The Duran Podcast - Globalists ditch Macron, resignation possible
Episode Date: June 29, 2024Globalists ditch Macron, resignation possible ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, Alexander, let's talk about the French elections, which the first round is right around the corner.
And Macron has been criticized by Bloomberg in an article the other day saying that he's toxic.
Bloomberg is reporting that Macron is toxic. He's toxic in France. He's toxic in the European Union.
no one wants to be around macron.
So are we going to be talking about a macron curse or something?
He's toxic.
He went from being the ultimate globalist to now being toxic
because of all the decisions he has made over the past month.
You're absolutely correct.
You're absolutely correct.
When he was elected in 2017, he was the globalist golden boy.
I remember reading all these enormously flattering,
and laudatory pieces about him in places like The Guardian back in 2017, that he was going to
bring a new type of politics, that he would be the French Justin Trudeau. And in fact, there
are some similarities. Anyway, there were all kinds of expectations of Macron. And, well, France,
as I've always said, very different country, very old country, various powerful traditions,
and it's all falling apart. Now, you know, we're getting opinion polls coming
out of France. And of course, opinion polls in France are not always completely reliable, just as they're
not in most places. But if what they show is what turns out to be the case, then I think that
there is now a possibility that the Rassamplement National, Marine Le Pen's party, might actually get a
majority in the French National Assembly. I mean, they seem to be pulling ahead. They are now polling at around
36 to 38% of the vote, which is a significant increase over the 31% that they got in the European
Parliament elections. So, you know, they're searching. The interesting thing is that the left,
the combined left parties, which have just about managed to hold together, where the dominant
personality is Jean-Luc Melanchon, who is, you know, the sort of very strong, fierce left,
very old-school leftist. I mean, he's the kind of person that in France was, you know, almost mainstream for a time in the 60s and 70s. Anyway, he's come back. He's now apparently, this grouping looks like they might win up to 30% of the vote. And Macron's party, which is the only party of the centre that seems to be left because all of the others look like they've collapsed. They are,
getting less than 20% of the vote. So it's starting to look like we're going to have a national
assembly in which pretty much, which is pretty much dominated by two big blocks, both of which
on the right and on the left, are deeply hostile to Macron. But the thing to understand is that the
French electoral system, even though it's based on proportional representation, it's a proportional
representation system, which isn't pure like the German one is, where the percentage of
votes a party gets is going to be reflected almost exactly in the proportion of MPs it elects to
the parliament.
the French system tends, like the Greek, to reward the winner.
So the fact that Le Pen's party is doing as well as it is, as I said, points to a possibility that she might win a majority.
She's quite close on the opinion polls to that point, and the drift is in her favour.
I understand that there was a television debate between the prime ministerial candidates,
her, the leader of her party in the parliament. I forget he's in Baldela, apparently did well.
Most of the views are that he gave an accomplished and effective performance. So all the stars
are aligning behind Le Pen and the Rassemblement National. And they're turning sour on
Macro. And, well, we were the first people to say that if the vote went against him, he might resign.
There's another article today in the Daily Telegraph by a French journalist who says that the
consensus in France now is that if these results are as bad as people perhaps think for him,
that he will resign, and about the fact that he's become toxic, he's become toxic.
Apparently, even his own party in these elections is now distancing itself from him.
His political allies in France are distancing themselves from him.
He's lost face and support in Europe, and amongst the globalists of whom he is part.
I think he will resign.
Yeah, we were the first channel that talked about his possible resignation.
you mentioned it in the video that we made a couple of weeks ago.
And I wonder if these articles that are coming out, like the Bloomberg article,
which are labeling Macron as toxic and citing various sources and unnamed officials in Europe
and in France is wanting to distance themselves from Macron is not so much about reporting
what they're hearing from these officials, but maybe it's the mainstream media.
being given the orders to
nudge Macron,
to hint that Macron,
you know, it's time for you.
If you really get pummeled these elections,
you need to go.
Yes.
I think maybe we're seeing something like that
where the media has now been told
you need to start putting out articles
so that Macron can get the hint
if he really does poorly in these elections.
As all the opinion polls suggest you will.
I think so.
all of these articles are intended to prepare us for the fact that he is going to go. And there was a pretty
clear message to Macron himself that he simply not wanted, that he's messed up, that he was the
man who was supposed to stop Le Pen and turn everything back and bring France back into the, you know,
neoliberal order. And that in effect, what he's achieved is the opposite. And I think people are very angry
with him. And I think going back to something we said in a recent program, I think at some level he
wants to go. He understands that things have not played out well. He doesn't want two years as a lame
dark president in France. Better go, leave it all to Le Pen. The French have failed to understand or
appreciate his genius. He can then go back to the world that he came from, the world of banking.
and investment. And on top of that, after the anger against him has abated, well, he'll be
readmitted to all the great institutions. He might even become, for all I know, president of the
IMF. That seems to me an obvious place for him to end up. It seems to be a French domain now.
We've had people like Christine Lagarde running. So maybe Macron will be a good.
fit. He's incompetent as the President of France, but as we know, that doesn't in any way affect
things when the fact that somebody's incompetent doesn't prevent them getting appointed to all of
these positions. Let me ask one quick question. What do you expect from Le Pen? Well, I think if Macron
resigns, there will presumably be elections, at which point she will stand for the presidency with a very,
very strong chance of being elected. If he stands, well, we're going to have a major battle
between her and Macron about who leads France. We will end the video there. The durand.orgas.com.
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Use the code football 24. Take care.
