Robert Zarader anticipates end of absolute majority in 2027

One year before the 2027 presidential election, Robert Zarader, head of communication agency Bona fidé, believes France is moving away from absolute majorities behind the president. He suggests the possible arrival of a « ticket » era where candidates name their prime minister upfront. In a Figaro interview, he launches a collection on political communication.

Robert Zarader, president of the Bona fidé communication agency, speaks out one year before the 2027 presidential election. In an interview with Louis Hausalter for Le Figaro, published on April 7, 2026, he launches a collection of short texts titled « Les idées de Bona fidé » on political communication.

Zarader laments that « la communication a pris le pas sur le politique », or communication has overtaken politics. He explains the public debate has become impoverished, with weak convictions replaced by communication due to a lack of political visions. He highlights the explosion of social media, info channels, and political guests on media, creating more containers than content.

He states « tout montre que l’on sort d’une logique de majorité absolue derrière le futur président », indicating a shift from absolute majorities. Extremes have better captured the ability to present a national vision than traditional parties. He references Emmanuel Macron’s unfulfilled promise to end the left-right opposition.

Zarader suggests « l’ère des tickets est peut-être venue, avec des candidats qui indiqueraient d’emblée qui sera leur premier ministre », or the ticket era may have arrived. This interview sheds light on expected changes in political strategy ahead of the vote.

Related Articles

Following his narrow defeat in the Pau municipal election, MoDem leader François Bayrou stated on LCI that he does not envision running for president in 2027. He described the loss as 'difficult' and 'a pain' but vowed to rebound, while urging central bloc candidates to consolidate early behind the strongest contender.

Reported by AI

Horizons and Renaissance parties, led by Édouard Philippe and Gabriel Attal, are organizing a first strategic meeting on April 15 with MoDem and UDI centrists. The move comes amid renewed talks of a single candidate from the right and center one year before the 2027 presidential election. Representatives from the parties will gather for lunch.

In his final rally before the first round of municipal elections on March 15, Emmanuel Grégoire, candidate from the non-Mélenchonist left, urged Parisians to oppose the alliance between the right and far-right. He targeted rivals Rachida Dati and Sarah Knafo, accusing them of aiming to bring down the capital to prepare for the 2027 elections.

Reported by AI

In the first round of Paris municipal elections on March 15, 2026, Emmanuel Grégoire, left-wing united candidate excluding LFI, leads with nearly 10 points ahead of Rachida Dati (LR). He tops 14 of the 20 arrondissements, leaving the other 6, mainly in the west, to his rival. Pierre-Yves Bournazel (Horizons), Sophia Chikirou (LFI) and Sarah Knafo (Reconquête!) qualify for the second round.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline