France Faces ‘Consequential’ Vote as Far-Right Rout Prompts Macron Gamble 

French President Emmanuel Macron appears on a screen as he delivers a speech following results after the polls closed in the European Parliament elections, in Paris, France, June 9, 2024. (Reuters)
French President Emmanuel Macron appears on a screen as he delivers a speech following results after the polls closed in the European Parliament elections, in Paris, France, June 9, 2024. (Reuters)
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France Faces ‘Consequential’ Vote as Far-Right Rout Prompts Macron Gamble 

French President Emmanuel Macron appears on a screen as he delivers a speech following results after the polls closed in the European Parliament elections, in Paris, France, June 9, 2024. (Reuters)
French President Emmanuel Macron appears on a screen as he delivers a speech following results after the polls closed in the European Parliament elections, in Paris, France, June 9, 2024. (Reuters)

France's finance minister said on Monday that the snap election called by President Emmanuel Macron after a bruising loss to the far-right in European Parliament elections would be the most consequential legislative vote in the republic's history.

Macron's shock decision amounts to a roll of the dice on his political future. It could hand a great deal of power to Marine Le Pen's far-right National Rally (RN) after years on the sidelines, and neuter his presidency three years before it is due to end.

The legislative vote will take place on June 30, less than a month before the start of the Paris Olympics, with a second round on July 7.

"This will be the most consequential parliamentary election for France and for the French in the history of the Fifth Republic," Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told RTL radio.

A source close to Macron said the president hoped to mobilize voters who had abstained from voting on Sunday.

"We're going for the win," the source said. "There's audacity in this decision, risk-taking, which has always been part of our political DNA."

The euro fell 0.5% in early European trade, while Paris blue-chip stocks dropped 2%, led by steep losses in banks BNP Paribas and Societe Generale.

Helmed by 28-year-old Jordan Bardella, the RN won about 32% of the vote on Sunday, more than double the Macron ticket's 15%, according to exit polls. The Socialists came within a whisker of Macron with 14%.

Analysts said Macron's decision aimed to make the best of his weak position, reclaiming the initiative and forcing RN into election mode faster than it would have liked.

Some RN leaders appeared to have been caught off-guard.

"We didn't think it would be immediately after the European elections, even if we wanted it to be," RN deputy chairman Sebastien Chenu said on RTL Radio. "Elections are rarely a gift and in this context, they aren't."

Bardella will be the party's candidate for prime minister, he added.

The result is hard to predict. The outcome is likely to depend on how committed leftist and center-right voters are to the idea of blocking the far-right from power. Voter turnout on Sunday was about 52%, the interior ministry said.

If the RN wins a majority, Macron would still remain as president and direct defense and foreign policy. But he would lose the power to set the domestic agenda, from economic policy to security.

His Renaissance party currently has 169 lower house lawmakers out of a total of 577. The RN has 88.

Eurasia Group said the RN was no shoo-in for a majority, predicting a hung parliament as the most likely scenario.

"Faced with another hung parliament, (Macron) will try to form a wider alliance with the center-right or center-left, possibly by appointing a prime minister from one of those camps," it said in a note.

"We foresee a losing struggle for serious domestic reform or strict deficit reduction in the remaining three years of Macron's term."

The dismal performance by Renaissance contrasted with the center-right's broader showing across the EU. The center-right European People's Party (EPP) will be the biggest political grouping in the new legislature, gaining five seats to field 189 deputies, a centralized exit poll showed.



Ukraine and Russia Exchange 185 Prisoners of War Each in Swap

Ukrainian soldiers carry a 152mm shell before firing it towards Russian forces at a frontline position in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region on April 9, 2026 (Reuters)
Ukrainian soldiers carry a 152mm shell before firing it towards Russian forces at a frontline position in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region on April 9, 2026 (Reuters)
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Ukraine and Russia Exchange 185 Prisoners of War Each in Swap

Ukrainian soldiers carry a 152mm shell before firing it towards Russian forces at a frontline position in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region on April 9, 2026 (Reuters)
Ukrainian soldiers carry a 152mm shell before firing it towards Russian forces at a frontline position in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region on April 9, 2026 (Reuters)

Ukraine and Russia each exchanged 185 service personnel in the latest prisoner of war swap on Friday, officials in both countries said.

