Left Impasse

Serge Halimi in Sidecar:

In the aftermath of the French municipal elections last month, only one left-wing party registered concern at a poor result: the embattled Écologistes, who forfeited six of the eight large cities they claimed in the 2020 ‘Green wave’, including Bordeaux. Not for the first time, La France insoumise (LFI) offered a triumphalist reading – ‘remarkable’, a ‘groundswell’ – of a performance that fell short of most expectations. The Parti socialiste (PS), after pointing out that together with allies it still retained seven of France’s ten largest cities – Paris, Lyon and Marseille among them – resumed its perennial internal squabbles over responsibility for those it had lost (Brest, Clermont-Ferrand, Avignon). As for the Parti communiste français (PCF), it bagged Nîmes but saw an erosion of support in working-class strongholds like Vénissieux. The election of its national secretary, Fabien Roussel, as mayor of Saint-Amand-les-Eaux (16,000 inhabitants) chiefly served to cement his candidacy in next year’s presidential race.

Local contests are, it should be said, an unreliable guide to national outcomes. Three years after his capture of the Élysée in 2017, Emmanuel Macron failed to establish a foothold in municipalities large or small; he was nevertheless re-elected two years later.

More here.

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