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Renaissance (French political party)

Renaissance (RE), or sometimes called simply En Marche ! (French: [ɑ̃ maʁʃ]) as its original name,[3] is a liberal and centrist political party in France.[4][5] The party was previously known as La République En Marche !,[c] translated as "The Republic on the Move" or "Republic Forward").[6][7][8]

Renaissance
AbbreviationRE
General SecretaryStéphane Séjourné
President in the National AssemblyAurore Bergé
President in the SenateFrançois Patriat
Honorary PresidentEmmanuel Macron
FounderEmmanuel Macron
Founded6 April 2016; 7 years ago (2016-04-06)
17 September 2022; 8 months ago (2022-09-17) (as Renaissance)
Merger of
Headquarters68, rue du Rocher 75008 Paris
Youth wingLes Jeunes avec Macron
Membership (2021)422,329 claimed adherents[1]
IdeologyLiberalism
Political positionCentre
National affiliationEnsemble
European Parliament groupRenew Europe[2]
Colours
  •   Navy[a]
  •   Yellow[b]
National Assembly
153 / 577
Senate
23 / 348
European Parliament
7 / 79
Presidency of departmental councils
2 / 95
Presidency of regional councils
1 / 17
Website
parti-renaissance.fr

The party was founded on 6 April 2016 by Emmanuel Macron, a former Minister of the Economy, Industry and Digital Affairs, who was later elected president in the 2017 French presidential election with 66.1% of the second-round vote. Presented as a pro-European party,[9][10][11] Macron considers LREM to be a progressive movement, uniting both the left and the right.[10] Following that year's presidential election, the party ran candidates in the 2017 French legislative election,[12] including dissidents from the Socialist Party (PS) and the Republicans (LR) as well as minor parties. It won an absolute majority in the National Assembly, securing 308 seats.

LREM accepts globalisation and wants to "modernise and moralise" French politics,[13] combining social and economic liberalism.[14][15] The movement generally accepts members from other parties at a higher rate than other political parties in France,[9][16][17] and does not impose any fees on members who want to join.[18] The party has been a member of Renew Europe, the European parliamentary group, since June 2019.[2]

History

Foundation

La Gauche Libre, the think tank for the movement, was declared as an organization on 1 March 2015.[19] Afterwards, lesjeunesavecmacron.fr was registered as a domain on 23 June 2015.[20] Eventually, two Facebook pages[21][non-primary source needed][22][non-primary source needed] were created and an extra domain registered.[23] Another organization was eventually created by Macron, declared as L'Association pour le renouvellement de la vie politique[24] and registered as a micro-party in January 2016.[25] This was following en-marche.fr being claimed as a domain.[26] L'Association pour le renouvellement de la vie politique was then registered as EMA EN MARCHE in March 2016.[13]

En Marche! was founded on 6 April 2016 in Amiens by Emmanuel Macron, then aged 38,[16] with the help of political advisor Ismaël Emelien.[27] The initials of the name of the party are the same as the initials of Macron's name.[28][18]

The announcement of En Marche! was the first indication by Macron that he was planning to run for President,[29] with Macron using En Marche! to fundraise for the potential presidential run.[30] The launch of the party was widely covered throughout the media[31] and media coverage continued to peak as tensions rose among Macron and other government ministers as his loyalty was questioned.[32] In the weeks following the creation of En Marche!, Macron soared in the opinion polls, coming to be seen as the main competitor on the left.[33][34]

The creation of En Marche! was welcomed by several political figures including Najat Vallaud-Belkacem,[35] Jean-Pierre Raffarin[36] and Pierre Gattaz,[37] although it was also criticised by Jean-Luc Mélenchon[38] and Christian Estrosi.

In an attempt to create the party's first campaign platform, Macron and head of operations Ludovic Chaker[39] recruited 4,000 volunteers[40] to conduct door-to-door surveys of 100,000 people, using the information gained to create a programme closer to the French electorate.[41]

Later that year,[42] Chaker structured the movement and became the first general secretary of Emmanuel Macron's party En Marche! and its first official employee.[42] He was then appointed as deputy general secretary and coordinator of Macron's campaign operations for the 2017 French presidential election.[43]

2017 legislative election

 
Logo of the Presidential Majority coalition of LaREM, MoDem and other liberal and centrist parties.

La République En Marche! ran candidates in most constituencies. At least half its candidates came from civil society,[44] the other half having previously held political office and half were women. Candidates could not be selected for more than one constituency.[45] In addition to those parameters, Macron specified in his initial press conference on 19 January that he would require that candidates demonstrate probity (disqualifying any prospective candidates with a criminal record), political plurality (representing the threads of the movement) and efficacy. Those wishing to seek the endorsement of LREM had to sign up online[46] and the movement received nearly 15,000 applications.

When dealing with nominations sought by those in the political world, the party considered the popularity, establishment and media skills of applicants, with the most difficult cases adjudicated by Macron himself. To present themselves under the label of La République En Marche!, outgoing deputies had to leave the Socialist Party (PS) or the Republicans (LR).[47] Macron previously said the legislative candidates would have to leave the PS before they could join LREM, though on 5 May 2017 Macron waived this requirement.[45][48] However, then-spokesperson of LREM Christophe Castaner later said they could stay in the PS as long as they supported Macron.[48] Moreover, spokesperson Jean-Paul Delevoye said the members of civil society could be mayors or members of regional councils and departmental councils.[48]

After François Bayrou endorsed Macron in February, the Democratic Movement (MoDem), which he leads, reserved 90 constituencies for MoDem candidates (running under the label of La République En Marche!), of which 50 were considered[by whom?] winnable.[49]

On 15 May 2017, the secretary general of the presidency announced the appointment of Édouard Philippe, a member of LR, as Prime Minister.[50]

On 18 June 2017, La République En Marche! won an absolute majority in the National Assembly, securing 308 seats (or 53% of the seats) while collecting only 28.21% of the vote on the first round, and 43.06% on the second round. Additionally, MoDem secured 42 seats. LREM became France's party of power, in support of the President.

