Member of Parliament of the French Socialist Party (PS) Olivier Faure has had enough of Mélenchon. EPA-EFE/GUILLAUME HORCAJUELO

Democracy From the capitals News

Crisis in French left-wing alliance over refusal to label Hamas ‘terrorists’

3 minutes read

The Socialist Party (PS) in France has voted for a “moratorium” on its participation in the New People’s Ecological and Social Union (Nupes), the French left-wing parliamentary alliance.

French Socialists are angry at alliance leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon (La France Insoumise) and his inner circle, who refuse to label Hamas “terrorists”, despite the large-scale attack on Israeli citizens on October 7.

The co-operation in the European Parliament between the French Leftists will also end.

The national council of the PS met for six hours, where 51.15 per cent of its members decided on a “moratorium on its participation” in Nupes.

For many, the moratorium is widely seen as the Socialists simply walking away from Nupes with Mélenchon accusing them of “breaking” their alliance.

PS leader Olivier Faure said: “There is a problem with the Mélenchon method because it effectively leads the Left into a form of stagnation.”

He also criticised “the strategy of making everything a conflict” and “of permanently antagonising”.

The secretary-general of the PS, Pierre Jouvet, told AFP: “If for some you are the authors of the permanent mess on the Left, it is not justifiable to blame others.” He said, for him it was “de facto the end of a stage. We want more unity and better unity.”

In a reply on X, Melenchon accused Faure of breaking up Nupes and added: “I can only repeat here the slogans that I adopted with which Faure and the PS disagree: ceasefire, release of hostages, humanitarian corridor, end of the blockade of Gaza, condemnation of all war crimes and trial of criminals by the ICC, UN political solution with two viable states with secure borders, non-aligned France.”

Another main La France Insoumise player, Manuel Bompard, appeared to be on the same page, saying: “At a time when our country is facing very serious problems, Olivier Faure is breaking with the Nupes under the false pretext of the smear campaigns of Macron and the far Right.”

Even before the terrorist attack against Israel, Faure wanted more freedom for his party and Mélenchon was already seen as an obstacle to success. The PS chief had already ruled out a united left-wing list ahead of next year’s European Parliament elections.

Boris Vallaud, leader of the Socialist faction in the French Parliament, pointed to the apparent inability of Mélenchon and his close allies to qualify Hamas as a terror group.

In addition, Vallaud accused the Nupes leadership of failing to present an alternative for the Left in the context of an ever-growing far-Right.

“We are at this impasse. The the June 2022 parliamentary elections, this alliance of the Left and ecology gave rise to great hopes and today our divisions are causing despair.”

The Greens also had criticism for the hard-Left La France Insoumise. On October 17, French Parliamentarian Danièle Obono called Hamas a “resistance movement”. She said: “It’s an Islamist political group with an armed wing that is resisting Israel.”

Marine Tondelier, leader of The Greens party, responded on X, saying: “All right, that’s enough. What happened on Saturday October 7 in Israel had nothing to do with ‘resistance’.

“It didn’t help the people of Gaza, quite the contrary – every image we’ve received in the last few days shows that. Nor has this kind of outrageous language.”

Former ecologist presidential candidate Yannick Jadot MEP said: “We must suspend our relationship with the leadership of La France Insoumise until there is strong clarity on the basis of values.”

The political ructions have been simmering for a while. In August, a discussion on co-operation on the Left between La France Insoumise and The Greens quickly turned toxic.

Key Topics

More like this

Paris police have banned a concert organised by the hard-left party La France Insoumise (LFI) as part of France's annual Fête de la Musique (music day) celebrations, citing concerns that the event could attract anti-police activists and fuel public disorder. Getty
News

Paris police ban hard-left music concert over fears of anti-police agitation

By Anne-Laure Dufeal

New leaders take their seats as the European Council meets in Brussels
Premium
News

New leaders take their seats as the European Council meets in Brussels

By Antonio O'Mullony

Spanish judge places Zapatero's daughters and secretary under investigation
News

Spanish judge places Zapatero’s daughters and secretary under investigation

By Brussels Signal

EP approves EU-US tariff deal
News

European Parliament approves EU-US tariff deal branded ‘unbalanced and unfair’

By Brussels Signal