• skaffi@infosec.pub
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    7 days ago

    I have been really curious about that, actually, but since I don’t speak French, it’s been hard for me to follow the post-election developments. Are you able to give a recap, or point me to a good summary somewhere?

    • wkk@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago
      • “far-right” gains lots of seats during european deputy elections
      • people shocked
      • Macron somehow figures this means people have new priorities and dissolves the general assembly
      • new elections
      • expected a swing victory for “far-right”
      • they actually lose seats
      • left coalition comes out on top, but with relative majority of seats only (<50%)
      • unexpected but welcome turn of events
      • issue: since no one has absolute majority it’s difficult to vote stuff
      • budget
      • Macron wants (NEEDS) to fix the debt issue
      • they’ll cut expenses in public services, mass layoffs
      • left coalition wants to find the missing money not by cutting but by taxing places where money accumulated (i.e. The Rich™)
      • left lands amends in the budget plan
      • prime minister overrules the plan using “49.3” and approves the initial Fuck The People <3 Budget Plan™
      • this unlocks the prime minister’s ejection seat button
      • prime minister is ejected
      • Macron needs to pick yet another prime minister, hopefully this time he won’t put one of his cronies to overrule the elected majority’s priorities
    • Ziggurat@sh.itjust.works
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      7 days ago

      Long story short

      1. following the European elections, Macron used his constitutional right to call for new parliamentary elections, a risky moved that hasn’t been used since 1997.

      2. European elections led to 3 similar sized block : A left wing union from with communists, green and social-democrats, a Center-right pro Macron block, and a far-right block

      3. Macron appointed former EU brexit negotiator Barnier as a prime minister, he is from a right wing party who’s done a pretty low score at the election, and he bought a government with centre-right liberals and some more conservative to show the far-right that it could have been worse.

      4. The parliament struggled to vote a budget, so Barnier used the trust me bro technique, a constitutional trick which allows you to bypass a parliament vote on a law but triggers a confidence vote.

      5. The Far-right decided that the current wasn’t right wing enough and vote the non confidence with the left-wing, meaning that the budget is rejected and the prime minister has to resign

      Direct consequences is that France has no budget for 2025 (I assume it means that they’ll re-use the 2024 budget until they vote something) and that Macron will have to appoint a new PM. With some luck French politicians will start behaving like in any democratic nation and build a coalition over a given coaltion contract rather than blaming each other on the TV

      • Foreigner@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        With some luck French politicians will start behaving like in any democratic nation and build a coalition over a given coaltion contract rather than blaming each other on the TV

        I feel we have a better chance of winning the euromillions than that happening