2017 Senate election and first party congress

In the 2017 Senate election, La République En Marche! lost seats, ending up with 21, seven fewer than before.[51] While hoping to double its representatives in the senate,[52] party officials have noted that due to the elections electoral system of indirect universal suffrage, where deputies, senators and regional councilors elect senators, the party had a disadvantage due to being new.[53]

In the same month, the first party congress was announced to be held in Lyon. The first gathering of party adherents and representatives, party spokesman, Christophe Castaner announced his candidacy on 25 October 2017 with the endorsement of President Macron, allowing him to run unopposed.[54] The congress took place on the 19 November 2017 and Castaner was elected the Executive Officer and leader[55] of the party by a council of 800 people, with a quarter being adherents of the party.[56][57] Castaner's term will last three years.[58] The congress generated media attention for criticism surrounding it, including a walk-out done by attendees of the congress where hundred attendants unanimously resigned from the party due to accusations of a lack of internal democracy and corruption.[59]

The first by-election of 15th National Assembly of France in Val-d'Oise's 1st constituency's, which was a La République En Marche! seat, was up for contention after it was ruled that deputy Isabelle Muller-Quoy's replacement Michel Alexeef was ineligible under electoral code.[60] Muller-Quoy won the first round by 18 percentage points in 2017 and won the first round by only 5 percentage points in the by-election, going onto lose the seat to the LR candidate Antoine Savignat.[61] The race was the first loss the party had endured in the National Assembly.[62] Several subsequent by-elections following showed a 10% overall swing against La République En Marche! since the June 2017 legislative elections.

2019 European Parliament election

 
Logo of the Renaissance list of LaREM, MoDem and other liberal parties.

LREM was expected to sign a cooperation agreement with the ALDE group for the 2019 European Parliament election.[63] However, owing to the Gilets Jaunes protests and the rise of national populism within France, Macron opted to run a campaign focusing more on electing representatives of his party to the European Parliament, than campaigning for ALDE. Macron styled his campaign as "Renaissance", calling for a renaissance across Europe.[64] Following the election, the ALDE parliamentary group reformed into Renew Europe, incorporating Macron's Renaissance, along with others.

2020 municipal elections

For the 2020 municipal elections, LREM set itself the objective of obtaining 10,000 municipal councilors (out of a total of 500,000 elected). The party invested 592 heads of the list in towns with more than 9,000 inhabitants, including 289 belonging to members.

Between the two rounds, the party formed 76 alliances with the right and 33 with the left in towns with more than 9,000 inhabitants; alliances are notably formed with right-wing lists against Europe Ecology – The Greens or union lists on the left, in large cities such as Bordeaux, Strasbourg and Tours. LREM leaders justify this imbalance by the fact that the outgoing right-wing mayors are more numerous given the success of the right in the 2014 elections; Marie Guévenoux, co-president of the national investiture commission of LREM, affirms to have “even rather want to forge alliances on the left, but that was not possible” because the majority on the left didn't want.

Confident after the electoral results of the legislative and European elections, the party did not conquer any large city at the end of the poll and only had 146 mayors supported or invested in municipalities with more than 9,000 inhabitants and 4 in municipalities with more than 30,000 inhabitants.

In many cities, the ruling party was relegated to third or even fourth place. As expected, in Paris as in Lyon, important place for the movement, the LREM candidates suffered serious setbacks. The defeat is all the stronger where the candidates had allied themselves with right-wing mayors, as in Bordeaux. The French ecologists won the majority of the metropolitan cities that the party wanted to win.[65] "It is no longer a green wave, it is a tsunami," said an employee of the party after the election. "The danger for 2022 is the rise of the Europe Ecology – The Greens," said a local official.[66]

A combination of circumstances symbolic of the difficulties encountered by La République en Marche during this campaign, marked in particular by a certain embarrassment to display the LREM logo on posters in the midst of the yellow vests movement, social conflict on pensions, climate strikes, as well as the management of the COVID-19 crisis did not calm the rejection of the party.[67]

2022 legislative election

 
Logo of La République En Marche ! until the rebranding in 2022

In May 2022, LREM announced that it would change the name of its parliamentary group to Renaissance.[68][69] In September, the party also switched its name to Renaissance.[70]

Ideology

Although Macron was a member of the PS from 2006 to 2009 and an independent politician from 2009 to 2016,[71][72] La République En Marche! seeks to transcend traditional political boundaries to be a transpartisan organisation.[16]

Various sources have described the party as being centrist,[73] centre-right,[74] or big tent.[75] Macron has described it as being a progressive party of both the left and the right.[76] Observers and political commentators have described the party as being socially liberal,[77][78] as well as economically liberal in ideology.[79] The party has also been described as using anti-establishment, populist strategies and rhetoric, with discourse comparable to the Third Way as adopted by the Labour Party in the UK during its New Labour phase.[80] The party has been described as supporting some policies close to centre-right classical liberalism.[81][82][83]

According to an Ipsos survey conducted in March 2018, some public perception of the party has moved to the right since March 2017,[84][85][86] with 45% of respondents classifying the party as being centre-right (25%) to right-wing (20%). 21% of respondents place it in the centre, compared to 33% in March 2017.[87][88][89]

Associate parties

Organisation

Membership

 
Cédric Villani at a public meeting of La République En Marche in Tokyo

La République En Marche! considers every person who submits identification information (date of birth, email, full address and telephone number) and adheres to the party's charter to be an adherent.[90] Unlike other political parties, it does not require adherents to make a monetary donation.[91] Macron has indicated that it is possible to adhere to La République En Marche! while remaining a member of another republican party.[16][92]

On 10 April 2016, a few days after the movement's launch, Macron claimed 13,000 adherents.[93] Le Canard enchaîné accused him of inflating the figure and claimed that 13,000 was in reality the number of clicks that Macron had received on his website.[94] Ismaël Emelien, Macron's advisor, clarified that "each adherent signs a charter of values and has a voice in the movement's general assembly" and that "that has nothing to do with those who sign up for the newsletter, who are much greater in number".[95] Sylvain Fort, another of Macron's advisors, affirmed that the movement verifies the email addresses of adherents but conceded that "the system relies on the honesty of each adherent".[91]

In October 2016, Macron affirmed that En Marche! was "neck and neck with the Socialist Party" in terms of membership after only seven months of existence.[96] According to Mediapart, this included many independents and executives, but few functionaries, farmers and unemployed people. Many of its members had never been engaged in politics. However, the majority had only shown interest by leaving their information on the party website.[97]

