Thousands protest in France against new prime minister
Thousands of left-wing demonstrators on Sept. 7 took to the streets across France to protest against the nomination of the centre-right Michel Barnier as prime minister and denounce President Emmanuel Macron's "power grab."
Protests took place in Paris as well as other cities including Nantes in the west, Nice and Marseille in the south and Strasbourg in the east.
Macron on Sept. 5 appointed Barnier, a 73-year-old former foreign minister who acted as the European Union's Brexit negotiator, as prime minister, seeking to move forward after July snap elections in which his centrist alliance lost its relative majority in parliament.
Barnier said on Sept. 6 night that he was open to naming ministers of all political stripes, including "people from the left."
But a left-wing coalition, which emerged as France's largest force after the elections, although without enough seats for an overall majority, has greeted Macron's appointment of Barnier with dismay.
Hard-left leader Jean-Luc Melenchon, whose France Unbowed party (LFI) and allies belong to the left-wing bloc, has charged that the election had been "stolen from the French" and called on French people to take to the streets.
On Sept. 7, he urged supporters to prepare for battle.
"There will be no pause," he vowed.
"Democracy isn't just the art of accepting that you've won, it's also the humility of accepting that you've lost," Melenchon said from a truck at the Paris protest.
The left-wing alliance wanted Lucie Castets, a 37-year-old economist, to become prime minister, but Macron quashed the idea, arguing that she would not survive a confidence vote in the hung parliament.
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