Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

New PM, first female Paris mayor on agenda in French vote

-

French voters go to the polls Sunday for a second round of local elections that will result in Paris having a female mayor for the first time and, possibly, the country having a new prime minister.

With the ruling Socialists facing a drubbing, President Francois Hollande is expected to react by ordering major changes at the top of his beleaguered government. Popular Interior Minister Manuel Valls is widely tipped to replace current premier Jean-Marc Ayrault.

The vote, in which the first ballots were cast in the French Pacific territory of New Caledonia, is also predicted to result in the far-right National Front establishing an unprecedented footprint in France's local government by winning control of as many as a dozen mid-sized towns.

In Paris, Socialist candidate Anne Hidalgo will be hoping to resist the national swing against her party and keep the French capital under the control of the left.

But all the signs are that it will be extremely close after a better-than-expected first-round showing by Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, a former minister for the centre-right UMP party who is Hidalgo's rival to join a very small club of women who have run major cities around the world.

Paris' Deputy Mayor and the Socialist party's (PS) candidate for the municipal elections i...
Paris' Deputy Mayor and the Socialist party's (PS) candidate for the municipal elections in Paris, Anne Hidalgo (2nd L), exits a bar as she campaigns along with the PS candidate in Paris' 9th district, Pauline Veron (L) on March 28, 2014
Francois Guillot, AFP/File

The FN also performed better than expected in the first round last Sunday and the results generally were interpreted as a signal of exasperation amongst voters with the Hollande government's failure to get a stagnant French economy moving again and reverse the upward march of unemployment.

Ayrault is widely expected to be made the principal scapegoat for that and Valls, the government's most popular figure, is favourite to replace him.

Hollande is also reportedly considering bringing veteran industrialist Louis Gallois and/or former World Trade Organisation director Pascal Lamy into the cabinet in a move that would reinforce his recent attempts to foster a more pro-business image.

The president's former partner, Segolene Royal, is also tipped for a comeback following his separation from girlfriend Valerie Trierweiler in January after revelations of his affair with actress Julie Gayet. Trierweiler reportedly vetoed Royal from being included in Hollande's first candidate despite the mother of his four children being a long-established Socialist Party heavyweight.

French Interior Minister Manuel Valls (C) and French Minister for Women's Rights and Government...
French Interior Minister Manuel Valls (C) and French Minister for Women's Rights and Government spokesperson Najat Vallaud-Belkacem (R) visit a delicatessen in Saint-Priest, outside Lyon, on March 21, 2014
Jean-Philippe Ksiazek, AFP/File

In the first round, Marine Le Pen's FN took five percent of the nationwide vote -- up from 0.9 percent in the first round of the last municipal polls in 2008 -- despite only being able to field candidates in a minority of municipalities.

Where it did present lists, the FN performed better than expected. It claimed the mayor's seat in Henin-Beaumont in northern France at the first attempt with just over 50 percent of the vote.

Le Pen is hoping to see FN-backed mayors installed in at least another dozen towns on Sunday evening.

The party has controlled a handful of local authorities in the past but does not have a good record in terms of competent administration.

Le Pen, who has made strenuous efforts to forge a new, more respectable image for the party founded by her father Jean-Marie, is looking to establish a local base which will allow the party to demonstrate it can be more than an outlet for voters' frustrations.

In an interview with Le Monde this weekend, she said: "What we lack at the moment is a positive report card. That is important. With that we can move to a higher level."

Le Pen, who took over the FN leadership in 2011, has been credited with broadening the appeal of a party regarded as taboo by many voters in light of her father's repeated convictions for Holocaust denial and inciting racial hatred.

The best-known city that could fall to the FN is Avignon, famed for its annual international arts festival, which organisers say will be pulled out if Le Pen's party takes over.

French voters go to the polls Sunday for a second round of local elections that will result in Paris having a female mayor for the first time and, possibly, the country having a new prime minister.

With the ruling Socialists facing a drubbing, President Francois Hollande is expected to react by ordering major changes at the top of his beleaguered government. Popular Interior Minister Manuel Valls is widely tipped to replace current premier Jean-Marc Ayrault.

