Republicans to consult members on presidential candidate selection process

The Republicans' political bureau voted on Tuesday to consult members on April 18 about selecting their 2027 presidential candidate. Party president Bruno Retailleau defends the move amid internal criticisms. Laurent Wauquiez was absent from the meeting.

On Tuesday, March 24, 2026, the political bureau of Les Républicains (LR), chaired by Bruno Retailleau, nearly unanimously adopted a resolution to consult party members on April 18 regarding the process for selecting the LR candidate for the 2027 presidential election. Retailleau defended the decision in a Figaro interview, emphasizing transparency and democracy. 'The criticisms were marginal: the political bureau adopted almost unanimously the choice to consult the members. The rare complaints were motivated by personal ambitions,' he stated, rejecting past opacity in the party. He noted having enshrined these requirements in LR statutes after a commitment to militants. David Lisnard called the vote 'rigged,' a claim Retailleau dismissed as 'a pretext to justify an adventure.' Meanwhile, Laurent Wauquiez, MP for Haute-Loire and a right-wing figure, did not attend the meeting despite being invited. On RTL that morning, he called for rallying behind a single right-wing candidacy, from Édouard Philippe to Sarah Knafo, via a broad primary. His absence highlights internal divisions, as the working group on selection methods, led by Gérard Larcher and Roger Karoutchi, delivered its conclusions. Retailleau stresses a democratic approach to avoid internal deals.

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Bruno Retailleau confidently announces his candidacy for France's 2027 presidential election at a podium with tricolor flag, promising national revival.
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Bruno Retailleau, president of the Republicans, officialized his candidacy for the 2027 presidential election on February 12, 2026, through a video on social media and a letter to his parliamentarians. At 65 years old, he depicts a France in decline and promises to restore order, justice, and national pride. He plans referendums on immigration, justice, and sovereignty.

Les Républicains (LR) will hold a political bureau meeting next Tuesday to present a committee's conclusions on selecting their candidate for the 2027 presidential election. The gathering follows municipal elections amid a crumbling centrist bloc. Options such as open or closed primaries will be put to a member vote before summer.

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Bruno Retailleau, leader of Les Républicains, has officially announced his candidacy for the 2027 presidential election during an evening at the party's headquarters in Paris. Committed by duty to the race for the Élysée, he remains serene amid internal competition and the possibility of a primary. Several potential candidates are emerging on the right and in the center.

David Lisnard, mayor of Cannes, declared his candidacy for the 2027 presidential election on January 21 on RTL. This announcement comes amid a proliferation of contenders against the Rassemblement National, making the outcome uncertain. Political decomposition favors personal ventures, notes chronicler Solenn de Royer.

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On January 24 in Tours, leaders of the unitary left, excluding La France insoumise, announced a primary for the 2027 presidential election set for October 11. Marine Tondelier, Olivier Faure, Clémentine Autain, and François Ruffin confirmed the vote, aimed at selecting a common candidate despite internal hesitations within the Socialist Party.

Bruno Retailleau, president of Les Républicains, has joined earlier calls from figures like former Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne urging Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu to invoke Article 49.3 for a responsible 2026 budget, without further concessions to socialists. In an Ouest-France interview, he criticizes deals with the PS that allowed the social security budget to pass but stalled the state budget, following Friday's joint committee failure. Lecornu plans talks Monday to avoid deadlock.

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The French Socialist Party (PS) remains deeply divided over organizing a primary to select a common left-wing candidate for the 2027 presidential election. Olivier Faure, the party's first secretary, will announce the details of this vote on January 24 in Tours, despite internal criticisms. This initiative, launched in July 2025, faces resistance from within the PS and its allies.

 

 

 

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