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Edouard Philippe: France’s little-known new premier

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PARIS: France’s new Prime Minister Edouard Philippe is a low-profile 46-year-old from the right-wing Republican­s party whose politics and interests mirror those of centrist President Emmanuel Macron.

As well as being of similar age, both come from provincial France but followed a classic route through the elite universiti­es Sciences Po and ENA, then public service in Paris and on to politics.

Both have also worked briefly in the private sector: Philippe in a law firm and then as a lobbyist for state nuclear group Areva, while Macron was once an investment banker.

And both count well-connected political adviser and writer Jacques Attali as well as late Socialist Prime Minister Michel Rocard as influences during their ascent through French political life.

But whereas Macron considers himself left-leaning and got his break under Socialist President Francois Hollande, the bearded Philippe has worked his way up internally through the conservati­ve Republican­s party.

The mayor of his hometown since 2010, the gritty northern port of Le Havre, Philippe was first elected to Parliament in 2012 as a Republican­s MP for his SeineMarit­ime area.

The son of two teachers is a longtime ally of ex-prime minister Alain Juppe, the veteran centrist whom he backed as a candidate for the Republican­s’ nomination for this year’s election.

“He has the advantage of being completely unknown to the average French person,” said political analyst Chloe Morin of the JeanJaures Foundation, a left-leaning think tank.

Macron, who won the presidenti­al election on May 7, came to power promising to renew French politics and bring in fresh faces.

As well as their similariti­es in outlook and experience, Philippe’s political positionin­g is crucial to understand­ing why France’s youngest president has plucked him from relative obscurity.

Macron is hoping to attract other young, centrist allies in the Republican­s to his new Republique En Marche party (Republic on the Move, REM), and his choice will perhaps entice others to cross over.

Speaking last Thursday, Philippe encouraged Macron to “transgress” by naming someone from outside his party which he hinted would encourage some of his colleagues to join the REM.

Macron wants to win a parliament­ary majority in June elections with the REM, which he hopes will redraw the political landscape, ending the grip on power of the traditiona­l forces of left and right, the Socialists and Republican­s.

Philippe is sporty, multi-lingual and known to be an intellectu­al, but is also seen by some critics as aloof or even arrogant.

“Intelligen­t, lively and at times a bit crazy,” one insider who worked with him in the Republican­s party said, adding that he had a tendency to be “brusque” with colleagues.

“He’s not easy to get to know,” a local politician in his native Normandy region also said on condition of anonymity, adding that Philippe “doesn’t have massive warmth” despite having many qualities.

A book last year on Juppe by journalist Gael Tchakaloff was brutal, describing Philippe as having “arrogance, an excess of selfconfid­ence and ambitions beyond all proportion.”

The new prime minister is also a keen amateur boxer, has written two crime thrillers, and has a strong interest in war-time British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.

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 ??  ?? Edouard Philippe, right, newly appointed prime minister, is welcomed by his predecesso­r Bernard Cazeneuve in Paris on Monday during an official handover ceremony. (AFP)
Edouard Philippe, right, newly appointed prime minister, is welcomed by his predecesso­r Bernard Cazeneuve in Paris on Monday during an official handover ceremony. (AFP)

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