Wildly unpopular Macron threatens "civil war" in France if he loses upcoming snap legislative election
French President Emmanuel Macron
has threatened "civil war" on his nation if his globalist Renaissance Party loses the upcoming snap legislative elections to the conservative populist National Rally and the far-left New Popular Front (NFP) coalition.
In a message lashing out at the popularity of La France Insoumise, the leading party of the NFP, Macron claimed that the so-called "far-right" solution it is proposing to fix mass migration and the breakdown of the social order in France will only lead to "division and civil war" because they are based on "categorizing people in terms of their religion or origins."
Macron further claimed that there is "a civil war behind" the political agenda of the NFP because they "categoriz[e] people in terms of their religious outlook or the community they belong to."
Trying to fix France's out-of-control mass migration problem in order to restore order and civility is simply "a means of justifying isolating [migrants] from the broader national community," Macron continued. "And, in this case, you would have a civil war with those who do not share those same values."
(Related: Did you hear? Macron
dissolved the entire French parliament after Marine Le Pen and National Rally thrashed him in the recent European elections.)
Macron likely to see his prime minister ousted after snap election
Just like they did in the recent European elections, Marine Le Pen's National Rally party is expected to place first in the fast-approaching snap elections. National Rally is said to have more than double that of Renaissance, which is why Macron is having a meltdown.
Macron apparently called the special snap election because he mistakenly thought National Rally would be too low on resources and too disorganized at that point to achieve a legislative majority, especially on such short notice. Macron, hilariously, was dead wrong.
The French right, admittedly, is not in very good shape. It tried unsuccessfully to rally together into a broad right-wing coalition against Macron, only to end up widening the splinter between National Rally and the more mainstream conservative party The Republicans.
On the left, most parties have joined with La France Insoumise to form the NFP. The left and right together are popular enough to ensure that Renaissance and Macron's liberal coalition Ensemble will likely place third in the snap elections.
National Rally will probably not secure an outright majority, but a third-place Ensemble means that Macron's first choice of prime minister will likely get ousted, making it difficult for Macron to continue governing.
"In France, they take it all too seriously," one of our regular readers wrote about the political climate in France. "I might be in a pub or club without a care in the world and the men want to talk politics."
"I had hoped that talking cuisine would gain me more friends than talking
la politique. French vin? Keep France as full as we can of its own culture and merit. Viva la France!"
Another wrote that Macron is clearly trying to maintain a dictatorial position over the French who no longer want him to hold that title.
Another of our regulars emphasized the fact that tyranny exists both on the left and the right, which is why the best route is dead center to keep the polar opposite ends of the political spectrum in a stalemate where they can cause the least amount of harm.
"In the West, everybody is tired of left-wing tyranny. In the east, people rejoice over right-wing tyranny as they have given up on their lives. No matter which wing or center, tyranny can exist in all shapes and sizes as long as the people allow it."
When tyrants don't get what they want, they try to ruin everything in an angry rage. Learn more at
Tyranny.news.
Sources for this article include:
TheNationalPulse.com
NaturalNews.com