
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
French President Emmanuel Macron called a snap parliamentary election, in a game of chicken with the French people, hoping they’d swerve away from backing right-wing parties which enjoyed support in the European Union vote last month.
After two rounds of voting, a coalition of left-wing parties won the most seats.
It has blocked the far-right from taking power but left the country with no dominant political force and the prospect of months of negotiations to form a government.
Today, Emmanuel Macron’s gamble and the political mess left behind.
Featured:
William Drozdiak, Global Fellow with the Wilson Center's Global Europe Program and a former Washington Post foreign editor
4.5
5151 ratings
French President Emmanuel Macron called a snap parliamentary election, in a game of chicken with the French people, hoping they’d swerve away from backing right-wing parties which enjoyed support in the European Union vote last month.
After two rounds of voting, a coalition of left-wing parties won the most seats.
It has blocked the far-right from taking power but left the country with no dominant political force and the prospect of months of negotiations to form a government.
Today, Emmanuel Macron’s gamble and the political mess left behind.
Featured:
William Drozdiak, Global Fellow with the Wilson Center's Global Europe Program and a former Washington Post foreign editor
69 Listeners
55 Listeners
867 Listeners
15 Listeners
17 Listeners
71 Listeners
14 Listeners
11 Listeners
7 Listeners
8 Listeners
2 Listeners
17 Listeners
94 Listeners
64 Listeners
6 Listeners
10 Listeners
13 Listeners
317 Listeners
7 Listeners
83 Listeners
141 Listeners
169 Listeners
250 Listeners
5 Listeners
63 Listeners
2 Listeners
2 Listeners