La République En Marche! takes inspiration from the participatory model of Désirs d'avenir, Ségolène Royal's movement and intends to rely on its member files, according to deputy Pascal Terrasse and former leader of Désirs d'avenir.[98][99][100] According to Libération, the movement relies on a pyramidal enrolment system inspired by Barack Obama's campaigns of 2008 and 2012.[101]

By relying on a participatory political model, each La République En Marche! adherent has the opportunity to freely join or create a local committee. Each of these committees is led by one or more adherents who organize the committee by planning local events, meetings and debates centered around the ideas and values promoted by the movement. La République En Marche! counted more than 2,600 of these committees in December 2016.[102]

Finance

Christian Dargnat, former general director of BNP Paribas Asset Management, leads the La République En Marche! financial association.[103] Since its creation, the association has raised funds for the party. In 2016, Georges Fenech, a deputy of the Republicans, alerted the National Assembly that the association had continued fund raising even during Macron's trip to London. This led Prime Minister Manuel Valls to issue an official denial even though En Marche! had already done so.[104] Macron declared in May 2016 that 2,000 donors had already contributed financially to the party. In December 2016, he spoke of more than 10,000 donors from 1 euro to 7,500 euros.[105] By the end of December 2016, he had collected between 4 and 5 million euros in donations.[106] At the end of March, this figure exceeded 9 million euros from 35,000 donations, averaging 257 euros per donation. 600 donors made up half of the total amount donated, with donations upwards of 5,000 euros.[107]

In the book Dans l'enfer de Bercy: Enquête sur les secrets du ministère des Finances (JC Lattès, 2017) by journalists Frédéric Says and Marion L'Hour, Macron was accused of using 120,000 euros from the state budget from 1 January to 30 August 2016 in order to fund his presidential campaign.[108]

European representation

In the European Parliament, La République En Marche sits in the Renew Europe group with five MEPs.[109][110][111][112][113]

In the European Committee of the Regions, La République En Marche sits in the Renew Europe CoR group, with three full members and one alternate member for the 2020–2025 mandate.[114] Anne Rudisuhli is Coordinator in the SEDEC Commission and Magali Altounian is Deputy Coordinator in the ECON Commission.

Election results

Presidential elections

Presidency of the French Republic
Election year Candidate First round Second round Result
Votes % Rank Votes % Rank
2017 Emmanuel Macron 8,656,346 24.01   1st 20,743,128 66.10   1st Won
2022 9,783,058 27.85   1st 18,768,639 58.55   1st Won

Legislative elections

National Assembly
Election year Leader First round Second round Seats +/− Rank
(seats)
Government
Votes % Votes %
2017 Richard Ferrand 6,391,269 28.21 7,826,245 43.06
308 / 577
  308 1st Presidential majority
2022 Stanislas Guerini 5,857,364 25.71 8,003,240 38.57
133 / 577
 175 1st Presidential minority

European Parliament

European Parliament
Election year Leader Votes % Rank LREM combined list seats +/- LREM Party seats +/−
2019[d] Nathalie Loiseau 5,079,015 22.42 2nd
23 / 79
 23
11 / 79
 11

Symbols

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ as Renaissance
  2. ^ as La République En Marche !
  3. ^ In French, exclamation marks are preceded by a space. English-language media typically omits the space. The party's name was frequently abbreviated LREM, LaREM or REM;
  4. ^ Common list, with 23 seats in total

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    • O'Callaghan, Laura (25 November 2021). "Pregnant woman and children among 27 migrants to drown in Channel". MSN News. Retrieved 6 December 2021. Bruno Bonnell, an MP for President Macron's centre-right En Marche party, said joint UK-France police patrols on beaches in northern France could work.
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Further reading

  • Elgie, Robert. "The election of Emmanuel Macron and the new French party system: a return to the éternel marais?." Modern & Contemporary France 26.1 (2018): 15–29.
  • Gil, Cameron Michael. "Spatial analysis of La République En Marche and French Parties, 2002–2017." French Politics (2018): 1-27.
  • Gougou, Florent, and Simon Persico. "A new party system in the making? The 2017 French presidential election." French Politics 15.3 (2017): 303–321.

External links

  •   Media related to La République En Marche at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website (in French)

