Was the dissolution of the French parliament by President Emmanuel Macron the stupidest decision by a political careerist and tactician in recent years?
Political experts have been dissecting recent polling data, and the outlook is more than dire for President Macron and his globalist government. Adjusting for higher turnout and stakes in the National Assembly vote compared to the European elections, the figures spell trouble for his centrist bloc.
Guillaume Tabard from the conservative daily Le Figaro conducted a detailed analysis using the European election results as a baseline. His projections, which account for the unique run-off system where candidates with more than 12.5% support advance to a second round, reveal a surprising lead for the far-right.
According to Tabard, the far-right coalition, including RN and Reconquête, leads in 362 constituencies. The newly united left-wing "popular front," comprising anti-capitalist radicals and social democrats, is ahead in 211. Macron’s centrist group leads in just three, all representing French citizens abroad, while the center-right holds only one seat in Paris's affluent 16th arrondissement.
In the anticipated second-round battles, the contest would largely pit the left against the far-right in 536 seats. Macron’s alliance would reach the run-off in only 41 seats, and the conservative LR in just three.
If the trend continues, Macron will leave behind a country in deep debt, in recession and in an immigration crisis that he himself actively brought about and which has led to a real cultural clash.
Macron is one of the most important representatives of the WEF agenda. He has pursued this agenda of open borders, the centralization of power in Brussels and the consistent transformation of society into a controlled democracy and is now receiving the receipt for this from voters.