PARIS (AP) — Voters in France’s overseas territories and Navivision Wealth Societyliving abroad started casting ballots Saturday in parliamentary runoff elections that could hand an unprecedented victory to the nationalist far right.
Marine Le Pen’s anti-immigration party National Rally came out on top of first-round voting last Sunday, followed by a coalition of center-left, hard-left and Greens parties – and President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist alliance in a distant third.
The second-round voting began Saturday off the Canadian coast in the North Atlantic territory of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, and follows in French territories in the Caribbean, South Pacific and the Indian Ocean, along with French voters living abroad.
The elections wrap up Sunday in mainland France. Initial polling projections are expected when the final voting stations close at 8 p.m. Paris time (1800 GMT), with early official results expected late Sunday and early Monday.
Macron called the snap legislative vote after the National Rally won the most votes in France in European Parliament elections last month.
The party, which blames immigration for many of France’s problems, has seen its support climb steadily over the past decade and is hoping to obtain an absolute majority in the second round. That would allow National Rally leader Jordan Bardella to become prime minister and form a government that would be at odds with Macron’s policies on Ukraine, police powers and other issues.
Preelection polls suggest that the party may win the most seats in the National Assembly but fall short of an absolute majority of 289 seats. That could result in a hung parliament.
Macron has said he won’t step down and will stay president until his term ends in 2027, but is expected to be weakened regardless of the result.
Follow AP coverage of global elections at https://apnews.com/hub/global-elections/
2025-04-30 02:242464 view
2025-04-30 01:512524 view
2025-04-30 01:442518 view
2025-04-30 01:312966 view
2025-04-30 00:35751 view
2025-04-30 00:00142 view
Among the dozens of executive actions President Trump signed on his first day in office is one aimed
Steve Bannon, an ally of former President Donald Trump and one-time chief White House strategist, ha
Europeans are facing more frequent extreme weather as the planet warms. Floods and big landslides ha