French President Emmanuel Macron lost control of the National Assembly in legislative elections on Sunday, a major setback that could throw the country into political paralysis unless he is able to negotiate alliances with other parties.
Macron's centrist Ensemble coalition, which wants to raise the retirement age and further deepen EU integration, was set to end up with the most seats in Sunday's election. But that was well short of the absolute majority needed to control parliament, initial projections and first results showed.
Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire called the outcome a “democratic shock” and added that if other blocs did not cooperate, “this would block our capacity to reform and protect the French.”
There is no set script in France for how things will now unfold. The last time a newly elected president failed to get an outright majority in parliamentary elections was in 1988.
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*** French President Emmanuel Macron's alliance lost its majority in the
French parliament, winning 245 seats in the 577-member chamber in
elections, according to full results published by the interior ministry
early Monday.
The results mean that Macron's Together alliance is well short of the 289 seats needed for an overall majority.
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