Was not Was
Loitering with intent
- Jul 31, 2003
- 1,606
Thank you for the explainer. The French system is so different from ours and I had been wondering about the rationale and precedents for what Macron has done (and I used to live in France!)He's probably playing a long game. He stays as president and can control their excesses, whilst they might get exposed as incompetent for governing. Then when it comes to the presidential electron the country may not be so willing to give the keys to Le Pen.
Split governments used to be the norm in France but this century the presidential and parliamentary elections have been at almost the same time, meaning one party tends to sweep the board. If Macron had limped on for two years he probably would have been at the wrong end of a Conservative style wipeout. Holding the Assembly election now breaks the electoral link between the two, allowing the possibility of the President and PM being of different parties. It would prevent LePen from holding absolute power.