Cazeneuve enters 2027 French presidential race with 86-page letter and a refusal to join Socialist primary
The former Socialist prime minister publishes an 86-page letter to the French people and tells Le Parisien he is entering the 2027 race 'by a contract that binds me to the French', while refusing to join the party primary.
A letter as a programme
Bernard Cazeneuve chose the written word to mark his entry into the 2027 presidential contest. On Friday 17 July, the former Socialist prime minister published an 86-page "letter to the French" that reads like a draft manifesto. The document, which BFMTV obtained ahead of release, is divided into six chapters and addresses subjects from child protection to institutional reform. In an interview with Le Parisien the day before, Cazeneuve framed the move as a binding commitment: "It is by a contract that binds me to the French that I present my candidacy." His entourage, however, told Agence France-Presse that this was not a formal declaration but "a further step" towards 2027.
It is by a contract that binds me to the French that I present my candidacy.
Three pillars of a centre-left project
Cazeneuve anchors his bid in what he calls a "republican, social, European and reformist left". The letter is built around three axes. The first, "protecting lives", focuses on women and children. He demands that no complaint of violence against a child should go unanswered and proposes recalling retired magistrates to re-examine cases that were left dormant. On women's rights, he writes that "there can be no real equality without feminism inspiring major public policies". The second axis, "putting the state back in order", includes a proposal to restore the seven-year presidential term, arguing that the five-year term has turned the president into a majority leader and stripped the office of its arbitral stature. The third axis, "rebuilding sovereignty", covers productive, educational and external sovereignty, with a call to redefine the European Union as "a contract rather than a framework of constraints".
Security is not a right-wing theme. And the left would do well to seize it. It is owed to the people.
Pensions and institutional repair
On pensions, one of the campaign's defining issues, Cazeneuve rejects a further rise in the legal retirement age. He argues that "contribution duration is the fairest lever" and promises a reform "without the brutality that has so damaged trust". He also wants to strengthen the prime minister's role and limit the use of article 49.3, the constitutional tool that allows governments to pass legislation without a vote. His diagnosis of the Macron years is blunt: "We have suffered, in recent years, a political shipwreck that no one would have dared imagine: five prime ministers in four years. In the same movement, the presidential function has been emptied of what made it strong."
The country is not broken: it is badly governed, badly represented, badly considered.
Refusing the primary, calling for a rally
Cazeneuve will not submit to the Socialist primary scheduled for October. "It is not a primary we are being invited to but, I fear, a last one," he said, urging instead "a broad rally that goes well beyond the narrow primaries". He left the Socialist Party in 2022 to found his own movement, La Convention, in protest at the alliance with Jean-Luc Mélenchon's La France insoumise. His stance sets up a direct competition with François Hollande, who also signalled his ambitions this week, telling supporters: "I have already been president, I know the job, I have done it. I can be useful but I cannot be a testimonial candidate." Raphaël Glucksmann, another potential centre-left contender, has given himself the summer to decide.
- Appointed Prime Minister under François Hollande
- Quits Socialist Party, founds movement La Convention
- Tells Le Parisien he presents his candidacy 'by a contract that binds me to the French'
- Publishes 86-page 'letter to the French' outlining presidential programme
What comes next
Guillaume Lacroix, president of the Radical Left Party, told Franceinfo that Cazeneuve's letter "sends the message that he has thought through his approach, that he has substantive proposals, and it is about creating a bond with the French". The former prime minister is inviting citizens to write back to him. "Everything will be decided in the autumn; it is not a bad thing to take some time this summer to deepen that bond," Lacroix added. With the letter now public and the interview framing it as a candidacy, Cazeneuve has placed himself firmly among the contenders for the social-democratic nomination, even if the formal announcement is still to come.


