 5:50 pm

      A true ‘ranked choice’ would follow the same format as the weekly college football polls. So it five candidates then each voter puts them in order of preference 1-5. Then that ranking is assigned points inverse to the ranking so:
      #1 gets 5 pts, #2 gets 4 pts all the way down to #5 which gets 1 pt. If the voter chooses to decline to assign any points to candidates #2-#5 that’s fine as well.

      Then add the points for each candidate. Most points is the winner. One day election. Very simple. Combines elements the advocates of ‘ranked choice’ desire but removes complexity while also putting the preferences of the voter as the priority over the mechanics of the process.

      I could probably get behind this system so long as it wasn’t used as gateway to jungle primary nonsense or ridiculous (IMO) ‘ranked choice’ where the voter’s political power is automatically transferred by the mechanics of the process.


         
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        geronl in reply to CommoChief. | July 7, 2024 at 7:08 pm

        Ranked choice voting is retarded


         
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        Milhouse in reply to CommoChief. | July 7, 2024 at 11:14 pm

        That is not a fair system, and is more complicated than the simple system marketed as “instant run-off”, which a child of ten can easily understand, and nobody in Australia has any problem understanding. What could be more simple than just rank all the candidates in your order of preference? Whom do you want to win? If that person can’t win, whom of the remaining candidates would you want to win? If you can’t have that one either, is there anyone of the rest you like better than the others? Keep going until you run out of candidates, or until you hate them all equally and don’t care which of them wins. Then count them accordingly. If someone gets a majority of first preferences, then great, they’re elected. If not, eliminate the one with the least support, and allocate all his votes to their second choice. Keep doing that until someone has a majority. What could be simpler? And what could be more fair?

        The system we and the UK have now is what produces results like the UK just got, where Reform gets 14% of the vote and only 4 seats, because their support is spread relatively evenly rather than clumped up in a few areas.


       
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      caseoftheblues in reply to Milhouse. | July 7, 2024 at 9:27 pm

      You clearly don’t grasp how ranked choice works and what it results in. It’s a garbage system


     
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    tbonesays in reply to TargaGTS. | July 7, 2024 at 6:24 pm

    Ranked choice voting is a safety net for the establishment. Even the unpopular incumbent gets a free vote down the ranking.


       
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      Milhouse in reply to tbonesays. | July 7, 2024 at 11:21 pm

      No, it is not a safety net for the establishment. A candidate only gets preferences if people actually prefer him to the only viable alternative. Which is exactly as it should be.

      First past the post is what forces people to vote for an unpopular candidate just because he’s marginally better than the alternative, and deprives them of any other choice. It’s what keeps the two major parties in their impregnable position, because people are afraid to vote for any alternative to them. So alternative parties never have a chance to get a foothold. First past the post means the two majors never have to cater to their base, because they know those votes are locked in, so they only have to go after the swing voters.


 
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scooterjay | July 7, 2024 at 4:56 pm

if France falls in the middle of the night will Joe hear it?


 
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JohnSmith100 | July 7, 2024 at 4:57 pm

While I don’t care about France and their outcome much, I am curious if this means their slide into Muslim hell will be affected by the outcome.


 
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Concise | July 7, 2024 at 5:37 pm

This is France. They gave the world Robespierre’s Committee of Public Safety (if safety means death by the guillotine and nascent insane communist radicalism) and the Vichy regime. If Britain has capitulated to the leftist insanity, no way France has the integrity or courage to do it. It just isn’t in the French national character.


     
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    JohnSmith100 in reply to Concise. | July 7, 2024 at 6:54 pm

    France’s nukes are my biggest concern. It is important that deranged Muslims do not get ahold of them. How do we ensure that? One way might be bribes and relocation of their submarine crews. I bet Israel would be happy to acquire those subs. And, there is the issue of other nukes and tech in France.


 
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Conservative Beaner | July 7, 2024 at 5:41 pm

England has nukes and the lefties took over with help from Muslims.

France has nukes and the lefties took over with help from Muslims.

The US has nukes and Biden is kissing muslim butt to get re-elected.

Jews are an endangered spieces and soon, Christians will be as well.


 
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Concise | July 7, 2024 at 5:43 pm

And something else this, the recent British disgrace, and frankly any democrat success in this country demonstrates. Voters are stupid. I mean just irredeemably frigging stupid. Can’t quite explain how this country ever managed to come into being but voter stupidity pretty much dominates globally today.


     
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    Dathurtz in reply to Concise. | July 7, 2024 at 6:14 pm

    There’s a reason that things like owning property or being able to read or being male were uses to restrict who can vote.


       
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      Concise in reply to Dathurtz. | July 7, 2024 at 6:32 pm

      I’m referring to the irresponsible and ignorant exercise of the franchise to the ultimate detriment of your own country. I didn’t say restrict votes but voting with your head up your ____, probably isn’t the wisest course.


