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Macron rejects French Left’s pick for prime minister

The leftwing parties stopped quarreling and tapped a little-known civil servant for the job. But President Emmanuel Macron said he would not appoint anyone until after the Paris Summer Olympics which start this Friday.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

A coalition of France’s left-wing parties on Tuesday tapped a little-known civil servant to be prime minister, unexpectedly ending weeks of bickering after snap parliamentary elections plunged the country into political gridlock, reports The New York Times.

But President Emmanuel Macron immediately rejected the coalition’s pick, Lucie Castets. In his first interview since the elections, Mr. Macron said that he would not appoint a new government until mid-August at the earliest, and that his current cabinet would remain in a caretaker capacity for the duration of the Paris Summer Olympics, which start this week.

The French president alone has the power to appoint the prime minister and the cabinet. His choice must, theoretically, reflect the political balance in Parliament, but there is no constitutionally mandated deadline for him to choose.

The left-wing coalition, known as the New Popular Front, said in a statement that it had agreed on Ms. Castets, 37, who has worked at France’s treasury and its anti-money-laundering unit and currently handles financial matters at Paris City Hall.

Read more of this report from The New York Times.