

The far-right Rassemblement National party obtained by far the most votes (31.5%) in France on Sunday, June 9, as voters throughout the European Union elected their members of the European Parliament, according to initial estimates by Ipsos for France Télévisions, Radio France, France 24/RFI, Public Sénat/LCP Assemblée Nationale.
Behind the RN, President Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance coalition held on to second place, with 15.2%, ahead of the Socialists and their lead candidate Raphaël Glucksmann (14%).
Two other parties appeared certain of crossing the 5% threshold required to send candidates to the European Parliament: the radical left La France Insoumise and the conservative Les Républicains. The initial estimates also put the far-right party Reconquête! at 5.5%, and the Greens at 5.2% – those tallies could potentially change as more results are counted during the evening.
Marine Le Pen's RN has now been the top-ranking party in three consecutive European elections. This year, however, it substantially improved its tally from 2019, when the same lead candidate, Jordan Bardella, had obtained 23.34 %.
For President Macron, his coalition's score comes as a disappointment, but not a surprise, after a sluggish campaign for his lead candidate Valérie Hayer, an unfamiliar face to many voters.
Polls closed at 6 pm in most of France, but voters in big cities could still cast their ballots until 8 pm, when the initial estimations were published.
Throughout the EU's 27 member states, citizens voted over four days to elect the 720 members of the European Parliament for the next five-year term. Results began trickling in on Sunday as the last countries voted.