French President Emmanuel Macron has finally decided on a Prime ministerial candidate after the country was without a new government for nearly two months following July’s legislative elections.
Macron has called on Michel Barnier, the former European Union official tasked with negotiating a deal with the UK following the 2016 Brexit referendum, which is well-known as opposed to the UK leaving the European Union.
Barnier, a member of the center-right Les Republicains, is now tasked with forming a government as no single party or bloc of parties has a clear majority in the French parliament.
Marine Le Pen of the populist National Rally (RN) stated that her party’s support for Barnier would depend on his policies. Le Pen also referred to Barnier as the “French Joe Biden” due to his age, 73, which makes him one of the oldest French Prime Ministers in recent history.
Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure, meanwhile, expressed anger that Macron chose a Prime Minister from a party that came forth in the election rather than a member of the left-wing New Popular Front (NFP), which came first overall.
Faure went even further, calling the move a denial of democracy, a term used by Marine Le Pen when Macron’s allies and others prevented her party, which received the most significant vote of any single party in the election, from any critical parliamentary positions.
Alongside his role in the Brexit negotiations, Barnier is known in France for taking a more rigid stance against illegal immigration and mass migration in recent years. He once called for a three—to five-year ban on immigrants entering France from outside the European Union.
Should Banrier be unable to form a working majority, France could face another snap election, a scenario predicted by The National Pulse Editor-in-Chief Raheem Kassam.