The Republican alliance crisis (French: Crise de 2024 au parti Les Républicains) was triggered by the formation of the Union of the Far-Right, an alliance between Éric Ciotti, the president of The Republicans (LR), and the National Rally (RN) ahead of the 2024 French legislative election. LR MPs and senators questioned claims the alliance was revolutionary. The senior members unanimously removed its president for unsanctioned negotiations and disrespect for party statutes, which was unprecedented in France. This broke the traditional cordon sanitaire against the far-right, a major party allying with the National Rally.[1]
Two opposing groups of Republican candidates were nominated. Its national investiture commission (CNI) nominated 400, including all outgoing MPs except Ciotti and Christelle d'Intorni. Ciotti nominated around 60, labeled the Union of the Far-Right, half not LR members, and petitioned RN candidates in other constituencies. Before parliament was dissolved, media businessman Vincent Bolloré prepared and promoted the alliance.[2]
Éric Ciotti, an unsuccessful candidate in the The Republicans' primary before the 2022 presidential election, was accused of not supporting primary winner Valérie Pécresse, preferring billionaire businessman Vincent Bolloré and his protégé Éric Zemmour, a candidate in the presidential election for Reconquête.[3]
On 26 July 2022, Ciotti announced his candidacy for the Republican leadership election in December 2022.[4] He obtained 42.73% of the vote, ahead of Bruno Retailleau and Aurélien Pradié,[5] and gained the support of 140 elected officials including Laurent Wauquiez and Nadine Morano.[6]
See also: 2023 French pension reform strikes. After the presentation of the pension reform law, Pradié was demoted.[7] In its 18 February 2023 discussion, Ciotti dismissed him, judging his positions against party values,[8] [9] worrying that his party alienated popular voter blocs. Seven LR managers wrote to Ciotti criticizing this dismissal and asking for a meeting before any further meetings at headquarters.
Because the bill was via of the constitution, a third of Republican MPs disobeyed Ciotti and Retailleau by voting for a bipartisan no confidence motion on 20 March.[10]
In the 2024 European Parliament election in France, the decline of the LR vote was reflected by François-Xavier Bellamy obtaining 7.2%, after Valérie Pécresse only obtained 4.78% in the 2022 presidential election. The repeated underperformance questioned the party's future.[11]
On 11 June 2024, two days after the dissolution of the National Assembly and within a week of the candidate deadline, Ciotti announced that the Republicans would ally with the National Rally (RN).[12] This was prepared with Bolloré without the party's political office.[13]
Presidential advisor Bruno Roger-Petit informed CNews anchor Pascal Praud three hours before the dissolution[14] and two hours before prime minister Gabriel Attal.[15]
This group would stand against the New Popular Front and the Ensemble coalition.[16] The proposals were welcomed by Marine Le Pen[17] and Jordan Bardella[18] from the National Rally, and also Guilhem Carayon, president of the young republican organisation .[19] President Emmanuel Macron criticized the project.[20]
Citing "threats received and disorder" after his dismissal, Ciotti ejected employees and locked himself in the headquarters. He continuously accessed the Republicans' Facebook profile.[21] He filmed himself alone in his office to broadcast his disagreement. However, the official party X (formerly Twitter) account's password had changed.
Senate president Gérard Larcher and the Republicans group president Olivier Marleix demanded Ciotti's resignation.[22] [23] CNews journalist Gauthier Le Bret asserted Larcher negotiated with the presidential majority, which he immediately denied. On CNews, Pascal Praud castigated the anti-Ciotti Republican officials. Reconquête also rallied to Bardella. Thus, Sarah Knafo, Sébastien Chenu and Ciotti appeared on Touche pas à mon poste ! by Cyril Hanouna to phone Bardella before 2 million viewers. A "save soldier Ciotti" campaign was publicized by the Bollorés similarly to Alfred Hugenberg, the giant of steel and media in Germany in the 1930s, according to economist Esther Duflo.[24]
The political bureau met elsewhere, after finding the headquarters locked and unanimously agreed Ciotti was a traitor to expel. Annie Genevard oversaw the interim presidency with European election lead candidate François-Xavier Bellamy and treasurer Daniel Fasquelle. Ciotti was demoted on 12 June and removed on 14 June.[25]
The president and the political office's conflict involved legal aspects. Party statutes specify the office as 50 members of Parliament, 20 non-parliamentary elected officials, 10 representatives of the federations, the party president, the deputy vice-president, the former presidents, the general secretary and the treasurer. It also included the president, deputy vice-president, general secretary and treasurer of the, as well as the former prime ministers, presidents of the Republic and president of parliamentary bodies members.[26]
The two expulsions were summarily litigated and suspended because the lower court must be seized within eight days by the most diligent party or the suspension will lapse.[27]
Bardella and Ciotti announced support for some unnamed MPs two days after the 2024 European Parliament election. Two days later, the press revealed no outgoing MPs except Ciotti and d'Intorni were supported.[28] Ciotti then cited MEP-elects Christophe Gomart and Céline Imart, but Imart disassociated herself.
Ciotti nominated 63 for the legislative elections, only half from The Republicans. The press partially named them on 17 June, the day after the registration deadline.[29] Among them were former Zemmour supporters, Marion Maréchal's friends, CNews columnists, a Trump spokesperson, a former Macronist MP, and parachute candidates from Paris. Only 17.5% are women, fineable against Gender quotas.[30]
On 19 June, the alliance withdrew two for bigotry.[31] Jean-Pierre Templier, deputy of Anthony Zeller in Loiret, was criticized by MP Richard Ramos (Modem) for antisemitism. The other was Louis-Joseph Pecher in Meurthe-et-Moselle. A third, National Rally candidate Joseph Martin in Morbihan, who tweeted "Gas brought justice to the victims of the Holocaust",[32] was suspended until saying he meant Holocaust denier Robert Faurisson.[33]
The CNI nominated 400, down from 457 in 2022. Mayor Philippe Dallier blamed deadlines, Éric Ciotti and legal questions. Only the CNI could reveal the list, hours before the registration deadline late 16 June. In Haute-Garonne, only two of seven people proposed went; others feared Ciotti's litigation. Among the 400 are 59 of 61 outgoing deputies and two against Ciotti and d'Intorni's alliance with the National Rally. It was too late to ally with the Union of Democrats and Independents in swing constituencies, unlike in 2022 in the Union of the Right and Centre.[34]
Gaullists consider the alliance traitorous but Ciotti considers it revolutionary. A political office unprecedentedly and dramatically excluded its own president.[35] The isolation of the RN and its Republicans allies may threaten French politics.[36] Ciotti claimed interference and bias in the Ministry of the Interior classifying his 63 as the "Union of the Far-Right".[37]