The Pak Banker

Back-to-work ethic

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Eighteen months before the French presidenti­al election, the campaign has begun. Admirably demonstrat­ing the back-to-work ethic he preached in June as the country's lockdown restrictio­ns were eased, Emmanuel Macron this month sounded the starting gun for the race with a shot across the bows of the Muslim community.

Variously described as a "crackdown" or an Islamic "reformatio­n," Macron put the Muslim community squarely in the political crosshairs, announcing a new law that he said would end religious "separatism" and free French Islam from "foreign influences."

As so often with politics, the real target was elsewhere. Macron may genuinely believe in reforming how religious education is handled - although the country's largest minority community has too frequently been a punching bag for his ministers. But he believes much more strongly in winning the next election.

And to do that, he will need to tame a far greater threat than imams who are trained abroad: He will need to curb the rise of the far right. History is not on Macron's side. France's last two presidents have only lasted one term. But, happily for him, history also provides a solution.

In the past half-century, no French leader has been elected with more than 54% of the vote. There are two notable exceptions: Jacques Chirac in 2002, when he won 82% against the far- right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen, and Macron himself in 2017, when he won 66% of votes against Le Pen's daughter Marine. Thus, for a French politician, there is no better opponent than a Le Pen.

A new poll last week suggested that rivalry is exactly what the French public wants. Macron and Marine Le Pen were far ahead of other politician­s, both standing to gain around 25% of votes if the election were held now.

That places the French centrist president in a quandary, both desiring the far right as an opponent and fearing the power of its ideas. Lean too far away from the right wing, and his mainstream political opponents will sweep in and wrap themselves in the antiimmigr­ation garb of the far right.

This is where Macron's plan to tackle Islamic "separatism" has come from. By tacking a little bit to the right, with talk of separatism and controllin­g imams, and tacking a little bit to the left, by issuing, in the same speech, a mea culpa for how the colonial past created French ghettos, he hopes to remain in the center while also riding the wave of the far right that is sweeping Europe.

It is a good strategy that has seen other European politician­s win by dancing to the hard right's tune. But it has a flaw: Le Pen is a conductor who can set the mood music.

Look at how the National Rally, the rebranded name for the National Front, responded to his speech and you see the battle lines they are preparing for: not immigratio­n per se, which can be satiated with policy, but freedom and independen­ce, which never can be.

While noting that it was the Rally that pushed Macron to act - a common claim for far- and hardright parties across Europe and, sadly, often an accurate one - the group concludes, "It is unfortunat­e that in the name of the fight against radical Islamism, the French are forced to cut back a little more on their freedoms, especially those of parents."

The

reference

to

parents

is because Macron, as part of the crackdown on "separatism," announced an end to home schooling. Banning home schooling is an unorthodox policy prescripti­on for separatism. It is legal in France, unlike in Germany, but not many do it - just perhaps in the low tens of thousands.

As with the French ban on the full-face veil, it is a prescripti­on without evidence: The French state doesn't appear to know how many citizens home-school their children, and because of the ban on collecting religious informatio­n, has no way of knowing how many of those might be Muslim.

What home schooling is, however, is a delineatin­g line that Le Pen has shrewdly identified can be painted as a question of freedom. As the election draws nearer, expect Le Pen to return to this theme, explicatin­g that it is politician­s who are seeking to take away freedom from the French, of deciding what is best for their children, and so on - all the rallying cries of independen­ce from government bureaucrac­y that have proven so politicall­y powerful for the right in Europe.

 ??  ?? believe Macron in reforming may genuinely how reli
gious education is handled -
although the country's largest
minority community has too
frequently been a punching
bag for his ministers. But he
believes much more strongly in
winning the next election.
believe Macron in reforming may genuinely how reli gious education is handled - although the country's largest minority community has too frequently been a punching bag for his ministers. But he believes much more strongly in winning the next election.

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