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Opposition parties sceptical over Macron's referenda 'innovation'

Cross-party talks on a proposition by French President Emmanuel Macron to introduce a series of referenda on major issues, in an attempt to unblock his party's predicament in parliament where it is without an absolute majority, ended in the early hours of Thursday after 12 hours of discussions and with opposition party leaders voicing their scepticism over the project.

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French political leaders from both the Left and Right were left unconvinced Thursday by marathon, 12-hour talks aimed at finding common ground with President Emmanuel Macron, reports FRANCE 24.

People close to the centrist [president], who has floated the idea of holding referendums as he struggles to build new momentum in a hung parliament, said he would "send a letter summarising the talks and the suggested work areas, that anyone can amend" before a new round of discussion.

But conservative leader Eric Ciotti, Macron's most obvious potential ally, told broadcaster France 2 hours after the talks broke up at 3:00 am (0100 GMT) that he was "unconvinced for now".

"I don't know where any of this will go," he added, while calling the all-party talks "timely".

There were harsher words from Manuel Bompard, coordinator of hard-left France Unbowed, who told France Info it had been "grotesque" to "spend 12 hours to get no serious answers, no measures, no concrete announcement, when we know what difficulties the country faces today".

With referendums in the air, the left is hoping for a public vote to reverse this year's unpopular pension reform while the conservatives and far-right both want one on immigration.

But people in Macron's camp -- aware referendums have often backfired on French presidents in the past -- have floated an alternative, a series of multiple-choice questions dubbed a "preferendum".

Read more of this AFP report published by FRANCE.