France's Elections End Up With No Clear Majority. This Is What Could Happen Next
HuffPost
Elections results show French voters have chosen to give a broad leftist coalition the most parliamentary seats in pivotal legislative elections.
PARIS (AP) — Election results show French voters have chosen to give a broad leftist coalition the most parliamentary seats in pivotal legislative elections, keeping the far right away from power. Yet no party won an outright majority, putting France in an uncertain, unprecedented situation.
President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist alliance arrived in second position and the far right in third — still drastically increasing the number of seats it holds in the National Assembly, France’s lower house of parliament.
No clear figure has emerged as a possible future prime minister. Macron says he will wait to decide his next steps, and heads to Washington this week for a NATO summit. The new legislators can start work in Parliament on Monday, and their first new session starts July 18.
A hung parliament?
Three major political blocs emerged from the elections — yet none of them is close to the majority of at least 289 seats out of 577.