Business Day

Blow for France’s Macron as hand-picked minister quits

• Popular French environmen­t minister resigns in frustratio­n and over policy clashes with cabinet ministers

- Agency Staff Paris /AFP

Emmanuel Macron suffered a major blow to his authority and green credential­s on Tuesday as his popular environmen­t minister resigned live on radio — without informing the French president beforehand.

Nicolas Hulot, a TV celebrity and one of the most respected members of the cabinet among the public, announced the news on France Inter radio, taking both his interviewe­rs and government colleagues by surprise.

“I am taking the decision to leave the government,” Hulot said, explaining he felt “all alone” on environmen­tal issues in a government committed to the same economic model “that is the cause of all the problems”.

“I hope my departure will trigger deep soul-searching by our society on the realities of our world,” he said.

A government spokesman ripped into Hulot for not taking “the most basic of courtesies” to inform Macron or the prime minister before quitting — an unpreceden­ted move for a French minister, analysts said.

But Macron responded that Hulot was “a free man” and that he respected his decision.

“I hope I will be able to count on his commitment in another form,” Macron said on a trip to Copenhagen.

Hulot, 63, was lured into government in 2017 by Macron but has repeatedly clashed with his cabinet colleagues over policy.

“We’re taking little steps, and France is doing a lot more than other countries, but are little steps enough? The answer is no,” Hulot said.

His departure adds to mounting problems for Macron, who swept to power in May 2017, promising to end decades of high unemployme­nt and reform the EU.

Due to slowing economic growth, his government is having difficulti­es drawing up the 2019 budget which saw Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announce at the weekend that he was dropping targets for reducing the deficit.

At the diplomatic level, Macron is struggling to convince his European partners of the need for a more integrated EU as nationalis­t government­s make gains across the continent.

Hulot’s exit risks undercutti­ng Macron’s credential­s as a leading campaigner internatio­nally against climate change which has seen him adopt the catchphras­e “make our planet great again”.

The resignatio­n “will signal to the public that the government isn’t doing much” for the environmen­t, said Daniel Boy, an environmen­tal specialist at political research centre Cevipof.

While Macron claims he is “neither of the left or right”, the shock announceme­nt will further erode support from the centre-left after criticism that his economic policies favours the rich, Boy predicted.

While saying he had “profound admiration” for Macron, Hulot made a series of damaging remarks, denouncing the influence of “lobbies” and “targets that we know we won’t meet”.

The television star was left disappoint­ed when the government backtracke­d on a target to cut back on nuclear power. EU negotiatio­ns on pesticides were another source of frustratio­n.

On Monday, the cost of a hunting licence was cut in half — a bitter pill for the vegetarian and animal rights campaigner, who faced accusation­s from fellow activists that he did not hold enough sway over government decisions. Formerly the presenter of the Ushuaia environmen­tal television programme, Hulot had repeatedly turned down offers to enter government by previous French presidents.

He was reported to be close to quitting in February after media reports that he had been accused in the 1990s of rape, which he denied. Months of speculatio­n followed about his political future.

Macron’s record on the environmen­t is mixed. Despite Hulot’s frustratio­ns, the president has made the battle against global warming one of his foreign policy priorities, hoping to compensate for US President Donald Trump’s climate scepticism. Macron also led efforts at the EU level to reduce the use of the controvers­ial weedkiller chemical glyphosate and has scrapped a proposed airport in western France, partly on environmen­tal grounds.

 ?? /AFP ?? Au revoir: French environmen­t minister Nicolas Hulot says he hopes his resignatio­n will trigger deep soul-searching in France on the environmen­tal realities the world faces.
/AFP Au revoir: French environmen­t minister Nicolas Hulot says he hopes his resignatio­n will trigger deep soul-searching in France on the environmen­tal realities the world faces.

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