renaissance, french, political, party, renaissance, sometimes, called, simply, marche, french, maʁʃ, original, name, liberal, centrist, political, party, france, party, previously, known, république, marche, translated, republic, move, republic, forward, renai. Renaissance RE or sometimes called simply En Marche French ɑ maʁʃ as its original name 3 is a liberal and centrist political party in France 4 5 The party was previously known as La Republique En Marche c translated as The Republic on the Move or Republic Forward 6 7 8 RenaissanceAbbreviationREGeneral SecretaryStephane SejournePresident in the National AssemblyAurore BergePresident in the SenateFrancois PatriatHonorary PresidentEmmanuel MacronFounderEmmanuel MacronFounded6 April 2016 7 years ago 2016 04 06 17 September 2022 8 months ago 2022 09 17 as Renaissance Merger ofTerritories of Progress 2022 Agir 2022 Headquarters68 rue du Rocher 75008 ParisYouth wingLes Jeunes avec MacronMembership 2021 422 329 claimed adherents 1 IdeologyLiberalismPolitical positionCentreNational affiliationEnsembleEuropean Parliament groupRenew Europe 2 Colours Navy a Yellow b National Assembly153 577Senate23 348European Parliament7 79Presidency of departmental councils2 95Presidency of regional councils1 17Websiteparti renaissance wbr frPolitics of FrancePolitical partiesElectionsThe party was founded on 6 April 2016 by Emmanuel Macron a former Minister of the Economy Industry and Digital Affairs who was later elected president in the 2017 French presidential election with 66 1 of the second round vote Presented as a pro European party 9 10 11 Macron considers LREM to be a progressive movement uniting both the left and the right 10 Following that year s presidential election the party ran candidates in the 2017 French legislative election 12 including dissidents from the Socialist Party PS and the Republicans LR as well as minor parties It won an absolute majority in the National Assembly securing 308 seats LREM accepts globalisation and wants to modernise and moralise French politics 13 combining social and economic liberalism 14 15 The movement generally accepts members from other parties at a higher rate than other political parties in France 9 16 17 and does not impose any fees on members who want to join 18 The party has been a member of Renew Europe the European parliamentary group since June 2019 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 2017 legislative election 1 3 2017 Senate election and first party congress 1 4 2019 European Parliament election 1 5 2020 municipal elections 1 6 2022 legislative election 2 Ideology 3 Associate parties 4 Organisation 4 1 Membership 4 2 Finance 4 3 European representation 5 Election results 5 1 Presidential elections 5 2 Legislative elections 5 3 European Parliament 6 Symbols 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditFoundation Edit La Gauche Libre the think tank for the movement was declared as an organization on 1 March 2015 19 Afterwards lesjeunesavecmacron fr was registered as a domain on 23 June 2015 20 Eventually two Facebook pages 21 non primary source needed 22 non primary source needed were created and an extra domain registered 23 Another organization was eventually created by Macron declared as L Association pour le renouvellement de la vie politique 24 and registered as a micro party in January 2016 25 This was following en marche fr being claimed as a domain 26 L Association pour le renouvellement de la vie politique was then registered as EMA EN MARCHE in March 2016 13 En Marche was founded on 6 April 2016 in Amiens by Emmanuel Macron then aged 38 16 with the help of political advisor Ismael Emelien 27 The initials of the name of the party are the same as the initials of Macron s name 28 18 The announcement of En Marche was the first indication by Macron that he was planning to run for President 29 with Macron using En Marche to fundraise for the potential presidential run 30 The launch of the party was widely covered throughout the media 31 and media coverage continued to peak as tensions rose among Macron and other government ministers as his loyalty was questioned 32 In the weeks following the creation of En Marche Macron soared in the opinion polls coming to be seen as the main competitor on the left 33 34 The creation of En Marche was welcomed by several political figures including Najat Vallaud Belkacem 35 Jean Pierre Raffarin 36 and Pierre Gattaz 37 although it was also criticised by Jean Luc Melenchon 38 and Christian Estrosi In an attempt to create the party s first campaign platform Macron and head of operations Ludovic Chaker 39 recruited 4 000 volunteers 40 to conduct door to door surveys of 100 000 people using the information gained to create a programme closer to the French electorate 41 Later that year 42 Chaker structured the movement and became the first general secretary of Emmanuel Macron s party En Marche and its first official employee 42 He was then appointed as deputy general secretary and coordinator of Macron s campaign operations for the 2017 French presidential election 43 2017 legislative election Edit Main article 2017 French legislative election Emmanuel Macron Logo of the Presidential Majority coalition of LaREM MoDem and other liberal and centrist parties La Republique En Marche ran candidates in most constituencies At least half its candidates came from civil society 44 the other half having previously held political office and half were women Candidates could not be selected for more than one constituency 45 In addition to those parameters Macron specified in his initial press conference on 19 January that he would require that candidates demonstrate probity disqualifying any prospective candidates with a criminal record political plurality representing the threads of the movement and efficacy Those wishing to seek the endorsement of LREM had to sign up online 46 and the movement received nearly 15 000 applications When dealing with nominations sought by those in the political world the party considered the popularity establishment and media skills of applicants with the most difficult cases adjudicated by Macron himself To present themselves under the label of La Republique En Marche outgoing deputies had to leave the Socialist Party PS or the Republicans LR 47 Macron previously said the legislative candidates would have to leave the PS before they could join LREM though on 5 May 2017 Macron waived this requirement 45 48 However then spokesperson of LREM Christophe Castaner later said they could stay in the PS as long as they supported Macron 48 Moreover spokesperson Jean Paul Delevoye said the members of civil society could be mayors or members of regional councils and departmental councils 48 After Francois Bayrou endorsed Macron in February the Democratic Movement MoDem which he leads reserved 90 constituencies for MoDem candidates running under the label of La Republique En Marche of which 50 were considered by whom winnable 49 On 15 May 2017 the secretary general of the presidency announced the appointment of Edouard Philippe a member of LR as Prime Minister 50 On 18 June 2017 La Republique En Marche won an absolute majority in the National Assembly securing 308 seats or 53 of the seats while collecting only 28 21 of the vote on the first round and 43 06 on the second round Additionally MoDem secured 42 seats LREM became France s party