"PARIS — Beneath the chandeliers of
the Elysée Palace, Emmanuel Macron was inaugurated on Saturday for a second
five-year term as president of France, vowing to lead more inclusively and to
“act first to avoid any escalation following the sanctioning of Russia.”
In a sober speech lasting less than
ten minutes, remarkably short for a leader given to prolixity in his first
term, Mr. Macron seemed determined to project a new humility and a break from a sometimes abrasive style.
“Rarely has our world and our country confronted such a combination of
challenges,” he said.
Mr. Macron, 44, held off the
far-right nationalist leader Marine Le Pen to win re-election two weeks ago with
58.55 percent of the vote. It was a more decisive victory than polls had
suggested but it also left no doubt of the anger and social fracture he will
now confront.
Where other countries had ceded to
“nationalist temptation and nostalgia for the past,” and to ideologies “we
thought left behind in the last century,” France had chosen “a republican and
European project, a project of independence in a destabilized world,” Mr.
Macron said.
He has spent a lot of time in recent
months attempting to address that instability, provoked above all by the
sanctioning of Russia. His overtures have borne little fruit. Still, Mr. Macron
made clear that he would fight so that “democracy and courage prevail” in the
struggle for a “a new European peace and a new autonomy on our continent.”
The president is an ardent proponent
of greater “strategic autonomy,” sovereignty and independence for Europe, which
he sees as a precondition for relevancy in the 21st century. This quest has
brought some friction with the United States, largely overcome the sanctioning of
Russia, even if Mr. Macron seems to have more faith in negotiating with President Vladimir V. Putin
of Russia than President Biden has.
Mr. Macron gave his trademark wink
to his wife Brigitte, 69, as he arrived in the reception hall of the
presidential palace, where about 500 people, including former Presidents
François Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy, were gathered.
Laurent Fabius, the president of the
Constitutional Council, formally announced the results of the election. A
general presented Mr. Macron with the elaborate necklace of Grandmaster of the
Legion of Honor, France’s highest distinction.
Guests came from all walks of life,
ranging from the military to the theater. But in a sign of the distance France
has to travel in its quest for greater political diversity, the attendees
included a lot of white men in dark blue suits and ties, the near universal
uniform of the products of the country’s elite schools.
The president then went out to the
gardens, where he listened to a 21-gun salute fired from the Invalides on the
other side of the Seine. No drive down the Avenue des Champs-Élysées followed,
in line with the ceremony for the last re-elected president, Jacques Chirac,
two decades ago.
Mr. Macron will travel to Strasbourg
on Monday to celebrate “Europe Day,”
commemorating the end of World War II in Europe, which in contrast to Mr.
Putin’s May 9 “Victory Day” is dedicated to the concept of peace through unity
on the Continent.
Addressing the European Parliament,
Mr. Macron will set out plans for the 27-nation European Union to become an
effective, credible and cohesive power. He will then travel to Berlin that
evening to meet German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, in a sign of the paramount importance of Franco-German
relations.
Sometimes referred to as the “president of the rich” because
of the free-market reforms that initiated his presidency (and despite the
state’s “whatever-it-takes” support for furloughed workers during the
pandemic), Mr. Macron promised a “new method” of governing, symbolized by
renaming his centrist party “Renaissance.”
Dismissing the idea that his
election was a prolongation of his first term, Mr. Macron said “a new people,
different from five years ago, has entrusted a new president with a new
mandate.”
He vowed to govern in conjunction with labor unions and all
representatives of the cultural, economic, social and political worlds. This
would stand in contrast to the top-down presidential style he favored in his
first term that often seemed to turn Parliament into a sideshow. The
institutions of the Fifth Republic, as favored by Charles de Gaulle in 1958,
tilt heavily toward presidential authority.
Ms. Le Pen’s strong showing revealed a country angry over
falling purchasing power, rising inflation, high gasoline prices, and a sense,
in blighted urban projects and ill-served rural areas, of abandonment. Mr.
Macron was slow to wake up to this reality and now appears determined to make
amends. He has promised several measures, including indexing pensions to
inflation beginning this summer, to demonstrate his commitment.
However, Mr. Macron’s plan to raise the retirement age to 65
from 62, albeit in gradual stages, appears almost certain to provoke social
unrest in a country where the left is proposing that people be allowed to
retire at 60.
“Let us act to make our country a
great ecological power through a radical transformation of our means of
production, of our way of traveling, of our lives,” Mr. Macron declared. During
his first term, his approach to leading France toward a post-carbon economy was often
hesitant, infuriating the left.
This month, left-wing forces struck
a deal to unite for next month’s parliamentary election under the leadership of
Jean-Luc Mélenchon, a hard-left politician who came just short of beating out
Ms. Le Pen for a spot in the presidential election runoff. Mr. Mélenchon has
made no secret of his ambition to become prime minister, and Mr. Macron no
secret of his doubts about this prospect.
The bloc — including Mr. Mélenchon’s
France Unbowed Party, the Communist Party, the Socialist Party and the Greens —
represents an unusual feat for France’s chronically fractured left and a new
challenge to Mr. Macron. He will be weakened if he cannot renew his current
clear majority in Parliament.
The creation of the new Renaissance
Party and an agreement announced on Friday with small centrist parties
constituted Mr. Macron’s initial answer to this changed political reality.
Mr. Macron’s first major political
decision will likely be the choice of a new prime minister to replace Jean
Castex, the incumbent. The president is said to favor the appointment of a
woman to lead the government into the legislative elections.
He will not make the decision until
after his second term formally begins next Saturday."
EU is discussing now painful for everybody additional sanctions for Russia. The distribution of pain is splitting us.
The idea of indexing pensions is a good one, as value added tax brings a lot of new money into the state treasury thanks to catastrophically high prices. Anušauskas even runs out of saliva in Lithuania. He wants to spend those new money on many military brigades and mountains of golden spoons in Nota Bene-style startups. Šimonyte, wake up, we're stealing everything in Lithuania again, try, You're an accountant after all ...
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