François Picard is pleased to welcome Damien Lecomte, Political Scientist and Researcher at CRPS-CESSP, Paris Pantheon Sorbonne University. According to Dr. Lecomte, there is a persistent tension between unity and fragmentation in French politics, and the legacy of Lionel Jospin illustrates this paradox: a figure of moral integrity and intellectual rigor who successfully governed a broad left-wing coalition, yet he was ultimately defeated by a divided electorate on the left.
What emerges from both historical reflection and recent municipal elections is a deep structural challenge. The left remains anchored in urban strongholds but struggles to reconcile its moderate and radical components, while the right faces similar pressures in balancing traditional conservatism with the gravitational pull of the far right.
Meanwhile, the National Rally continues its steady territorial implantation, particularly outside major cities, reshaping the political landscape not through dramatic victories but through cumulative local gains. This produces a fragmented political field in which no camp easily achieves coherence.
Electoral dynamics are increasingly shaped by geography, by differing relationships to globalisation, and by the strategic dilemma of coalition-building across ideological divides. The central question is no longer simply who can win, but who can unify without alienating other parts of the electorate.








English (US) ·