of power in support of the President 2017 Senate election and first party congress Edit In the 2017 Senate election La Republique En Marche lost seats ending up with 21 seven fewer than before 51 While hoping to double its representatives in the senate 52 party officials have noted that due to the elections electoral system of indirect universal suffrage where deputies senators and regional councilors elect senators the party had a disadvantage due to being new 53 In the same month the first party congress was announced to be held in Lyon The first gathering of party adherents and representatives party spokesman Christophe Castaner announced his candidacy on 25 October 2017 with the endorsement of President Macron allowing him to run unopposed 54 The congress took place on the 19 November 2017 and Castaner was elected the Executive Officer and leader 55 of the party by a council of 800 people with a quarter being adherents of the party 56 57 Castaner s term will last three years 58 The congress generated media attention for criticism surrounding it including a walk out done by attendees of the congress where hundred attendants unanimously resigned from the party due to accusations of a lack of internal democracy and corruption 59 The first by election of 15th National Assembly of France in Val d Oise s 1st constituency s which was a La Republique En Marche seat was up for contention after it was ruled that deputy Isabelle Muller Quoy s replacement Michel Alexeef was ineligible under electoral code 60 Muller Quoy won the first round by 18 percentage points in 2017 and won the first round by only 5 percentage points in the by election going onto lose the seat to the LR candidate Antoine Savignat 61 The race was the first loss the party had endured in the National Assembly 62 Several subsequent by elections following showed a 10 overall swing against La Republique En Marche since the June 2017 legislative elections 2019 European Parliament election Edit Logo of the Renaissance list of LaREM MoDem and other liberal parties LREM was expected to sign a cooperation agreement with the ALDE group for the 2019 European Parliament election 63 However owing to the Gilets Jaunes protests and the rise of national populism within France Macron opted to run a campaign focusing more on electing representatives of his party to the European Parliament than campaigning for ALDE Macron styled his campaign as Renaissance calling for a renaissance across Europe 64 Following the election the ALDE parliamentary group reformed into Renew Europe incorporating Macron s Renaissance along with others 2020 municipal elections Edit For the 2020 municipal elections LREM set itself the objective of obtaining 10 000 municipal councilors out of a total of 500 000 elected The party invested 592 heads of the list in towns with more than 9 000 inhabitants including 289 belonging to members Between the two rounds the party formed 76 alliances with the right and 33 with the left in towns with more than 9 000 inhabitants alliances are notably formed with right wing lists against Europe Ecology The Greens or union lists on the left in large cities such as Bordeaux Strasbourg and Tours LREM leaders justify this imbalance by the fact that the outgoing right wing mayors are more numerous given the success of the right in the 2014 elections Marie Guevenoux co president of the national investiture commission of LREM affirms to have even rather want to forge alliances on the left but that was not possible because the majority on the left didn t want Confident after the electoral results of the legislative and European elections the party did not conquer any large city at the end of the poll and only had 146 mayors supported or invested in municipalities with more than 9 000 inhabitants and 4 in municipalities with more than 30 000 inhabitants In many cities the ruling party was relegated to third or even fourth place As expected in Paris as in Lyon important place for the movement the LREM candidates suffered serious setbacks The defeat is all the stronger where the candidates had allied themselves with right wing mayors as in Bordeaux The French ecologists won the majority of the metropolitan cities that the party wanted to win 65 It is no longer a green wave it is a tsunami said an employee of the party after the election The danger for 2022 is the rise of the Europe Ecology The Greens said a local official 66 A combination of circumstances symbolic of the difficulties encountered by La Republique en Marche during this campaign marked in particular by a certain embarrassment to display the LREM logo on posters in the midst of the yellow vests movement social conflict on pensions climate strikes as well as the management of the COVID 19 crisis did not calm the rejection of the party 67 2022 legislative election Edit Logo of La Republique En Marche until the rebranding in 2022 In May 2022 LREM announced that it would change the name of its parliamentary group to Renaissance 68 69 In September the party also switched its name to Renaissance 70 Ideology EditAlthough Macron was a member of the PS from 2006 to 2009 and an independent politician from 2009 to 2016 71 72 La Republique En Marche seeks to transcend traditional political boundaries to be a transpartisan organisation 16 Various sources have described the party as being centrist 73 centre right 74 or big tent 75 Macron has described it as being a progressive party of both the left and the right 76 Observers and political commentators have described the party as being socially liberal 77 78 as well as economically liberal in ideology 79 The party has also been described as using anti establishment populist strategies and rhetoric with discourse comparable to the Third Way as adopted by the Labour Party in the UK during its New Labour phase 80 The party has been described as supporting some policies close to centre right classical liberalism 81 82 83 According to an Ipsos survey conducted in March 2018 some public perception of the party has moved to the right since March 2017 84 85 86 with 45 of respondents classifying the party as being centre right 25 to right wing 20 21 of respondents place it in the centre compared to 33 in March 2017 87 88 89 Associate parties EditName Ideology Position Leader Current MP sCentrist Alliance Liberalism Pro Europeanism Centre Philippe Folliot 4 577Ecologist Party Green politics Green liberalism Centre left Francois de Rugy 2 577Guiana Rally Liberalism Autonomism Centre Rodolphe Alexandre 1 577United Guadeloupe Solidary and Responsible Centre Guy Losbar 1 577Organisation EditMembership Edit Cedric Villani at a public meeting of La Republique En Marche in Tokyo La Republique En Marche considers every person who submits identification information date of birth email full address and telephone number and adheres to the party s charter to be an adherent 90 Unlike other political parties it does not require adherents to make a monetary donation 91 Macron has indicated that it is possible to adhere to La Republique En Marche while remaining a member of another republican party 16 92 On 10 April 2016 a few days after the movement s launch Macron claimed 13 000 adherents 93 Le Canard enchaine accused him of inflating the figure and claimed that 13 000 was in reality the number of clicks that Macron had received on his website 94 Ismael Emelien Macron s