Éric Ciotti, the leader of France’s mainstream rightwing party, Les Républicains, has vowed he will stay in his job despite key members of his party voting unanimously to oust him over his proposed alliance with the far right.
Ciotti was holed up in his office on Wednesday after locking members out of his party’s Paris headquarters amid a mass revolt over his call for an alliance with Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally.
The extraordinary scenes outside the locked offices echoed the disarray that has gripped French politics since Emmanuel Macron called a snap election on Sunday to try to counter the rise of the far right.
Senior figures from Les Républicains (LR) arrived at the party headquarters on Wednesday, where they had planned to hold a meeting to oust Ciotti, saying his announcement on Tuesday of an alliance with Le Pen was a betrayal of their values. However, they found the building locked.
Ciotti posted on X that he had closed the doors “after receiving threats” and that he had to “guarantee staff safety”.
“What’s more, there has never been any meeting planned at the HQ this afternoon,” he wrote.
Aurélien Pradié, a senior member of the party, told TV crews outside the closed door: “We live in a democracy. People that shut themselves in their office and say ‘I’m never coming out’ – that’s not possible.”
Pradié said Ciotti “was no longer president [of the party] from the second he made this insane decision”, referring to the proposed alliance with the National Rally (RN).
“We’ll remove him from the office of the heirs of General de Gaulle if we have to,” Pradié said, adding: “We are not in the normal world here, it’s just not possible. There are French people working so hard, who every day hope to believe in democracy and they see this spectacle of crazy people. Enough is enough.”
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J’entends beaucoup d’élucubrations sur la fermeture du siège LR.
J’ai pris cette décision à la suite des menaces reçues et des désordres d’hier.
Je dois garantir la sécurité du personnel.
De surcroît, aucune réunion n’a jamais été prévue au siège cet après-midi. https://t.co/YdkTikAseC
— Eric Ciotti (@ECiotti) June 12, 2024
Asked how party figures would get Ciotti out, he said they would ask Jordan Bardella, the president of Le Pen’s RN, to ask Ciotti to leave his office. Another LR MP joked that they would call the fire brigade.
Members of the party hastily left to hold a meeting elsewhere to try to sack Ciotti from his role, which Ciotti said was not possible according to party statutes. They were expected to hold a press conference outside the locked building later on Wednesday afternoon.
“The idea is to unanimously vote for his exclusion,” Vincent Jeanbrun, a spokesperson for LR and a mayor, told journalists. “Éric Ciotti has the methods of a dictator. He has shut himself in his office. He spent his career quoting General de Gaulle but what he did yesterday was the Munich accords,” referring to an appeasement deal reached in 1938 between Nazi Germany, the UK, France and Italy.
Macron called a snap parliamentary election on Sunday night after Le Pen’s far-right party won more than 31% of the vote in the European elections, more than twice the share of the score won by Macron’s centrist grouping. The election will take place on 30 June and 7 July.