National Post (National Edition)
‘THE TIME HAS COME FOR FRANCE TO RISE UP’
French President Emmanuel Macron parades down the Champs Elyseés after his inauguration ceremony in Paris.
PARIS • In ceremonies marked by youthful optimism and old-world Napoleonic pomp, Emmanuel Macron swept into office Sunday as France’s new president, pledging to strengthen the European Union, redesign French politics and glue together his divided nation.
Macron’s presidency began with a visit to troops wounded in overseas combat — a reminder of France’s large global military presence and role in fighting extremists from Syria to Africa.
He’s expected to name a prime minister imminently, and to show his commitment to reviving European unity. Macron takes his first presidential trip Monday to Berlin to meet Chancellor Angela Merkel.
In a lofty but lucid inaugural speech, Macron vowed to lift France out of its sense of decline and lost purpose, and seize again its place in the world.
“The time has come for France to rise up to the occasion. The division and fractures across our society must be overcome ... because the world expects us to be strong, solid, clairvoyant.”
He promised to take France’s responsibilities to tackle today’s crises — “the migration crisis, the climate challenge, authoritarian abuse, the excesses of capitalism in the world and of course terrorism. Nothing now strikes one and spares the other. We are all interdependent. We are all neighbours.”
The 39-year-old Macron is the youngest president in the country’s history and the eighth president of France’s Fifth Republic, which was created in 1958. A former economy minister with probusiness, pro-European views, he is the first French president who doesn’t originate from the country’s two mainstream parties.
After Macron was formally declared president at the Elysée Palace, 21 cannon shots were fired from across the Seine River at the Invalides monument, where Napoleon is entombed.
Macron later solemnly paid tribute at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier beneath the Arc de Triomphe, greeting veterans and military officers in formation beneath the imposing structure.
Reviving support for European unity will be among Macron’s top priorities.
“We will need a more efficient Europe, a more democratic Europe, a more political Europe because it’s the instrument of our power and our sovereignty, I will work on that,” he said Sunday.
Macron has also promised to reinvigorate French politics by bringing in new faces, and will form a government in the coming days.
His Republic on the Move movement — barely a year old — is hoping to elect a majority of lawmakers in next month’s parliamentary elections so that he can pass his programs. It has announced an initial list of 428 candidates for the 577 seats up for grabs in France’s lower house of parliament in the vote on June 11 and 18.