France’s political drama has not ended yet. Marine Le Pen, who missed out on the Presidential seat, aims to garner dominance in the country’s parliament. Le Pen managed to gather nearly 41% of the votes, making rival Emmanuel Macron the French president once again.

Le Pen, a far-right politician, gathered her party’s troops on Monday to plan for the parliamentary vote and capture a majority of seats in the National Assembly. The vote is scheduled for June this year.

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Le Pen told her party officials that she would aim to revamp her representation in the working-class community in northern France, according to reports from French media. A National Rally party meeting was called on Monday, following the election results.

Le Pen is expected to tackle Macron’s dominance in the National Parliament with the momentum she has gained with her most fruitful polls so far. This is the first time Le Pen, in her three attempts so far, came so close to winning the Presidential elections.

Le Pen’s programme, which would crack down severely on immigrants and diminish the role of the European Union and NATO in France, sent many voters into the arms of Macron, according to reports from Associated Press.

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What does the National Assembly currently look like?

The National Assembly currently has 577 seats, with Macron and his allies controlling 313 of them. Le Pen’s party has only 8 seats now but hopes for broad support from other parties to hobble Macron’s ability to get his agenda passed.

France’s parliamentary vote comes in two rounds on June 12 and June 19. Candidates who win a majority in the first round are elected. If no one does — a common occurrence in France’s fractured political landscape — those who get at least 12.5% of the vote in a race go into a runoff on June 19.