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Today — 26 June 2024The Guardian

Film-maker warns against ‘rampant racism’ in France as election approaches

26 June 2024 at 06:27

Alice Diop, whose documentaries have explored the lives of people in housing estates, wants to mobilise voters against the far right

The award-winning French film-maker Alice Diop has warned of “rampant racism” in France and launched a collective to mobilise residents of housing estates to vote in the snap election in an attempt to hold back the far right.

“For people like me it’s life or death,” said the acclaimed director, as Marine Le Pen’s far-right anti-immigration National Rally (RN) is forecast by pollsters to take the largest number of seats in the French parliament on 7 July and is seeking an absolute majority to form a government.

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© Photograph: Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images

Marine Le Pen – or the hard left? Macron has left France’s voters with a ‘scary choice’ | Paul Taylor

26 June 2024 at 02:00

With the collapse of centrist parties, voters are caught between the National Rally, a left mired in controversy – or abstaining altogether

It’s a choice between the plague and cholera. Millions of French voters are agonising at the prospect of having to choose between a candidate of Marine Le Pen’s hard-right anti-immigration National Rally (Rassemblement NationalRN) party and Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s hard-left France Unbowed (La France Insoumise – LFI) movement in parliamentary election runoffs on 7 July.

Barring a dramatic comeback by President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist bloc in the 30 June first round, the second ballot in roughly half of the 577 constituencies will pit a representative of Le Pen’s illiberal national populists against a candidate of the New Popular Front (Nouveau Front Populaire – NFP), a hastily cobbled-together alliance of leftwing parties dominated by Mélenchon’s radical leftists.

Paul Taylor is a senior visiting fellow at the European Policy Centre

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© Photograph: Remon Haazen/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Remon Haazen/Getty Images

EU braces for the nightmare scenario – a Eurosceptic France

National Rally win may hamper bloc’s ability to get things done and pose existential question over French role

On the night her party swept to a crushing victory in European elections and France’s president triggered a political earthquake by dissolving parliament, Marine Le Pen, the longtime leader of the National Rally (RN), could not have been much clearer.

“Tonight’s message – including the dissolution – is also addressed to the leaders in Brussels,” she said. “This great victory for patriotic movements is in alignment with the direction of history … We are ready to take power if the people so wish.”

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© Photograph: Christian Hartmann/Reuters

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© Photograph: Christian Hartmann/Reuters

Before yesterdayThe Guardian

EU elections fallout: a shock snap vote, resignations and the far right – video report

10 June 2024 at 12:36

Emmanuel Macron stunned politicians and the public by announcing a snap general election after the far-right National Rally party won about 32% of the French vote. But it wasn’t just in France that the far right was celebrating. In Germany and Austria, parties on the populist right made stunning gains. Despite that, the pro-European centre appeared to have held in a set of results likely to complicate EU lawmaking

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© Photograph: The Guardian

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© Photograph: The Guardian

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