European liberals seek alliance with France’s Macron for European elections

FAN Editor
ALDE President and Former Belgium PM Verhofstadt takes part in the kick-off campaign of La Republique En Marche Benelux, in Brussels
ALDE President and Former Belgium Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt takes part in the kick-off campaign of La Republique En Marche Benelux, in Brussels, Belgium, April 7, 2018. REUTERS/Eric Vidal

September 9, 2018

PARIS (Reuters) – The leader of the liberal group in the European Parliament Guy Verhofstadt said on Sunday he is seeking an alliance with French President Emmanuel Macron’s political party for the European elections in May in a bid to counter populists.

In an interview published by French newspaper Ouest France, the former Belgian prime minister said he is ready for the European liberals and La Republique en Marche, the party created by Macron, to build an alternative to populism.

Asked about an alliance, Christophe Castaner, the head of La Republique en Marche, dismissed Verhoftsadt’s comments. “We are not ready for an alliance,” he told Reuters on Sunday.

As Italian and Hungarian leaders have met and stressed their common vision, pro-European liberal parties intend to fight back ahead of European Parliament elections in May.

“The fight in 2019 will be a fight between the nationalist populists on one side and a pro-European alternative,” Verhofstadt told Ouest France.

The liberal leader said each party would campaign together with common proposals but keep their own identities. “The goal is to create a decisive group in the future parliament, that would be a tool to stop the nationalist tide,” he said.

The fourth largest group in the European Parliament, with 68 MPs out of 751, is courting the newcomer on the European stage to join its ranks and gain clout after the May elections.

This summer, Castaner toured Europe to seek allies ahead of the elections. He had a meeting with Verhofstadt last Tuesday.

Eight months ahead of the vote, Macron has positioned himself as the main opponent to European nationalists. On Thursday he called on the European Popular Party, the conservative group in Parliament to clarify its position, saying it cannot have Angela Merkel and Hungary’s Viktor Orban under the same banner.

(Reporting by Inti Landauro and Julie Carriat; editing by David Evans)

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Olivia Munn finds little support from 'Predator' peers

Actress Olivia Munn says she has found little support from some of her “Predator” co-stars and director after a Los Angeles Times report revealed that Twentieth Century Fox had removed a scene that featured a man who is a registered sex offender. Munn alerted the studio to Steven Wilder Striegel’s […]

You May Like