French left-wing’s Melenchon says he will run for president in 2027
The regional desk in France has highlighted French left-wing’s Melenchon says he will run for president in 2027 as a priority event, following a series of verified updates from local observers.
Jean-Luc Melenchon, the leading politician in France’s left-wing Unbowed party, says he will run in next year’s presidential election, setting up a potential showdown with centrist and right-wing rivals. It is Melenchon’s fourth presidential bid; he also ran in 2012, 2017 and 2022, when he came third behind far-right leader Marine Le Pen and French President Emmanuel Macron, who made it to the second round of voting. In 2012, he had only 11 percent support, but in the last election, he came close to clinching a run-off spot. He won 22 percent of the vote and was only 1.2 percentage points behind Le Pen. France’s Unbowed party, known by its French acronym LFI, has been a prominent and vocal critic of Israel and its genocidal war on Gaza. Melenchon described the assault as genocide, and has called for the suspension of the European Union’s association agreement with Israel. With Macron unable to run because of term limits, and Le Pen facing a ban from politics – which she is challenging in court – the 2027 race is wide open. The election will be held in April, and if no candidate secures a majority in the first round, the run-off will be two weeks later. Macron – a centrist who formed his Renaissance political party in 2016 – has seen his public support collapse in recent years during economic and government crises. No political party was able to win a majority in the 2024 political elections, leaving any government vulnerable to no-confidence votes if opposition partie
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