Europe 1 with AFP 3:07 p.m., February 9, 2024

On the sidelines of a trip to Bordeaux, Emmanuel Macron considered it "completely normal" that there could "be discussions" with the National Rally in the Assembly. The President is thus following the direction of Gabriel Attal, who declared that "the republican arc is the hemicycle".

Emmanuel Macron judged on Friday "completely normal" that there could "be discussions" with the National Rally in the National Assembly, going in the direction of his Prime Minister the day before. “We are not going to consider that this or that political group would have fewer parliamentary rights, less recognition,” said the head of state on the sidelines of a trip to Bordeaux.

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Thursday evening, Gabriel Attal had "assumed" to work "with everyone" in the National Assembly, including with groups to which he is "radically opposed", the RN and LFI. The Prime Minister had been criticized on the left after having declared to the daily

Le Monde

that "the republican arc is the hemicycle" of the Assembly, where 88 deputies from the National Rally sit, when his predecessor Elisabeth Borne regularly stressed that the RN and LFI were to be excluded.

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Gabriel Attal's declarations on the Republican arc are not unanimous within the presidential camp. “I do not share” this approach, Renaissance MP Marc Ferracci, close to Emmanuel Macron, told AFP. “I am not speaking to the extreme right, nor to LFI. I see no reason to change my method. I am not seeking compromise with them,” this executive of the group emphasized.

Friday in Bordeaux, Emmanuel Macron also briefly returned to the anger of his ally François Bayrou (MoDem), who had announced to AFP that he would not join the government for lack of "deep agreement on the policy to follow". “I never comment on political events,” reacted the President of the Republic. “What matters to me, what matters to the French, is the record of service, not the state of mind,” he added.