PARIS (Reuters) – France’s opposition left-wing parties late on Monday pledged to work together and nominate joint candidates in snap parliament elections later this month to challenge the government and Marine Le Pen’s far-right movement.
The country’s socialists, greens, communists and the more radical France Unbowed party in a joint release made a call for a shared platform to “present an alternative to (President) Emmanuel Macron and fight against the racist project of the far right”.
The parties said they would support a joint candidate in each electoral district from the first round of voting on June 30.
The bloc had worked together during the previous parliamentary campaign in 2022 before a leadership struggle and policy differences – including on the Gaza war – led to cracks in their alliance.
Following a massive loss for his Renaissance party in Sunday’s European Parliament election, Macron announced snap elections and dissolved the National Assembly.
In a first opinion poll released on Monday, the far-right National Rally was forecast to score the most votes without securing an absolute majority.
(Reporting by Nicolas Delame, writing by Tassilo Hummel; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
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