“No one has won alone and each person separately cannot govern alone,” sums up the Ensemble-Renaissance MP.
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“Either we can work together, or it will be very difficult to govern,” notes Monday July 8 on franceinfo Roland Lescure, re-elected Ensemble-Renaissance MP and Minister Delegate for Industry. “We find ourselves with three blocs, none of which has an absolute majority, no one has won alone and each one separately cannot govern alone”summarizes the deputy, the day after the legislative elections.
Unlike François Bayrou, Roland Lescure nevertheless recognizes that the presidential camp “lost”. “We didn’t do things right”assumes the minister, who urges to “change method” and says he is ready to work “with people of good will”, “republicans from both sides”For “move forward on a compromise approach”. Roland Lescure calls for the “collective responsibility of politicians” to avoid “to have Madame Le Pen at the Élysée in three years.”
While the New Popular Front, which came out on top, assures that it will propose a candidate for Matignon during the week, Roland Lescure appears doubtful. “We will see the name in question, we will see if they can actually agree.”he reacts. “I heard an extremely voluble Jean-Luc Mélenchon who spoke first before everyone else to explain that everyone had to leave except him and that he had won,” comments Roland Lescure, while the parties of the left coalition say they are discussing to propose a name “either by consensus or by vote.” “We’ll see if they can calm him down, put him in a corner, and come up with another name, we’ll see where that leads them.”he adds, convinced that “The Popular Front may crack.” According to Roland Lescure, “The NFP program is incoherent” And “minority”and imposing it on the other political forces in the National Assembly will not allow the Assembly “to move forward”.