Mélenchon Launches Fourth Presidential Bid, Targets Far Right at Massive Saint-Denis Rally

June 7, 2026
Mélenchon Launches Fourth Presidential Bid, Targets Far Right at Massive Saint-Denis Rally
  • A large Saint-Denis rally underscored a decisive start to Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s fourth presidential bid with La France insoumise, drawing tens of thousands of supporters and signaling a high-profile push for the 2027 election.

  • Speakers target the National Rally by attacking its racialized rhetoric, emphasizing unity on the left to defeat the far right.

  • Analysts describe Mélenchon’s branding as a careful balance between revolutionary rhetoric and coalition-building, with external analyses noting the ongoing debate over his approach.

  • Mélenchon criticized the EU on migration and Gaza-related policy, calling for a moratorium on certain EU rules, including posted workers and agricultural imports.

  • Saint-Denis mayor Bally Bagayoko’s office displayed provocative symbols, including a removed Macron portrait and a Palestinian flag, signaling LFI’s confrontational stance on national identity and media.

  • The coverage stresses a left unity message, arguing against divisions within the left and urging momentum around Mélenchon as the main challenger to the right and far right.

  • Manuel Bompard, LFI coordinator, described the gathering as linking a “new France” to history, while offering little beyond that frame to Le Monde.

  • The rhetoric also portrays Bardella as emblematic of right-wing nationalism and frames the abolition of birthright citizenship as anti-national.

  • Mélenchon launched his campaign in Saint-Denis on June 7, 2026, framing the event as the kickoff of a broader effort toward a “new France” and positioning himself as the leading challenger to the right and far-right.

  • The rally is portrayed as part of a longer 2027 campaign strategy and is framed as a laboratory for the “new France” that LFI envisions, integrating political branding with coalition-building.

  • Mélenchon called for decolonization of digital space, Corsican autonomy, and steps toward Kanak independence in New Caledonia, signaling a transformative anti-establishment platform.

  • He criticized RN leader Jordan Bardella and proposed controversial measures like revisiting birthright citizenship as part of his critique of right-wing nationalism.

Summary based on 13 sources


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