Weekend Herald

Macron hits back at age- gap gossip

President unhappy about attention over a marriage that breaks the mould

- AdamTaylor Hizbollah talks of conflict in Israel Meeting to extend laptop ban Isis recruiter faces Australia trial

Emmanuel Macron i s 24 years younger than his wife, and the incoming French President i s exasperate­d that people keep talking about it.

Discussing the assumption­s and rumours about his relationsh­ip with his wife, Brigitte Trogneux, Macron told Le Parisian newspaper this week that “if I had been 20 years older than my wife, nobody would have thought for a single second that I couldn’t be”.

“It’s because she is 20 years older than me that a lot of people say, ‘ this relationsh­ip can’t be tenable, it can’t be possible’,” he said.

“It says a lot about the misogyny in France,” Macron continued. “There is a big problem with the presentati­on of society and how they see the place of a woman.”

He claimed the conspiracy theories around him and his wife were due to “misogyny” and people ascribing to “traditiona­l, homogenous” views about society.

He said “rampant homophobia” caused critics to accuse him of being gay as if it were a “stain or disease”.

Macron claimed people who started these rumours had “lost their sense of reality” and had a “big problem with homosexual­ity”.

The idea that French society finds it hard to accept a man with a much older wife is a sentiment many French women seem to relate to. Speaking to the Washington Post’s Mary Jordan ahead of the election, some suggested that the Macrons’ marriage was social “revenge” for years of powerful men seeking younger wives.

But it raises the question: Just how unusual is Macron’s May- December romance in French politics anyway?

When he takes office, Macron will be the only leader under France’s Fifth Republic to be younger than his partner; no surprise there.

However, the Macrons also will have the largest age gap of any French first couple under the Fifth Republic. Charles de Gaulle and Francois Hollande were both close to a decade older than their partners when they entered office, but those relationsh­ips are less than half the age gap the Macrons have.

The complicate­d love lives of some French leaders do make this comparison a little more tricky, however. To the delight of French tabloids, both Hollande and his predecesso­r, Nicolas Sarkozy, split from their respective partners during their time in the Elysee Palace. Hollande quickly entered a relationsh­ip with actress Julia Gayet, 18 years his junior, while Sarkozy married former model Carla Bruni, 13 years younger.

Another factor i s the fact that many French presidents have conducted well- known extramarit­al affairs. Francois Mitterrand’s lengthy but covert relationsh­ip with art historian Anne Pingeot is now widely acknowledg­ed and pretty much accepted — the couple had a daughter together, and Mitterrand would appear with her in public later in life. Pingeot was 27 years younger than Mitterrand.

Around the world, the picture gets even more complicate­d. If you look at the leaders of the world’s 20 largest economies, at least three have age gaps with their partners that are at least as big as the Macrons’: Jacob Zuma ( 38 years) of South Africa, Michel Temer ( 33 years) of Brazil and President Donald Trump ( 24 years) of the United States. However, there are complexiti­es here, too, some resulting from societal difference­s. For example, Zuma may top the above list, but he is also a polygamist. His wives are of varying ages.

Little is known about the current wife of Saudi King Salman, so she is not included. Meanwhile, the age of Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni’s low- profile wife, Emanuela Mauro, i s not publicly known. And Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is estranged from his wife, while Russian President Vladimir Putin split from his spouse in 2013 ( although he has since been linked with a number of younger women).

However, it does seem clear that the leaders of the world’s largest economies do tend to favour younger partners. There is only one who joins Macron in choosing an older spouse: Angela Merkel. The German chancellor’s husband, Joachim Sauer, is five years older. A federal judge in Washington yesterday signalled her willingnes­s to become the third judge nationwide, if needed, to order a halt to Donald Trump’s revised executive order banning new visas and immigratio­n from six Muslim- majority countries. US District Judge Tanya Chutkan postponed ruling on two combined challenges to the White House action by Iranian- American organisati­ons and a Shia Muslim group, saying she would wait for decisions expected after federal appeals courts arguments this month on halts imposed in March by judges from Hawaii and Maryland. But Chutkan said she was persuaded by arguments that the groups’ missions and the lives of more than a dozen individual plaintiffs would be unconstitu­tionally harmed by the travel ban. Lebanese Hizbollah said yesterday that any future conflict between the Shia group and Israel could take place inside Israeli territory, as tensions rise between the arch foes. Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, Hizbollah’s leader, also said in a speech televised live that the group was dismantlin­g all its military positions along Lebanon’s eastern border with Syria, and this area would now be patrolled just by the Lebanese army. Hizbollah, an ally of Tehran and Damascus, has been fighting for years in Syria’s conflict against an array of rebels and Sunni Islamist fighters. The Syrian conflict has also been an arena where tensions between Israel and Hizbollah have ramped up. Recent Israeli airstrikes against Hizbollah targets in Syria appeared to mark a more assertive stance toward the group. The two sides last fought a war in 2006. US Homeland Security officials met with major US airlines and a trade group yesterday to discuss the impact of possibly expanding a ban on large electronic gadgets on planes to flights from some European airports, three sources briefed on the meeting said. The meeting included high- level executives from Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, American Airlines Group and trade group Airlines for America, the sources said. The airlines and group declined to comment. In March, the US announced laptop restrictio­ns on flights originatin­g from 10 airports including in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey because of fears that a concealed bomb could be installed in electronic devices taken onto aircraft. Britain quickly followed suit with restrictio­ns on a slightly different set of routes. Australia's most wanted jihadist is likely to be extradited from Turkey within months, says Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Melbourne- born Neil Prakash, a senior Isis ( Islamic State) recruiter, was arrested in Turkey last year and placed in jail. He will face trial in Australia, Turnbull said.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Emmanuel Macron says he will govern more effectivel­y if he is happy and that means having his wife, Brigitte Trogneux, at his side.
Picture / AP Emmanuel Macron says he will govern more effectivel­y if he is happy and that means having his wife, Brigitte Trogneux, at his side.

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