Entering the prime minister’s residence on Friday evening, Mr Barnier promised to address “the challenges, the anger, the suffering, the feeling of abandonment, of injustice running through many of our cities, suburbs and rural areas”.
He told the TF1 channel that as prime minister, he would address national issues including pension reform, migration and the country’s economic situation.
Ex-prime minister Gabriel Attal, whose centrist bloc came second in the election, said after talks with Mr Barnier that Ensemble was prepared to join a broad front with the republican right and republican left, with “no desire to block or offer unconditional support”.
Mr Barnier himself comes from the Republicans, and party leader Laurent Wauquiez said his decision depended on the prime minister’s plans: “For the moment, nothing has been decided.”
Some on the left said it was their own fault they ended up with Mr Barnier as prime minister.
Socialist Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo pointed out that the president had considered former Socialist prime minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, for the job but that he had been turned down by his own party.
Another Socialist mayor, Karim Bouamrane, blamed intransigence from other parts of the left alliance: “The path they chose was 100% or nothing – and here we are with nothing.”
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