Most French oppose Macron gaining a parliamentary majority.
A poll conducted after the announcement of the preliminary results of the French presidential election showed that more than 60% of French people do not want his party to win a majority in the June parliamentary elections.
A new poll shows that more than 60 percent of French voters do not want French President Emmanuel Macron to win a majority in the National Assembly in the upcoming parliamentary elections in June.
According to the Russian news agency Sputnik, 63% of those polled said they did not want Macron to have a majority in parliament, while 35% said they wanted him to win a majority. The poll was conducted by the Opinionway Institute with 1,300 French voters after the preliminary results of the second round of the presidential election were announced.
In response to a question about who they support as prime minister, French voters voted 46 percent in favor of Marine Le Pen, 44 percent in favor of Jean-Luc Melanesia, and eight percent in favor of Valerie Packers. The presidency supported the Republican Party.
Regarding the results of the French presidential election yesterday (Sunday), 49% of respondents said they were satisfied with the results of the second round of elections. The same number of participants said they were not satisfied with the result.
The second round of the French presidential election was held on Sunday, April 24. The French Interior Ministry said after a 100 per cent vote count that incumbent President Emmanuel Macron won with 58.55 per cent of the vote, with far-right candidate Marine Le Pen winning 41.45 per cent. In the first round of the French election on April 10, Macron won 27.84 percent of the vote and Le Pen 23.15 percent.