     
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    Milhouse in reply to Concise. | July 7, 2024 at 11:26 pm

    No, the British outcome is not the result of voters being stupid, it’s the result of voters being intelligent enough to understand that the only way out of the current situation was to vote Reform and let the Tories fall, and accept that this would mean five years of Labour government. It was conservative voters who brought about the outcome, not socialist voters or swing voters. And it’s the result of first-past-the-post voting, just like in the USA.

    Everyone voting Reform knew what they were doing and chose to put Labour in, judging that it was worth it, and I think they were right. It’s a tough price to pay, but it’s better than the alternative of voting Conservative again and getting the same result as the last time.


 
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CommoChief | July 7, 2024 at 5:57 pm

Th existing political structure will make all sorts of compromises to thwart a rising populist movement (see French elections) and if that won’t work they will run the ship aground rather than defer to prevailing populist mood/wishes of the voters (see Brexit, huge majority for Tories in ’19 squandered to result in last week’s British election).


     
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    Dathurtz in reply to CommoChief. | July 7, 2024 at 6:15 pm

    It is absolutely delusional to think the western nations are able to fix their political problems by voting.

    Has freedom ever been restored without massive use of force and the horror that goes with it.


 
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gonzotx | July 7, 2024 at 6:25 pm

Shades of our November?


 
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ThePrimordialOrderedPair | July 7, 2024 at 6:35 pm

New Popular Front, a coalition of leftist and Communist parties, is expected to win 172 to 192 seats,

Yep … typical French.

In 5 years, the Muslims will have run over France and England, the only fun will be seeing the Muslims and Cultural Marxists fight it out afterwards.


 
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geronl | July 7, 2024 at 7:07 pm

The fix was in


 
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alaskabob | July 7, 2024 at 7:28 pm

France … Exit stage Left.


 
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TargaGTS | July 7, 2024 at 7:34 pm

One of the people elected to Parliament today is a guy named Raphaël Arnault. Prior to being elected, Mr. Arnault was the leader of Antifa in France and enjoyed a prominent spot on the French terror watchlist, because of it.

There is no ‘right’ in France, much less ‘far right. NR is a center-left organization that believes in securing the border and maintaining a French national identity. Rather than do that, the good people of France would prefer to elect literal Communists & fascists. God help them because no one else is.


 
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TargaGTS | July 7, 2024 at 10:22 pm

“Marine Le Pen’s National Rally party won EVERY single French department except for Paris in the EU Elections.”

https://x.com/CilComLFC/status/1810101454507573560

Unbelievable. The entire map of France is blue (NR) with the exception of the department that’s home to Paris (Seine). This is an ideal lesson about the importance of the Electoral College. While it’s not a perfect comparison to the US because ‘Departments’ aren’t quite the equivalent of states, it goes a long way towards demonstrating why there has to be some robust protection against densely concentrated urban areas completely overwhelming the entire country.

As the X-poster says, imagine Republicans winning every state but one yet having a hyper-minority of House seats and Trump winning every state in the country except DC and still losing the election. That’s where France is.


     
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    Milhouse in reply to TargaGTS. | July 7, 2024 at 11:39 pm

    You didn’t read carefully enough.

    Yes, RN won every department except Paris in the EU Elections. And it got the corresponding outcome. But this was not the EU election. In this election it did not win every department except Paris. If it had it would have an overwhelming majority; it has a rather large minority because all over France people in enough seats, when faced with a choice of only RN or a Marxist, chose the Marxist. Not that they wanted the Marxist, but they’d rather have that then the NR.


 
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Subotai Bahadur | July 7, 2024 at 11:17 pm

In today’s world, what odds do you give that any Leftist regime in any Western country can be removed by electoral means; given the proven efficacy of election fraud?

Subotai Bahadur


     
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    Milhouse in reply to Subotai Bahadur. | July 7, 2024 at 11:44 pm

    The same odds as ever. I’m not aware of any evidence of significant fraud in France or in the UK. The French result is because a lot of people can’t get over their fear of a party that used to be explicitly neo-nazi, even though it is now reformed. And the UK result is because enough conservative voters decided it was more important to teach the Tories a lesson than to give them another five years to mess up.


     
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    mailman in reply to Subotai Bahadur. | July 8, 2024 at 1:58 am

    It is practically impossible for fraud to affect the British elections given;

    Photo ID required to vote..
    Vote in person on the day.
    Voting used physical paper ballots.
    Very limited reasons as to why one can vote by post.
    The dead stay dead in the UK.

    This is why the result was known by 5am the next day.

    In the past there was wide scale postal fraud in Tower Hamlets that resulted in police action being taken and an election result nullified.

    Tower Hamlets has a high proportion of snack bar lovers.


       
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      Milhouse in reply to mailman. | July 8, 2024 at 2:47 am

      This is why the result was known by 5am the next day.

      That, but another reason is that there was only one ballot to count. In the USA there are usually a dozen or more.

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