The list is led by Ingrid Levavasseur, a 31-year-old auxiliary nurse and one of the main figures of the street movement | Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images Yellow Jackets protesters announce candidates for European election List includes an accountant, a forklift driver and a housewife.

Members of France's Yellow Jackets movement announced the first names on a list of candidates to run in May's European Parliament election, according to French media.

The list so far has 10 names and is led by Ingrid Levavasseur, a 31-year-old auxiliary nurse and one of the main figures of the street movement, which began in response to an increase in fuel taxes but has since morphed into a bigger — largely anti-Emmanuel Macron — cause.

The candidates have formed their own group called "Citizens' Initiative Rally" — a reference to one of the main demands of the movement: allowing for a so-called "citizens' initiative referendum," which would let citizens trigger a referendum by collecting 700,000 signatures, or 1.5 percent of registered voters.

The group ultimately hopes to have a total of 79 candidates. The list also includes an accountant, a forklift driver and a housewife.

"We want to create a list that resembles the citizens and shows that we are independent, non-partisan from the first day," campaign manager Hayk Shahinyan told BFMTV.

Political groups on the right and left have been hoping to attract support from the Yellow Jackets movement in the European election, including the far-right leader of the National Rally, Marine Le Pen, and the French Communist Party.

A poll last month showed 13 percent of French respondents would vote for a hypothetical Yellow Jackets list in the European election.