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Opinion

In France, the yellow vest movement has lost its charm

'The Jewish vote? I can only guess but in four Paris districts with a Jewish or Israel-friendly mayor, Macron’s party polled between 38 and 46 percent, Le Pen between six and eight per cent'

May 31, 2019 10:25
French National Rally leader Marine Le Pen
2 min read

The French went to the polls Sunday to elect 79 representatives to the European parliament. The extreme right came in first, as expected. But President Macron’s “Renaissance” list won as many seats (23) as Marine Le Pen’s “Rassemblement National”, vindicating his personal engagement in the campaign and entrenching his young party in the political landscape.

The election’s main surprise was the third place (13 seats) for “Europe Ecologie Les Verts” (Greens), while the two traditional mainstream parties -- “Les Republicains” (Conservative) and “Envie d’Europe “(Labor) -- simply collapsed, mustering only 14 seats between them.

The radical left party “La France Insoumise” (six seats from 6.3 percent of the vote) plummeted from its threatening 19 percent at the presidential elections two years ago.

France’s social crisis is not over, but the yellow vest movement has lost its charm. Violent attacks on established democratic institutions – from the presidency to political parties, trade unions and media – lost them support. And as the election drew closer, public debate shifted away from pocketbook issues and anarchic ideas such as government by referendum. Many yellow vests abstained or voted Marine Le Pen.