"Proposition d'annexion", "tambouille électorale" : à gauche, la proposition LFI d'"une candidature commune" à la présidentielle 2027 ne passe pas

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Ahead of the 2027 French presidential election, La France insoumise (LFI) coordinator Manuel Bompard proposed a joint candidacy with the Green party (EELV) and the Communist party (PCF) on April 2nd, 2026. The proposal included an agreement on a common program and candidate selection for senatorial and legislative elections. However, both Fabien Roussel, the PCF's national secretary, and Marine Tondelier, head of the Green party, rejected the offer. Roussel cited a "rupture" with LFI and considered Jean-Luc Mélenchon the "worst second-round candidate," while Tondelier is already preparing for a primary outside of LFI. Both parties fear being overshadowed by a potential Mélenchon candidacy and view the proposal as an "annexation" rather than an alliance.
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Key Claims (5)
AI-ExtractedThe Green party leadership views LFI's proposal as an 'annexation, not an alliance'.
Marine Tondelier (Verts) is already running in a primary outside of France Insoumise.
Fabien Roussel (PCF) rejected LFI's offer, citing a 'rupture' with Jean-Luc Mélenchon's party.
Manuel Bompard (LFI) called for a common left-wing candidacy for the 2027 presidential election.
PCF and Verts fear being overshadowed by Jean-Luc Mélenchon's potential presidential candidacy.
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