France's Macron set to lose majority - projection

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By Paul Kirby
In Paris

French President Emmanuel Macron greets supporters as he leaves after voting in the second round of French parliamentary elections, at a polling station in Le Touquet-Paris-Plage, France, June 19, 2022.Image source, Reuters

Image caption,

President Macron needed 289 seats to maintain his majority in the National Assembly but is on course to fall well short

Less than two months after he was re-elected president, Emmanuel Macron is on course to lose control of the French National Assembly after a strong performance by rival parties.

His centrist Ensemble coalition is on course to win parliamentary elections, according to projected results.

But he is set to lose dozens of seats and would struggle to push his reforms.

A left-green alliance is projected to come second, but Marine Le Pen's far-right party have also done well.

Mr Macron had more than 300 seats in the outgoing parliament and defeated Ms Le Pen's National Rally convincingly in the presidential election in April. To maintain his outright majority he needed 289 seats but Sunday's projection of around 210 to 250 seats is worse than the pollsters expected.

Far-left Jean-Luc Mélenchon's left-green alliance called Nupes is set to win 150 to 180 seats, while the far-right National Rally is on course to go from eight seats to between 80 and 100, says TF1 TV.

An early casualty for the government came on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, where a secretary of state, Justine Benin, lost her seat and will have to resign.

Image source, Reuters

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Jean-Luc Mélenchon, who voted in Marseille, formed an alliance made up of Communists, Socialists, Greens and his own far-left party

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