His campaign mirrors the very successful campaign of centrist liberal Dutch Prime Minister Rob Jetten in October 2025, which focused on optimism about the future and prioritizing the young generations, while exalting a sense of national pride.
“My first promise is that we will once again become Europe’s leading power within six years. That is our rank, our place, our destiny,” he said, also vowing to make France the leading European country in artificial intelligence.
Attal is following incumbent French President Emmanuel Macron as the presidential candidate of the centrist liberal Renaissance party, which he heads. After almost 10 years of Macron governments and dwindling popularity, Attal is seeking to distance himself from Macron to frame his candidacy as one of change and reform.
The 27-year-old politician served as prime minister under Macron from January-September 2024. He was the youngest prime miniter in French history and the first openly gay.
The latest polls put Attal in fourth place at 13 percent of popular vote, preceded by far-right French Rally candidate Jordan Bardella, center-right Édouard Philippe, and radical left France Unbowed head Jean-Luc Mélenchon.
Attal on Saturday said his priorities would be to strengthen education and increase purchasing power by raising wages and boosting business as well as investing in research and innovation. His third priority are be tighter border controls, a clear attempt to win back voters who have drifted to the right and far right, where immigration and border security have become dominant political issues.

