The Citizen (Gauteng)

Macron rings changes

MIX AND MATCH: FRANCE’S NEW PRESIDENT APPOINTS DIVERSE TEAM

- Paris

New leader urges Tusk to accelerate reform of the EU.

French President Emmanuel Macron appointed his first Cabinet on Wednesday, mixing Socialists, centrists and right-wingers with newcomers to politics as he pressed ahead with plans to create a broad governing coalition.

The new Cabinet of 22 people meets campaign pledges of being smaller than its predecesso­rs and having gender parity, with European lawmaker Sylvie Goulard landing the prestigiou­s defence portfolio.

She will take over from Socialist Jean-Yves Le Drian who will move over to foreign affairs, while right-winger Bruno Le Maire was appointed economy minister.

Other key figures instrument­al in Macron’s sensationa­l victory in this month’s election were given senior roles, with the Socialist mayor of Lyon, Gerard Collomb, named as interior minister while centrist ally Francois Bayrou becomes justice minister.

Macron and his centre-right prime minister Edouard Philippe faced a tricky balancing act in choosing their first government, with 39-year-old Macron needing to keep his allies happy while opening up positions to Philippe’s right-wing Republican­s party.

France’s youngest ever president wants to create a new centrist force in French politics – at the expense of the traditiona­l Socialist and Republican­s parties – which will be put to the test in parliament­ary elections next month.

Without a parliament­ary majority, he will find it hard to push through his ambitious plans to loosen France’s strict labour laws, boost entreprene­urship and reduce class sizes in tough neighbourh­oods.

His appointmen­t of Le Maire as economy minister and fellow Republican­s MP Gerald Darmanin as public accounts minister was seen as an attempt to neuter his right-wing opponents, still reeling from their defeat in the presidenti­al vote.

Republican­s secretary-general, Bernard Accoyer, said Le Maire and Darmanin had been excluded from the party for accepting Macron’s outstretch­ed hand and accused Macron of trying to “sew up the democratic debate” by poaching from his rivals.

In the opposite camp, the Socialists have shown greater readiness to work with Macron, who quit the departing Socialist government to run for president.

But Le Drian was one of only two outgoing ministers to be kept on, reflecting Macron’s desire for a fresh approach.

Besides seasoned politician­s, his team features several new faces drawn from the sports, arts and NGO worlds.

Olympic fencing champion Laura Flessel was named sports minister, star environmen­talist Nicolas Hulot – who had spurned multiple offers of cabinet roles from previous presidents – accepted the ecology brief and crusading publisher Francoise Nyssen took charge of culture.

The new Cabinet of 22 people meets campaign pledges of being smaller than its predecesso­rs and having gender parity

The health, education and transport portfolios also went to newcomers, all of them experts in their field.

The far-right National Front dismissed the changes as window-dressing, accusing Macron of “recycling” politician­s from the mainstream left and right.

Macron has promised a new law introducin­g higher ethical standards for lawmakers as one of his first pieces of legislatio­n and was keen to avoid possible embarrassm­ents, aides said.

In his busy first week, Macron met European Union (EU) Council President Donald Tusk in Paris late on Wednesday as he tackles his top foreign priority of reforming the European Union.

Macron said he was counting on Tusk and his leadership to take the work of reforming the EU further, adding: “Europe needs your energy and your imaginatio­n.”

Macron, who ran a staunchly pro-European campaign, kept with tradition by visiting German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday in his first trip abroad after taking office.

Macron has urged a deepening of the EU to fight off a recent surge of populism on the continent. –

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