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In Marseille, Glucksmann takes battle against far right to the streets

As France's Raphaël Glucksmann campaigned for the left wing's freshly formed coalition, his message for upcoming snap elections was clear: Keep the far right out of power.

MARSEILLE, France (CN) — On Wednesday, Raphaël Glucksmann — a French left-wing politician and member of the European Parliament — emerged from behind a pizza truck onto the Place Claire in Saint-Barnabé, a neighborhood in Marseille, in a suit. He stopped on the square and asked the crowd to picture a scenario with the right wing in charge.

Bardella as prime minister, Maréchal as minister of education, Ciotti as interior minister,” Glucksmann said, citing some of France’s leading far-right politicians. “On July 7, we need to ensure that what has never happened in the history of this country doesn't happen.”

The French right's Jordan Bardella of the National Rally, or RN; Marion Maréchal of Reconquer!; and Eric Ciotti of The Republicans, or LR, have never been closer to power. In the European Elections on June 9, the far right dominated the country’s other political parties, prompting President Emmanuel Macron to dissolve France’s government and call for snap elections for the lower house of parliament, the National Assembly.

The stakes couldn’t be higher in the two rounds of voting on June 30 and July 7. If the RN wins an absolute majority, they’ll be fully in control of the country's domestic agenda for the first time in history.

Glucksmann talking to reporters in Marseille in Saint Barnabé, a neighborhood in the 12th arrondissement of the city. (Lily Radziemski/Courthouse News)

Polls show the right poised to take about 30% of the vote, with the left earning between 22-29%, and Macron's group garnering about 18%.

The New Popular Front, France’s freshly formed left-wing coalition uniting the Socialists, Greens, Communists and France Unbowed — known as LFI, is fighting to edge out the right. In Marseille, Glucksmann’s message was clear: The number one priority is keeping the far-right RN out of power. The details of the New Popular Front’s political mandate are secondary.

“France is about to topple into something we’ve never seen before,” Glucksmann said on the Place Claire. “The RN are at the gates of power, and we will do everything to close these gates.”

Glucksmann's discourse focused almost exclusively on the RN. In 1972, Jean-Marie Le Pen founded the extreme-right party — then called the National Front, which faced controversy for decades for its xenophobic policies and rhetoric. When Marine Le Pen, his daughter, succeeded him in 2011, she struggled to detach the party from the family name. In recent years, Bardella has been credited with normalizing the party and helping boost its ranks. 

After the "picture this" scenario — one Glucksmann has returned to on multiple occasions in recent days — he hammered on the need for collective action to prevent the right from taking the helm.

When challenged over aligning with the LFI — a far-left party that Glucksmann has openly criticized — his response was brief.

“It was a difficult decision and it wasn’t a marriage for love,” he said. “It was tactical.”  

Glucksmann said Macron’s decision to call snap elections was irresponsible. Early polls show the president's coalition running third.

“On the night of June 9, Macronism died,” Glucksmann said. “Macron lost all legitimacy to run the National Assembly.”

Lecorché, the local candidate from Glucksmann's party, hands out pamphlets to people walking the streets of Marseille. (Lily Radziemski/Courthouse News)

Then Glucksmann and Pascaline Lecorché, the local parliamentary candidate he came to support, were on the move. They walked up the Rue Montaigne past an organic bakery, butcher shops and hair salons to hand out pamphlets. They stopped a man coming out of his apartment building and people running errands on the street, before moving through a shopping complex and entering a local bookstore. Reporters crowded in between the shelves as Glucksmann and Lecorché urged the shopkeeper to vote.  

Not everyone welcomed the pair with open arms. Outside of the local Carrefour, one of France’s biggest supermarket chains, a man holding a long receipt approached Glucksmann.

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“Look!” he said. “This was 90 euros, who’s going to manage this?”

A man approached Glucksmann upon leaving Carrefour, one of France's largest grocery store chains, to challenge him on rising costs. (Lily Radziemski/Courthouse News)

Another man, who looked no older than 35, got into a heated debate with Lecorché, exclaiming that he found more in common with the RN than with the New Popular Front. While the two were arguing, Glucksmann quietly retreated to another part of the square and talked to more locals.

The pair continued weaving through the neighborhood. They spoke to the owner of a clothing shop and the cashiers of a catering store. Around 5:30 p.m., when the visit was over, Glucksmann lit a cigarette and retreated down a side street before hopping into a Toyota hybrid en route to the official campaign event.

The event was held at Le Talus, a socio-eco-cultural space in Marseille. (Lily Radziemski/Courthouse News)

At Le Talus, a socio-eco-cultural space in Marseille, a farmer sold fresh produce outside of her truck. People inside of the space’s community garden were smiling, hands covered in soil. People gathered around the bar with beers in hand, ashing smokes in recycled tomato cans.

Frédérique Martin traveled from a nearby town for this event, which was announced with less than a day’s notice. He voted for Glucksmann in the European elections.

The elections were catastrophic, and we were not surprised,” he told Courthouse News.  

Martin supports Glucksmann’s ideas, and applauds him for having a clear stance against antisemitism; other far-left candidates, namely Jean-Luc Mélenchon of LFI, have faced serious backlash for refusing to acknowledge Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel as a terrorist attack. This caused a major rift on the left.

When it comes to the New Popular Front, Martin simply doesn’t see another option.

“It’s not strategic, it’s that we don’t have a choice,” he said.

Jacqueline Vesperini sat on a wooden bench overlooking the small stage where Lecorché and Glucksmann would be speaking.

“We have a historic political responsibility to ensure that history doesn’t repeat itself,” she told Courthouse News. “It’s our responsibility to raise our heads and say no.”

When Lecorché and Glucksmann took the stage, they were met with clapping, cheering and chanting. People in the audience held beers and smiled up at the duo.

“Marseille is a city of welcoming, with doors open to the Mediterranean,” Lecorché said to the crowd. “It’s inclusive for everyone.”

The speech quickly turned to the RN. Lecorché acknowledged that many are veering to the right out of frustration — there is a large demographic of RN voters that are young and making minimum wage, people the left wish to sway to their side.

“Social inequalities are very strong,” Lecorché said. “We have to find these people, tell them they’re not alone and propose solutions for them.”

Lecorché announced the party would tax the super-rich to finance the climate transition, which prompted the crowd to start chanting, “Tax the rich!”

Glucksmann and Lecorché take the stage in a campaign event in Marseille ahead of the legislative elections. (Lily Radziemski/Courthouse News)

Then Glucksmann took the stage.

“I think we’ve all had the same pit in our stomachs since Sunday,” he said, referring to June 9, when Macron called for these elections. “We have 10 days to close the gates of hell that the president, in full irresponsibility, opened.”

When Glucksmann painted his "picture this" scenario of the far right in the National Assembly, the crowd reacted with dramatic gasps and groans. The RN’s France would mean the end of support for Ukraine, the systemic destruction of the European project and attacks on women’s rights, he said.

“That France — we don’t want it,” Glucksmann said. “We want to preserve what we have inherited … a democracy.”   

Glucksmann urged the crowd to fight with everything they’ve got to keep the far right out of power, as if their lives depended on it — because he argued that they do. His comment prompted a standing ovation.

Follow @lilyradz
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