BERLIN — Leaders across Europe and the United States reacted with relief but also some concern to the result of the French legislative election, which leaves a key European Union country facing the prospect of a hung parliament and political paralysis.
Relief, because the far-right National Rally didn't come out as the strongest party, as many pro-European leaders had feared — but also concern because no political grouping has a majority in the National Assembly.
U.S. President Joe Biden provided his political analysis of the French parliamentary elections when asked for his take on the outcome during a telephone interview Monday morning on cable TV.
"The polls were wrong in France,'' he said, adding that ''there's no right wave or tide here in America, either.''
''France rejected extremism,'' Biden said.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany, which together with France has long been viewed as the engine of European integration, said it would have been a major challenge if French President Emmanuel Macron would have had to work with a right-wing populist party, German news agency dpa reported.
''That has now been averted," the chancellor said.
Scholz expressed hope that Macron and the newly elected members of parliament would succeed in forming a stable government.