
Originally published byThe Guardian
Unless the mainstream gets its act together, next year’s election looks likely to hand the keys of the Élysée to the far right
• Don’t get This Is Europe delivered to your inbox? Sign up here
“The real risk,” France’s prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, reportedly said last month, “is that this tangle of ambitions reflects such a lack of engagement with reality on the part of all these candidates that voters find the whole thing grotesque.”
He has a point. By this time next year, France will have a new president and Emmanuel Macron, who is constitutionally barred from serving more than two consecutive terms, will have left after a decade in the Élysée Palace.
Continue reading...🇬🇧
More news from United KingdomUnited Kingdom
EUROPE
Related News
German authorities arrest 2 on China high-tech espionage allegations
6h ago
Turkey: Leadership dispute engulfs opposition CHP
5h ago
Germany records high numbers of online child abuse cases
5h ago
Philippines: New inquiry launched into Duterte-era drug war
5h ago
Hotter 2026 and El Nino could trigger extreme fires
6h ago