advisor clarified that each adherent signs a charter of values and has a voice in the movement s general assembly and that that has nothing to do with those who sign up for the newsletter who are much greater in number 95 Sylvain Fort another of Macron s advisors affirmed that the movement verifies the email addresses of adherents but conceded that the system relies on the honesty of each adherent 91 In October 2016 Macron affirmed that En Marche was neck and neck with the Socialist Party in terms of membership after only seven months of existence 96 According to Mediapart this included many independents and executives but few functionaries farmers and unemployed people Many of its members had never been engaged in politics However the majority had only shown interest by leaving their information on the party website 97 La Republique En Marche takes inspiration from the participatory model of Desirs d avenir Segolene Royal s movement and intends to rely on its member files according to deputy Pascal Terrasse and former leader of Desirs d avenir 98 99 100 According to Liberation the movement relies on a pyramidal enrolment system inspired by Barack Obama s campaigns of 2008 and 2012 101 By relying on a participatory political model each La Republique En Marche adherent has the opportunity to freely join or create a local committee Each of these committees is led by one or more adherents who organize the committee by planning local events meetings and debates centered around the ideas and values promoted by the movement La Republique En Marche counted more than 2 600 of these committees in December 2016 102 Finance Edit Christian Dargnat former general director of BNP Paribas Asset Management leads the La Republique En Marche financial association 103 Since its creation the association has raised funds for the party In 2016 Georges Fenech a deputy of the Republicans alerted the National Assembly that the association had continued fund raising even during Macron s trip to London This led Prime Minister Manuel Valls to issue an official denial even though En Marche had already done so 104 Macron declared in May 2016 that 2 000 donors had already contributed financially to the party In December 2016 he spoke of more than 10 000 donors from 1 euro to 7 500 euros 105 By the end of December 2016 he had collected between 4 and 5 million euros in donations 106 At the end of March this figure exceeded 9 million euros from 35 000 donations averaging 257 euros per donation 600 donors made up half of the total amount donated with donations upwards of 5 000 euros 107 In the book Dans l enfer de Bercy Enquete sur les secrets du ministere des Finances JC Lattes 2017 by journalists Frederic Says and Marion L Hour Macron was accused of using 120 000 euros from the state budget from 1 January to 30 August 2016 in order to fund his presidential campaign 108 European representation Edit In the European Parliament La Republique En Marche sits in the Renew Europe group with five MEPs 109 110 111 112 113 In the European Committee of the Regions La Republique En Marche sits in the Renew Europe CoR group with three full members and one alternate member for the 2020 2025 mandate 114 Anne Rudisuhli is Coordinator in the SEDEC Commission and Magali Altounian is Deputy Coordinator in the ECON Commission Election results EditPresidential elections Edit Presidency of the French Republic Election year Candidate First round Second round ResultVotes Rank Votes Rank2017 Emmanuel Macron 8 656 346 24 01 1st 20 743 128 66 10 1st Won2022 9 783 058 27 85 1st 18 768 639 58 55 1st WonLegislative elections Edit National Assembly Election year Leader First round Second round Seats Rank seats GovernmentVotes Votes 2017 Richard Ferrand 6 391 269 28 21 7 826 245 43 06 308 577 308 1st Presidential majority2022 Stanislas Guerini 5 857 364 25 71 8 003 240 38 57 133 577 175 1st Presidential minorityEuropean Parliament Edit European Parliament Election year Leader Votes Rank LREM combined list seats LREM Party seats 2019 d Nathalie Loiseau 5 079 015 22 42 2nd 23 79 23 11 79 11Symbols Edit First logo submitted to the INPI on 8 April 2016 Second logo submitted to the INPI on 9 February 2017 Third logo submitted to the INPI on 7 May 2017 Alternative logo 2022See also EditLa Republique En Marche group Senate Liberalism and radicalism in France List of political parties in France Renaissance groupFootnotes Edit as Renaissance as La Republique En Marche In French exclamation marks are preceded by a space English language media typically omits the space The party s name was frequently abbreviated LREM LaREM or REM Common list with 23 seats in totalReferences Edit La carte En Marche En Marche Retrieved 9 March 2021 a b Despite bruised ego Macron starts real campaign for Brussels influence Reuters 27 May 2019 Chrisafis Angelique 17 February 2017 Emmanuel Macron the French outsider who would be president The Guardian Retrieved 17 November 2016 Nordsieck Wolfram 2017 France Parties and Elections in Europe Mark Kesselman Joel Krieger William A Joseph 2018 Introduction to Comparative Politics Political Challenges and Changing Agendas Cengage Learning p 3 ISBN 978 1 337 56044 3 Rubin Alissa J 7 May 2017 Macron Well Ahead of Le Pen Is Poised to Be President of France The New York Times Retrieved 7 May 2017 Williamson Lucy 7 May 2017 French election What next for Macron after win BBC News Retrieved 9 May 2017 Callus Andrew Jarry Emmanuel 16 November 2016 Macron Launches French Presidential Bid as Polls Show Tight Race Reuters Retrieved 17 November 2016 a b Emmanuel Macron a Berlin pour se donner une stature europeenne Le Monde 10 January 2017 Retrieved 2 June 2017 a b special Patrick Roger Charente Maritime Vendee envoye 20 August 2016 Macron precise son projet progressiste pour 2017 Le Monde Macron veut voir son projet progressiste defendu en 2017 in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 work Europe 1 Legislatives En marche fera connaitre d ici jeudi a midi ses 577 candidats Le Figaro 8 May 2017 Retrieved 8 May 2017 a b Site officiel d En Marche ǃ Une charte pour avancer ensemble PDF Emmanuel Macron and the building of a new liberal centrist movement 6 February 2017 Le projet d Emmanuel Macron est social liberal Le Monde 24 February 2017 a b c d Emmanuel Macron lance un mouvement politique nouveau baptise En marche Le Monde 6 April 2016 Retrieved 10 April 2016 En marche en campagne sur le marche La Depeche du Midi a b En marche le bebe du ministre fait ses premiers pas Liberation fr 20 April 2016 Retrieved 24 April 2017 Consulter les annonces du JO Association lt journal officiel gouv fr in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 Whois lesjeunesavecmacron fr whois com Retrieved 9 August 2017 Security Check Required facebook com Retrieved 9 August 2017 Security Check Required facebook com Retrieved 9 August 2017 Whois vision macron fr whois com Retrieved 9 August 2017 Consulter les annonces du JO Association lt journal officiel gouv fr in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 Consulter les annonces du JO Association lt journal officiel gouv fr in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 Whois en marche fr whois com Retrieved 9 August 2017 Pietralunga Cedric 19 December 2016 Ismael Emelien le bras droit d Emmanuel Macron Le Monde Retrieved 8 May 2017 Emmanuel Macron son mouvement En marche fait bien rire les