Most of the Ukrainians brought back were in Russian captivity since 2022, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on X, Reuters reported.

Russia also returned one civilian, he added.

The oldest Ukrainian being brought back is 62, according to Kyiv's general staff.

Friday's swap is the second one under an agreement between the countries to swap 1,000 prisoners of war each, as part of a three-day ceasefire agreement brokered by the U.S. in early May.

The United Arab Emirates, which brokered previous rounds of swaps, also mediated the Friday exchange, the Russian defense ministry said on the Telegram app.


Truck Breakdown in Niger Strands Passengers, Leaves at Least 49 Dead in the Sahara Desert

African migrants attempt to cross the desert (file photo)
African migrants attempt to cross the desert (file photo)
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Truck Breakdown in Niger Strands Passengers, Leaves at Least 49 Dead in the Sahara Desert

African migrants attempt to cross the desert (file photo)
African migrants attempt to cross the desert (file photo)

At least 49 people died of thirst after a truck broke down and they were stranded for days in the Sahara Desert in northern Niger, authorities said.

The victims, all Nigeriens, were returning home from a religious festival in Mali when the truck stopped running more than 80 kilometers (49 miles) west of Assamaka, near the borders with Mali and Algeria, Niger's Agadez region governorate said in an online post late Thursday, The AP news reported.

Two men survived after trekking more than 50 kilometers (31 miles) to a water source and then continuing to Assamaka, where they alerted authorities, the governorate said.

A delegation sent to the scene by the Agadez Region Governor Gen. Ibra Boulama Issa learned the truck had traveled for several days from the Malian town of Talhandek about 300 kilometers (187 miles) from the Nigerien border.

It was not immediately clear what led to the breakdown or how long the passengers waited.

“On the spot, the findings were particularly disturbing. Dozens of lifeless bodies were found under the immobile truck and in its surroundings,” the Agadez governorate said.

Photos published by the governorate showed bodies in the desert with pieces of clothing and other belongings scattered around.

“Deprived of water and unable to repair the vehicle despite the efforts of the driver, his apprentice and passengers, travelers found themselves trapped in the heart of a hostile environment where extreme temperatures and lack of supply points make survival extremely difficult,” the governorate said.

The 49 victims were buried in mass graves at the scene in what officials called a “particularly delicate and emotionally exhausting task” for the survivors.


German Investigators Launch Probe Into Boeing 787 Incident in Frankfurt

04 June 2026, Hesse, Frankfurt: A Lufthansa Dreamliner aircraft rests on its nose in front of a terminal at Frankfurt Airport after the nose landing gear collapsed. Photo: Mike Seeboth/dpa
04 June 2026, Hesse, Frankfurt: A Lufthansa Dreamliner aircraft rests on its nose in front of a terminal at Frankfurt Airport after the nose landing gear collapsed. Photo: Mike Seeboth/dpa
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German Investigators Launch Probe Into Boeing 787 Incident in Frankfurt

04 June 2026, Hesse, Frankfurt: A Lufthansa Dreamliner aircraft rests on its nose in front of a terminal at Frankfurt Airport after the nose landing gear collapsed. Photo: Mike Seeboth/dpa
04 June 2026, Hesse, Frankfurt: A Lufthansa Dreamliner aircraft rests on its nose in front of a terminal at Frankfurt Airport after the nose landing gear collapsed. Photo: Mike Seeboth/dpa

The German Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accident Investigation (BFU) has begun an investigation into the Boeing 787 jetliner whose nose gear collapsed on Thursday at a gate at Frankfurt airport, according to a BFU spokesperson.

An interim report is expected in about eight weeks, and the final report ⁠in about a ⁠year, said the spokesperson.

Lufthansa, which operated the aircraft, said several crew members and ground staff were lightly injured and hospitalized; two ⁠Lufthansa employees who were briefly hospitalized on Thursday were able to leave the same day.

The affected Boeing 787-9 will be repaired after the investigation, Reuters quoted Lufthansa as saying.

Passengers had not yet boarded the aircraft.

The incident occurred at 12:45 p.m. (1045 GMT) ⁠on Thursday, ⁠and the jet was scheduled to depart for Los Angeles as flight LH450.

The Boeing 787-9 is a relatively new addition for the Lufthansa Group, which is planning to gradually phase out less efficient jets and simplify its fleet.