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Into the void
The Guardian Weekly
|June 14, 2024
Far-right gains in last weekend's EU polls sent shockwaves across the continent - and prompted Emmanuel Macron to call a high-risk snap election in France. Is Europe on the brink of a political earthquake?

Everyone is in total shock," said Baptiste Lopata, a radiologist, sitting in his trade union office in the small northern French town of Soissons. "Now we've all got to mobilise against the far right." When Marine Le Pen's anti-immigration, far-right National Rally (RN) won a historic victory in the European elections last Sunday night, its highest scores were here, in the north-eastern department of L'Aisne, where it won over 50%, and even 60% in some rural villages, compared to a 31% score nationwide.
The far right's huge success was expected in this heartland area, which is ageing, underpopulated, has higher than average unemployment and poverty, and a history of factory closures.
Instead, the real shock was Emmanuel Macron's sudden decision to dissolve parliament and call a snap election.
Two years ago, Lopata's area of Soissons elected an RN member of parliament, José Beaurain, a professional piano-tuner who was the French national assembly's first blind MP since the war. Residents now feel that a snap election with the far right on an upwards trend, could see the party increase from its current 88 seats to more than 200.

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