internautes Planet 11 April 2016 Retrieved 24 April 2017 Wieder Thomas 7 April 2016 Le pari liberal d Emmanuel Macron Le Monde fr in French ISSN 1950 6244 Retrieved 9 August 2017 Mourgue Marion 18 May 2016 Les levees de fonds au profit d Emmanuel Macron se poursuivent Le Figaro in French ISSN 0182 5852 Retrieved 9 August 2017 La folle sequence mediatique d Emmanuel Macron Europe 1 in French Archived from the original on 6 August 2017 Retrieved 9 August 2017 Finalement le parti d Emmanuel Macron est et de droite et de gauche mais surtout progressiste Europe 1 in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 A quoi joue Emmanuel Macron Les Echos France 21 April 2016 Retrieved 9 August 2017 Macron l envol dans les sondages La Depeche du Midi in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 Macron lance son mouvement J adhere assez Vallaud Belkacem Europe 1 in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 La marche de Macron regale Raffarin et fait rire Melenchon Le Parisien 7 April 2016 Retrieved 9 August 2017 Macron et son mouvement En Marche c est rafraichissant estime Pierre Gattaz in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 Perou Olivier 7 April 2016 Macron le Medef seduit Melenchon rigole Philippot denonce Le Point in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 Les bebes Macron font leurs premiers pas avec En Marche La Lettre A N 1737 lalettrea fr in French 7 July 2016 Retrieved 9 August 2017 Comment Emmanuel Macron a fait son diagnostic L Obs in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 Emmanuel Macron lance sa Grande Marche vers un plan d action L Obs in French Retrieved 9 August 2017 a b Plowright Adam 14 September 2017 The French Exception Emmanuel Macron The Extraordinary Rise and Risk Icon Books Limited ISBN 9781785783128 Retrieved 26 July 2019 Caudel Manuel 25 April 2017 Macron fait le plein de soutiens Midi Libre in French Rapidite efficacite Gers Le Petit Journal 23 May 2017 a b Legislatives les candidats de La Republique en marche investis d ici a jeudi L Express 8 May 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2017 Nathalie Raulin 19 January 2017 Macron lance un appel a ses marcheurs pour les investitures aux legislatives Liberation Retrieved 9 May 2017 William Galibert 26 April 2017 Elections legislatives un comite d investiture deja a l oeuvre dans le camp d En Marche Europe 1 Retrieved 9 May 2017 a b c Emmanuel Macron deja face a ses incoherences Valeurs actuelles 8 May 2017 Retrieved 8 May 2017 Legislatives accord MoDem En marche Le Figaro 5 May 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2017 Day 1 for French President Macron visit to Germany and naming of prime minister Los Angeles Times 15 May 2017 ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved 15 May 2017 the announcement of Philippe s appointment delivered by the presidency s new secretary general took just eight seconds francais Senat Liste des senateurs par groupes politiques Senat www senat fr Retrieved 31 August 2018 Macron en marche arriere et les autres lecons de ces senatoriales Le Huffington Post in French 24 September 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Senatoriales la droite renforcee Macron et La Republique en marche tenus en echec lindependant fr in French Retrieved 31 August 2018 Christophe Castaner annonce sa candidature a la delegation generale de REM RTL fr in French Retrieved 31 August 2018 Macron s party picks new leader amid internal wrangling France 24 France 24 18 November 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2018 French government spokesman Castaner takes helm of Macron s party POLITICO 18 November 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Liste des membres du Conseil de La Republique En Marche La Republique En Marche La Republique En Marche in French 20 October 2017 Archived from the original on 5 November 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2018 magazine Le Point 18 November 2017 Castaner prend la tete de LREM pour la remettre en mouvement Le Point in French Retrieved 31 August 2018 Tribune des 100 democrates de La Republique en marche Scribd Retrieved 31 August 2018 Legislatives dans la 1re circonscription du Val d Oise les recours enfin examines leparisien fr in French 14 November 2017 Event occurs at CET19 35 41 01 00 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Legislative partielle Antoine Savignat LR elu dans le Val d Oise RTL fr in French Retrieved 31 August 2018 L election d une deputee LREM du Val d Oise invalidee FIGARO in French 16 November 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Baume Maia de La 18 January 2019 Macron s liberal love affair goes cold POLITICO Baume Maia de La 6 March 2019 Renaissance reborn again as name of Macron s campaign POLITICO Retrieved 26 December 2019 Municipales 2020 avec EELV une vague verte historique deferle sur les grandes villes francaises Le Monde fr 29 June 2020 via Le Monde Un jour historique pour l ecologie une vague verte deferle sur la France L Obs 28 June 2020 La deroute de LREM aux municipales oblige Macron a tout changer Le HuffPost 29 June 2020 France LREM devient Renaissance au sein d une confederation pour les legislatives RFI in French 5 May 2022 Retrieved 5 May 2022 Legislatives 2022 LREM devient Renaissance sur fond d accord Ferrand Bayrou et Philippe Le Figaro in French 5 May 2022 Retrieved 5 May 2022 Renaissance un nouveau parti pour reactiver le depassement macroniste Le Monde fr in French 18 September 2022 Retrieved 18 September 2022 Macron militant PS depuis 2006 n est plus a jour de cotisation depuis 5 ans L Obs in French Retrieved 10 December 2016 politique Le Scan 18 February 2015 Emmanuel Macron n est plus encarte au Parti socialiste Le Figaro in French ISSN 0182 5852 Retrieved 10 December 2016 Multiple citations Sophie Di Francesco Mayot 2017 The French Parti Socialiste 2010 16 from office to crisis In Rob Manwaring Paul Kennedy eds Why the Left Loses The Decline of the Centre Left in Comparative Perspective Policy Press p 162 ISBN 978 1 4473 3269 5 Gillett Francesca 12 June 2017 Emmanuel Macron s La Republique en Marche All you need to know about the French President s groundbreaking new party ahead of the elections Evening Standard Retrieved 8 July 2021 Milner Susan 6 February 2017 Emmanuel Macron and the building of a new liberal centrist movement EUROPP London School of Economics Retrieved 25 April 2017 magazine Le Point 11 May 2019 Europeennes pour LREM le centre droit en France le centre gauche en Europe Le Point Albertini Dominique LREM s installe a droite et s inquiete de sa gauche Liberation Multiple citations Wolfreys James 2018 Republic of Islamophobia The Rise of Respectable Racism in France Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190911645 via Google Books Macron s party pulls support for local election candidate over hijab Reuters 12 May 2021 Retrieved 15 May 2021 General delegate of La Republique En Marche LREM centre right ruling party O Callaghan Laura 25 November 2021 Pregnant woman and children among 27 migrants to drown in Channel MSN News Retrieved 6 December 2021 Bruno Bonnell an MP for President Macron s centre right En Marche party said joint UK France police patrols on beaches in northern France could work Briatte Francois Neihouser Marie Kelbel Camille 20 April 2020 France held elections under coronavirus Here are four takeaways