The vote, in which the first ballots were cast in the French Pacific territory of New Caledonia, is also predicted to result in the far-right National Front establishing an unprecedented footprint in France’s local government by winning control of as many as a dozen mid-sized towns.

In Paris, Socialist candidate Anne Hidalgo will be hoping to resist the national swing against her party and keep the French capital under the control of the left.

But all the signs are that it will be extremely close after a better-than-expected first-round showing by Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, a former minister for the centre-right UMP party who is Hidalgo’s rival to join a very small club of women who have run major cities around the world.

Paris' Deputy Mayor and the Socialist party's (PS) candidate for the municipal elections i...

Paris' Deputy Mayor and the Socialist party's (PS) candidate for the municipal elections in Paris, Anne Hidalgo (2nd L), exits a bar as she campaigns along with the PS candidate in Paris' 9th district, Pauline Veron (L) on March 28, 2014
Francois Guillot, AFP/File

The FN also performed better than expected in the first round last Sunday and the results generally were interpreted as a signal of exasperation amongst voters with the Hollande government’s failure to get a stagnant French economy moving again and reverse the upward march of unemployment.

Ayrault is widely expected to be made the principal scapegoat for that and Valls, the government’s most popular figure, is favourite to replace him.

Hollande is also reportedly considering bringing veteran industrialist Louis Gallois and/or former World Trade Organisation director Pascal Lamy into the cabinet in a move that would reinforce his recent attempts to foster a more pro-business image.

The president’s former partner, Segolene Royal, is also tipped for a comeback following his separation from girlfriend Valerie Trierweiler in January after revelations of his affair with actress Julie Gayet. Trierweiler reportedly vetoed Royal from being included in Hollande’s first candidate despite the mother of his four children being a long-established Socialist Party heavyweight.

French Interior Minister Manuel Valls (C) and French Minister for Women's Rights and Government...

French Interior Minister Manuel Valls (C) and French Minister for Women's Rights and Government spokesperson Najat Vallaud-Belkacem (R) visit a delicatessen in Saint-Priest, outside Lyon, on March 21, 2014
Jean-Philippe Ksiazek, AFP/File

In the first round, Marine Le Pen’s FN took five percent of the nationwide vote — up from 0.9 percent in the first round of the last municipal polls in 2008 — despite only being able to field candidates in a minority of municipalities.

Where it did present lists, the FN performed better than expected. It claimed the mayor’s seat in Henin-Beaumont in northern France at the first attempt with just over 50 percent of the vote.

Le Pen is hoping to see FN-backed mayors installed in at least another dozen towns on Sunday evening.

The party has controlled a handful of local authorities in the past but does not have a good record in terms of competent administration.

Le Pen, who has made strenuous efforts to forge a new, more respectable image for the party founded by her father Jean-Marie, is looking to establish a local base which will allow the party to demonstrate it can be more than an outlet for voters’ frustrations.

In an interview with Le Monde this weekend, she said: “What we lack at the moment is a positive report card. That is important. With that we can move to a higher level.”

Le Pen, who took over the FN leadership in 2011, has been credited with broadening the appeal of a party regarded as taboo by many voters in light of her father’s repeated convictions for Holocaust denial and inciting racial hatred.

The best-known city that could fall to the FN is Avignon, famed for its annual international arts festival, which organisers say will be pulled out if Le Pen’s party takes over.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

Chinese students at an e-commerce school rehearse selling hijabs and abayas into a smartphone - Copyright AFP Jade GAOJing Xuan TENGDonning hijabs and floor-length...

World

US President Joe Biden delivers remarks after signing legislation authorizing aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan at the White House on April 24, 2024...

World

AfD leaders Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla face damaging allegations about an EU parliamentarian's aide accused of spying for China - Copyright AFP Odd...

Business

Meta's growth is due in particular to its sophisticated advertising tools and the success of "Reels" - Copyright AFP SEBASTIEN BOZONJulie JAMMOTFacebook-owner Meta on...