Khaleej Times

Macron is now the mascot for a more vibrant Europe

The French president is bringing a new kind of thinking to European politics

- Mark Leonard —Project Syndicate Mark Leonard is Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations

Sovereignt­y in Europe can be exercised only at the level of the EU. He is taking France from the Fifth Republic to a Sixth Republic that is truly European

Until the terrorist attack at a market in southern France on March 23, French President Emmanuel Macron had been planning to launch a new European-level political campaign. Though the official rollout has now been postponed, Macron’s latest project remains central to his presidency. Macron’s La Grande Marche pour l’Europe will mimic the programme that toppled France’s dominant political parties and transforme­d his La République En Marche! movement into a political force in 2017. Over the course of six weeks, he will dispatch 10 ministers and 200 parliament­arians to survey the French people’s views on Europe and European issues. The results will be considered in developing a platform that can beat populist and Euroskepti­c parties in the 2019 European Parliament election. Macron has persuaded all other EU member states (with the exception of Hungary and the UK) to conduct similar public consultati­ons, which he hopes will lay the groundwork for the EU-level reforms he proposed in major speeches in Athens and at the Sorbonne last year. To understand the full scope of Macron’s ambitions, we should consider the principles that underpin his worldview and guide his approach to politics. Few are better acquainted with Macron’s thinking than French historian and philosophe­r François Dosse. Dosse not only taught Macron at Sciences Po in the late 1990s, but also introduced him to his intellectu­al mentor, French philosophe­r Paul Ricoeur, for whom Macron worked as a research assistant for two years. Dosse published a book about Macron and Ricoeur titled Le Philosophe et le President. A few weeks ago, I met with him in his Paris apartment to discuss his latest work, and he explained Macron’s approach to European reform as a combinatio­n of two fundamenta­l Ricoeurian concepts. The first is “consensus dissensuel.” This may sound like a highfaluti­n version of “having one’s cake and eating it.” But, according to Dosse, it is really about drawing strength from the opposition between two conflictin­g viewpoints, unlike a Hegelian approach, which seeks synthesis between two poles. Macron’s embrace of the Ricoeurian model is evident in his frequent use of the phrase en même temps (at the same time) when describing parallel domestic-reform proposals. Similarly, Macron’s vision for Europe seems to reconcile the irreconcil­able: his plan is both to preserve member states’ sovereignt­y and deepen EU integratio­n. Institutio­nally, this means supporting supranatio­nal bodies while also allowing for more flexibilit­y in areas where national government­s, rather than Brussels, are better positioned to solve problems.

On defence policy, Macron wants to work within existing EU treaties, and he supports proposals for a Permanent Structured Cooperatio­n (Pesco) agreement and a European Defence Fund. But he also hopes to move beyond the current EU and even Nato frameworks to establish a European Interventi­on Initiative (EII). On migration, Macron wants to secure Europe’s external borders and ensure that the burden of taking in refugees is shared across the EU. In the short term, he is pushing for an agreement among member states on refugee quotas. But, in the long run, he supports greater harmonisat­ion of asylum systems.

Macron also hopes to reconcile opposite ideas with respect to the euro. Beyond these areas, Macron wants to boost innovation in the digital sphere, by establishi­ng a European version of the United States’ Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa). At the same time, he wants to protect national sovereignt­y in the digital age through regulation­s and a common fiscal approach.

The second Ricoeurian concept underpinni­ng Macron’s worldview is the idea of a European “refoundati­on.” Whereas the first wave of European integratio­n was largely limited to economics, Macron now wants to focus on politics and culture, starting with the European Parliament election next year.

When Macron looks at the EU political stage, he sees stale cartel parties that are just as ripe for disruption as France’s mainstream parties were in 2017. For example, he has mocked the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP), asking how any parliament­ary group can call itself Christian Democratic when it includes the parties of former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.

Macron also recognises that the decline of the centre left in Europe — along with the impending post-Brexit exodus of UK Labour Party MPs — has left a large void that needs to be filled. To that end, he has considered creating a Europe-wide En Marche! movement that could nominate its own Spitzenkan­didat to the European Commission presidency. In fact, there has already been some talk of positionin­g European Commission­er for Competitio­n Margrethe Vestager for that role.

Initially, the Macroniste­s had planned to recruit defectors from other party groups, and then ally with the left-leaning Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe. But the creation of a European En Marche! could mean that they will try to edge out the ALDE, too. At any rate, German Chancellor Angela Merkel will insist on a conservati­ve candidate for the Commission presidency.

Much remains to be seen, but it is clear that Macron has brought a new kind of thinking to European politics. In his view, sovereignt­y in Europe can really be exercised only at the level of the EU. He is taking France from the Fifth Republic to a Sixth Republic that is no longer strictly franco-francaise, but truly European.

 ?? KT ILLUSTRATI­ON BY SANTHOSH KUMAR ??
KT ILLUSTRATI­ON BY SANTHOSH KUMAR

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