The Washington Post Retrieved 6 December 2021 So how did things look for French President Emmanuel Macron s center right party La Republique En Marche The Republic on the Move O Brien Chris 23 September 2020 French Government Closes Marseille s Bars As Country Battles Second COVID 19 Wave Forbes Retrieved 6 December 2021 France s environmentalists have been highly critical of President Emmanuel Macron s government But the new measures pit the greens against Macron s center right La Republique En Marche government on issues of health and the local economy Pujol Mazzini Anna 21 June 2021 Marine Le Pen blames poor results on low turnout The Telegraph Retrieved 26 April 2022 Mr Macron s centre Right LREM party only gathered 11 per cent of the vote and is not expected to win any regions Williamson Lucy 27 June 2020 France s Macron set for Covid test in local vote BBC News Retrieved 26 April 2022 Her list is currently running neck and neck with their centre right LREM opponent Multiple citations Les Inrocks Legislatives Le parti d Emmanuel Macron a un caractere attrape tout Les Inrocks 9 June 2017 Retrieved 1 July 2017 Emmanuel Macron le candidat attrape tout in French 27 January 2017 Retrieved 15 May 2018 Finalement le parti d Emmanuel Macron est et de droite et de gauche mais surtout progressiste Le Lab Europe 1 in French Retrieved 10 December 2016 Isabelle Hertner 2018 Centre left parties and the European Union Power accountability and democracy Manchester University Press p 68 ISBN 978 1 5261 2036 6 Audrey Tonnelier 24 February 2017 Le projet d Emmanuel Macron est social liberal Le Monde in French Retrieved 23 June 2017 Multiple citations Milner Susan 6 February 2017 Emmanuel Macron and the building of a new liberal centrist movement EUROPP London School of Economics Retrieved 25 April 2017 Cowley Jason 23 February 2017 Emmanuel Macron a populist eruption from the liberal centre New Statesman Retrieved 25 April 2017 Endeweld Marc 10 December 2016 La demonstration de force du social liberal Emmanuel Macron Marianne in French Retrieved 25 April 2017 Venturini Lionel 12 January 2017 En marche Un social liberal pour piloter le projet de Macron L Humanite in French Retrieved 25 April 2017 Michael Kranert 2019 Discourse and Political Culture The language of the Third Way in Germany and the UK John Benjamins Publishing Company p 262 ISBN 978 90 272 6204 2 Christopher J Bickerton Carlo Invernizzi Accetti ed 2021 Technopopulism The New Logic of Democratic Politics Oxford University Press p 60 Macron Scrambling to Salvage Liberal Reputation Worldwide After Targeting Islam The Daily Beast 12 November 2020 Retrieved 11 December 2021 William Smaldone ed 2019 European Socialism A Concise History with Documents Rowman amp Littlefields Wolfreys James 2018 Republic of Islamophobia The Rise of Respectable Racism in France Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190911645 via Google Books Macron s party pulls support for local election candidate over hijab Reuters 12 May 2021 Retrieved 15 May 2021 General delegate of La Republique En Marche LREM centre right ruling party LREM le parti de Macron est de droite selon les Francais in French The breakdown in 2018 is as follows 5 of respondents rated the party on the far right 20 on the right 25 on the right centre 21 on the centre 9 on the left centre and 5 on the left or on the far left In 2017 the distribution was 5 on the far right 15 on the right 13 on the right centre 33 in the centre 9 on the left centre and 12 on the left or far left En Marche un parti de droite aux yeux des Francais in French Valeurs actuelles 12 April 2018 La Republique en marche est desormais percu comme un parti de droite in French FIGARO 6 April 2018 Retrieved 12 April 2018 Macron peine a convaincre les Francais d etre optimistes Le Monde fr in French 6 April 2018 Retrieved 12 April 2018 En marche Espace personel En Marche 2016 Archived from the original on 9 January 2017 Retrieved 8 January 2017 a b Mathilde Damge 7 October 2016 Emmanuel Macron La Grande Marche et ses chiffres flous Le Monde fr Retrieved 16 October 2016 Bastir soutient Macron La Depeche du Midi 27 November 2016 Retrieved 11 November 2018 Emmanuel Macron annonce une grande marche en France et 13 000 adherents L Express 10 April 2016 Retrieved 11 April 2016 En marche quand Macron gonfle le nombre de ses adherents Metronews 2016 Previsions de croissance Macron Suivez l actualite politique en direct Le Monde fr 20 September 2016 Retrieved 20 September 2016 Marie Pierre Haddad 20 October 2016 Presidentielle 2017 pourquoi Macron court circuite l agenda de Hollande rtl fr Retrieved 14 October 2016 Mathieu Magnaudeix 23 September 2016 Macron joue le centre pour occuper le vide Mediapart Retrieved 26 September 2016 Eric Hacquemand Pauline Theveniaud 7 April 2016 Le modele de Macron Desirs d avenir Le Parisien Retrieved 20 April 2016 Les Desirs d avenir de Royal au service du En marche de Macron et de Hollande HuffPost 7 April 2016 Retrieved 20 April 2016 Jean Laurent Cassely 5 October 2016 Emmanuel Macron n est pas candidat il est consultant a la presidentielle Slate Retrieved 5 October 2016 Nathalie Raulin Guillaume Gendron 3 April 2017 L equipe Macron affine la mise en cene Liberation in French Retrieved 19 April 2017 Camille Bordenet 10 December 2016 Ces militants qui marchent avec Macron Le Monde fr Retrieved 10 December 2016 Macron en marche Nous assumons de lever des fonds Le Point 12 May 2016 Retrieved 17 May 2016 Manuel Valls recadre sechement Emmanuel Macron en direct sur les bancs de l Assemblee nationale rtl fr Retrieved 17 May 2016 Stephane Lauer 6 December 2016 Emmanuel Macron tente de se tailler une stature de presidentiable a New York Le Monde fr Retrieved 7 December 2016 Anne Laure Dagnet 27 December 2016 Le brief politique Emmanuel Macron 400 parrainages et 4 millions d euros de dons au compteur francetvinfo fr Retrieved 28 December 2016 JDD Le 28 March 2017 Presidentielle combien de dons par candidat lejdd fr Retrieved 10 May 2017 Emmanuel Macron et les 120 000 euros de Bercy Le Journal du Dimanche 29 July 2017 Retrieved 26 January 2017 Home Stephane BIJOUX MEPs European Parliament www europarl europa eu Retrieved 8 March 2021 Home Valerie HAYER MEPs European Parliament www europarl europa eu Retrieved 8 March 2021 Home Pierre KARLESKIND MEPs European Parliament www europarl europa eu Retrieved 8 March 2021 Home Stephane SEJOURNE MEPs European Parliament www europarl europa eu Retrieved 8 March 2021 Home Chrysoula ZACHAROPOULOU MEPs European Parliament www europarl europa eu Retrieved 8 March 2021 Members Page CoR a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Further reading EditElgie Robert The election of Emmanuel Macron and the new French party system a return to the eternel marais Modern amp Contemporary France 26 1 2018 15 29 Gil Cameron Michael Spatial analysis of La Republique En Marche and French Parties 2002 2017 French Politics 2018 1 27 Gougou Florent and Simon Persico A new party system in the making The 2017 French presidential election French Politics 15 3 2017 303 321 External links Edit Media related to La Republique En Marche at Wikimedia Commons Official website in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Renaissance French political party amp oldid 1152358449, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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