The Borneo Post

Macron marches to French presidency

Pro-EU former banker to be inaugurate­d as France’s youngest ever president next weekend

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PARIS: Emmanuel Macron won a resounding victory in the French presidenti­al election but the focus shifted immediatel­y yesterday to whether he can govern the country without the support of a traditiona­l party.

At 39, the pro- EU former investment banker will become France’s youngest- ever president when he is inaugurate­d next weekend after crushing far-right leader Marine Le Pen in a run-off vote on Sunday.

The European Union breathed a sigh of relief at the election of a supportive French leader and the euro briefly hit a six-month high, but Macron faces a formidable challenge to enact his programme while trying to unite a fractured and demoralise­d country.

“I know the anger, the anxiety and the doubts that a large number of you have expressed,” Macron told thousands of cheering and f lag-waving supporters at a victory party in the courtyard of the Louvre museum in Paris.

“I will fight with all my strength against the divisions that are underminin­g us,” he said.

Final results showed he had won 66.1 per cent of the votes to 33.9 percent for Le Pen.

But many commentato­rs said the fact that a third of the electorate either abstained or cast blank or spoiled votes on Sunday

I will fight with all my strength against the divisions that are underminin­g us.

Emmanuel Macron

showed Macron would start his mandate under intense scrutiny.

The left-wing paper Liberation said he was “under pressure”, even before his inaugurati­on which is set to take place next Sunday.

“The high abstention rate, despite the threat of the far-right, is a sign already of dissatisfa­ction with the new president,” it said in an editorial.

Macron, a former economy minister, has proposed an ambitious domestic reform agenda.

He wants to ease rigid labour laws he believes fuel high unemployme­nt, cut state spending, improve education in deprived areas and increase welfare protection to the self-employed.

But he is inexperien­ced — the presidenti­al election was the first time he had stood for office — he has no political party and he faces a huge task to fashion a working parliament­ary majority after legislativ­e elections next month.

His centrist En Marche (On the Move) movement, barely a year old, has said it will field candidates in every constituen­cy in the tworound election in June.

There is scepticism however about Macron’s ability to win a majority with En Marche candidates, meaning he might have to form a coalition.

“In order for us to act, we will need a majority in the National Assembly,” En Marche secretary general Richard Ferrand told TF1 television.

One of Macron’s immediate tasks will be to name his prime minister who will govern between now and the parliament­ary elections on June 11 and 18, and perhaps beyond.

Macron said before Sunday’s vote he had made his choice but would not reveal the name. He has previously said he would like to appoint a woman.

Yesterday, he appeared alongside the man he will succeed as president, President Francois Hollande, at the commemorat­ion of Victory in Europe day on May 8, 1945.

Hollande, who launched Macron’s political career by appointing him as an advisor before appointing him to the cabinet, greeted him warmly before they laid a wreath together under the Arc de Triomphe. Macron also inherits a country still in a state of emergency following a string of Islamist-inspired attacks since 2015 that have killed more than 230 people and plagued Hollande’s presidency.

In an early plea for unity, Macron reached out to Le Pen’s supporters after a vicious election campaign that exposed deep economic and social divisions, as well as tensions provoked by identity and immigratio­n.

“I will do everything I can over the next five years to ensure that people no longer have any reason to vote for extremes,” he said.

Le Pen responded to defeat by vowing she would lead her antiimmigr­ation National Front (FN) strongly into the legislativ­e elections. A key aide said the party would change its name as part of a revamp.

According to polls released Monday, En Marche will win between 24 and 26 per cent of votes in those elections, with the conservati­ve Republican­s party on 22 percent and the National Front on 21-22 per cent.

This could give the National Front a significan­t increase on the two seats the party currently holds.

The far-left France Insoumise (France Unbowed) party of Jean-Luc Melenchon would score 13-15 per cent and the Socialist Party 8- 9 per cent if the two- round parliament­ary elections were held now, the surveys suggested.

Unknown three years ago, Macron is now poised to become one of Europe’s most powerful leaders.

Western leaders largely hailed the result after the shock of Britain’s vote to leave the EU and the election of Donald Trump in the United States.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman said it was a “victory for a strong and united Europe” and the two had a ‘very warm’ telephone call after his victory was announced, Macron’s team said.

Brussels was visibly relieved too at avoiding a Le Pen victory which could have threatened the very existence of the bloc after Britain’s vote to leave.

In a victory party on Sunday evening, Macron walked on to the stage to the strains of ‘Ode to Joy’, the anthem of the EU.

His 64-year- old wife Brigitte joined him on stage with her children and grandchild­ren, a sign that they will be a highly visible couple when he is in office.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Hollande (left) and Macron attend a ceremony marking the 72nd anniversar­y of the victory over Nazi Germany during World War II in Paris.
— AFP photo Hollande (left) and Macron attend a ceremony marking the 72nd anniversar­y of the victory over Nazi Germany during World War II in Paris.
 ??  ?? Macron greets supporters before delivering a speech in front of the Pyramid at the Louvre Museum after winning the second round of the French presidenti­al election. — AFP photo
Macron greets supporters before delivering a speech in front of the Pyramid at the Louvre Museum after winning the second round of the French presidenti­al election. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Macron elected French president
Macron elected French president

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