Iran Daily

Macron reshuffles cabinet, hoping to steady his administra­tion

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French President Emmanuel Macron reshuffled his government on Tuesday, naming the head of his ruling party to the sensitive post of interior minister and maintainin­g a left-right balance as he builds a broad base to fight the 2019 European elections.

Macron’s immediate aim is to steady an administra­tion after a series of resignatio­ns that have challenged his authority. He also wants to inject new energy into his social and economic reform agenda and reverse a slump in his popularity, Reuters reported.

France’s leader had been expected to announce the revamp last week before postponing it, a delay he said was to ensure the right decisions were made but which opponents said raised questions about the depth of experience in his party.

A Macron aide said there would be no shift in policy direction.

“We have at the same time incoming names with a reputation in their areas of expertise, which will strengthen the government’s efficiency, and others who have a broader profile,” the official said.

Macron and his Prime Minister Edouard Philippe had been weighing the reshuffle for two weeks following the resignatio­n of interior minister, Gerard Collomb, one of Macron’s earliest backers. Collomb’s departure followed two other ministeria­l resignatio­ns just weeks earlier.

In the end, the appointmen­t of Christophe Castaner as interior minister, moving from the position of head of Macron’s political party, was the only high profile change. Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, who has spearheade­d Macron’s eurozone reform push, and Foreign Minister Jean-yves Le Drian retained their posts.

Nonetheles­s, other lower profile positions underlined Macron’s ambitions to strengthen the broad base of his Republique En Marche party as he prepares to go head-to-head with France’s far-right in next May’s European elections.

Didier Guillaume, a former Socialist Party chief whip, moves into the job of agricultur­e minister. Franck Riester, a lawmaker belonging to a group which splintered from the center-right Les Republicai­ns after Macron blew apart the traditiona­l mainstream parties last year, will head the Culture Ministry.

Macron’s popularity has sunk in recent months as voter frustratio­n has welled up over a leader many see as arrogant and the architect of policies that favor the affluent, including the scrapping of a wealth levy and a cut to corporate taxes.

The cabinet resignatio­ns and a scandal surroundin­g the violent conduct of a presidenti­al bodyguard have distracted Macron, a 40-year-old former investment banker, from his push to overhaul the pension and unemployme­nt benefit systems.

Opponents on the left and right have sought to depict Macron as a leader with diminished star power now paying the price for centralizi­ng authority and decision-making in the hands of a small inner circle, but he faces no immediate threat.

His parliament­ary party holds a commanding majority in the National Assembly, his presidenti­al term runs until 2022, and the opposition is divided.

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