Der Standard

Macron and the Revival of Europe

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It’s not just that Emmanuel Macron won and will become, at the age of 39, France’s youngest president. It’s not merely that he defeated, in Marine Le Pen, the forces of xenophobic nationalis­m exploited by President Donald J. Trump. It’s that he won with a bold stand for the much-maligned European Union, and so reaffirmed the European idea and Europe’s place in a world that needs its strength and values.

This, after Britain’s dismal decision last year to leave the European Union, and in the face of Trump’s woeful anti-European ignorance, was critical. Macron underlined his message by coming out to address his supporters in Paris accompanie­d by the European anthem, Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy,” rather than the Marseillai­se — a powerful gesture of openness.

A Le Pen-led lurch into a Europe of nationalis­m and racism has been averted. President Vladimir Putin of Russian backed Le Pen for a reason: He wants to break down European unity and sever the European bond with the United States. Instead, the center held and, with it, civilizati­on.

A federalizi­ng Europe is the foundation of European postwar stability and prosperity. It offers the best chance for young Europeans to fulfill their promise. It is Europeans’ “common destiny,” as Macron put it in his acceptance speech, standing before the French and European Union flags. To think otherwise is to forget history. No wonder Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, through her spokesman, immediatel­y proclaimed a victory “for a strong and united Europe.”

That will require reform. Europe, complacent, has lost traction. Macron recognized this. He declared, “I want to re-weave the bond between citizens and Europe.” More transparen­cy, more accountabi­lity and more creativity are required. No miracle ever marketed itself more miserably than the European Union.

Macron, who came from nowhere in the space of a year at the head of a new political movement, did not make facile promises or make up stories. He stood by refugees; he stood by Europe’s shared currency, the euro; and he was prepared to tell the French that they cannot turn their back on modernity and prosper.

Through rational argument he increased a lead over Le Pen that polls put at 20 percent after the first round on April 23 to 30 percent, winning with 65 percent of the vote to Le Pen’s 35 percent. This, in the age of Trump’s fake news, fake claims, and overall fakeness, was an important demonstrat­ion that reason and coherence still matter in politics.

Now the hard part begins. For the first time in France, the far right took more than a third of the vote, a reflection of the anger in the country at lost jobs, failed immigrant integratio­n and economic stagnation. Macron, who said he was aware of “the anger, the anxiety, the doubts,” needs to address this social unease head- on by reviving a sense of possibilit­y in France. Without change, Le Pen will continue to gain support.

Change is notoriousl­y hard to fashion in France. It is especially hard without strong parliament­ary backing, and Macron will need that. Parliament­ary elections will be held in June. His En Marche! (Onward!) movement must organize fast to build on his victory. It has extraordin­ary momentum. The traditiona­l political landscape of the Fifth Republic — the alternatio­n of center-left Socialists and center-right Republican­s — has been blown apart.

Perhaps this very feat, without parallel in recent European political history, and Macron’s status as a centrist independen­t give him unique latitude to persuade the French, at last, that they can — like the Germans and the Dutch and the Swedes and the Danes — preserve the essence of their welfare state while forging a more flexible labor market that gives hope to the young. With 25 percent of its youth unemployed, France undoes itself.

If France grows again, Europe will grow with it. This would consti- tute a powerful rebuke to the autocratic-nationalis­t school — Le Pen with her sham of a political makeover, the xenophobic buffoon Nigel Farage in Britain (friend of Trump), Putin in Moscow, Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey, and of course the American president himself, whose irresponsi­bility on the subject of America’s European allies has been appalling.

Macron’s is a victory for many things. He has demonstrat­ed that France is not a country where racism and anti-European jingoism can win an election. He has reasserted the European idea and raised the possibilit­y that France and Germany will conjure a revival of European idealism. He has rebuked the little Englanders who voted to take Britain out the Union (and made a tough negotiatio­n on that exit inevitable).

Above all, through his intelligen­ce and civility, his culture and his openness, Macron has erected a much-needed barrier to the crassness and incivility, the ignorance and the closed-mindedness that seeps from Trump’s Oval Office and threatens to corrupt the conduct of world affairs.

Vive la France! Vive l’Europe! Now more than ever.

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