Deccan Chronicle

MACRON SAVES DEMOCRACY

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WHAT IS AT STAKE is not just the future of France but, to a large extent, the future of Europe and, even broader, the image of democracy in the world”, they said before the French presidenti­al election, which resonated throughout Europe and across the Atlantic. In the wake of Brexit and Donald Trump’s unexpected victory, it offered a stark choice between a liberal, establishm­ent vision for France and Europe personifie­d by Emmanuel Macron and a nationalis­t, protection­ist one offered by Le Pen. The magnitude of his victory showed that Europe, the euro single currency and a liberal economy (in short globalisat­ion) are, contrary to stereotype, electoral winners, especially in France.

EUROPE HAS had the most terror attacks and taken in the maximum immigrants of Islamic faith has time and again shown that the response to fears is not in turning right! What is it about European society that makes it so liberated? Holland first, Austria then and now France! On all three occasions, the bogey of right winning the polls was drummed up by the media.

WHAT MACRON’S win means is French liberalism may survive, even if they banned Azan, Burkhas and made the practice of faith a private affair to be observed at home, they shut mosques and yet these things were not seen in a negative light. Also, not wearing your religious identity may protect you from the haters. In a sense, French thinking was different from other European powers. Seen in the outside world as isolationi­st and even xenophobic, French society has had much to offer the immigrants.

WHERE WILL France head now is the most intriguing question as elections to parliament loom. The youth unemployme­nt rate stands just below 24% and if it grows any, Macron’s En Marche! movement, which left both the Socialists and the Republican­s — the two parties that have reigned over French politics since the founding of the Fifth Republic — gasping and flailing behind him, would have to face the wrath.

LE PEN’S FRONT NATIONAL objected to Beethoven’s Ode to Joy (which is the European anthem) being played when Macron entered the Louvre instead of La Marseillai­se. Macron knows he inherits a divided country as illustrate­d by the big divisions between urban and small-town France, between the north-east leaning toward Le Pen and the south-west toward Macron, between the educated and the non-educated.

 ??  ?? Le Pen
Le Pen
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Beethoven

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