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President Cyril Ramaphosa at a presidential Imbizo in Tsakane.
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PARIS – French President Emmanuel Macron began a round of thorny consultations with political leaders on Friday, hoping to cobble together a viable ruling coalition after last month’s inconclusive election.
READ: France votes in final round of ‘seismic’ election
A full six weeks after a snap election in which Macron lost his relative parliamentary majority, he has still not named a new prime minister, whose first major task will be to submit next year’s budget plan to the National Assembly.
The left-wing New Popular Front (NFP) — which emerged as the largest faction post-election — has said it wants the 37-year-old economist Lucie Castets to be the new premier.
But Macron’s forces have shown little interest in the idea, preferring a potential alliance with the traditional right.
“We have come here to remind the president how important it is to respect the election result and to pull the country out of paralysis,” Castets said as she arrived at the Elysee palace on Friday, accompanied by other NFP representatives.
She and her allies were willing to find a “compromise, given that nobody has the absolute majority” and would work towards “stability”, Castets said.
Also ahead of the meeting with Macron, Manuel Bompard, coordinator of the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) party, had warned: “We’re not going to negotiate with him”.
Instead, he announced, “we’ll tell him that there is no alternative to Lucie Castets’s appointment.”
– ‘Ready to build coalitions’ –
But allies of Macron — who said after the election that “nobody won” — have argued that the leftist bloc is too weak to claim the prime minister’s post, and are hoping instead to form a majority around a centrist figure.
As she left the Elysee, Castets told reporters that she had, indeed, detected “a temptation for the president to build his own government”.
She herself was “ready to build coalitions, starting today”, and to talk with the other political groups.
Macron had acknowledged in the talks that all parties opposed to the far right “are fully legitimate to govern”, said leading Socialist Olivier Faure.
The current period is the longest France has ever been without a leader of government following a legislative election, after Macron said he would not prioritise the task of finding one during the Paris Olympic Games, which ended on 11 August.
Prime Minister Gabriel Attal has been running a caretaker government.
Opposition figures have sharply criticised Macron for taking so much time, with Green Party senator Yannick Jadot calling the president’s stance “a denial of democracy”.
Even some of Macron’s own allies have become impatient.
An official in his office insisted Thursday that “the president is on the side of the French people, the guarantor of the institutions”.
The Elysee talks — scheduled for Friday and Monday — include representatives from across the political spectrum.
Macron’s office did not give an indication of when the president might make his choice for prime minister, but observers expect him to do so sometime next week.
Whoever is appointed must be able to survive a confidence motion in parliament and present a 2025 budget draft law to parliament by 1 October, the legal deadline.
By Jurgen Hecker