The National - News

IN POLITICS, NO QUARTER GIVEN TO ‘THE OTHER HALF’

Travails of Brigitte Macron show the confusion that persists over roles of leaders’ spouses and their ambitions, writes Damien McElroy

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The past week has been a bruising one for Brigitte Macron, the new French premiere dame. If it were advertised, the role of consort to the French president would be a very appealing opportunit­y.

With three palaces at the couple’s disposal, a jet and a lifetime of perks, the French state offers a golden existence.

But the sorry experience of recent occupants tells a different tale. Emmanuel Macron, who became president in May, was forced by an online petition to abandon plans to grant his wife an office of first lady. While unpaid, the job would have come with permanent staff and its own agenda.

The move was designed to avoid a legal vacuum that had tripped up previous presidents. In a civic republic, the idea of a first lady with her own causes and patronage has been controvers­ial.

Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, the wife of Nicolas Sarkozy, cost the taxpayer €437,376 (Dh1.86 million) a year from 2007 to 2012, while the short stay in the Elysee Palace by the partner of his successor Francois Hollande cost €236,904.

Ms Macron, 64, is dedicated to the cause of autism in children. She has hired Pierre-Olivier Costa from Paris city council as head of her section of the presidenti­al staff.

In an example of the expectatio­ns surroundin­g the first lady, she was reported to have spent hours on the phone to Chinese diplomats after Beijing requested she act as “godmother” to a panda cub born in a French zoo.

By abandoning the upgrade, Mr Macron has ensured that his wife and those who follow in her footsteps inhabit a political no-man’s land – no ordinary spouse but not a USstyle presidenti­al partner.

To some, the climbdown was an opportunit­y lost to put an end to a soap opera.

“Check out the careers of first ladies of France and you can see why no self-respecting woman would want to go anywhere near the role,” said Nabila Ramdani, a Parisian writer. “State-sponsored doormat might be a better descriptio­n. Humiliatio­ns range from presidents routinely cheating on their premieres dames to denying them the right to speak for themselves at all.”

It is not just France. All of the major democracie­s, with the notable exception of the US, have had women and men struggle with their spouses’ rise to power.

Even in Washington, it is only the good grace of the women who have been first lady that has resulted in an absence of scandal. If Michelle Obama was an inspiratio­n in the White House, it must be noted Hillary Clinton bore her husband’s philanderi­ng with a stoic dignity. The Bush women were models of aristocrat­ic good cheer.

“Everyone who ends up married to the head of government or state does the job in their own way but it always says something, often a great deal, about them both,” said Anne Perkins, a British commentato­r.

The wrong partner can be a handful. Canadians still talk of how Margaret Trudeau, the much younger wife of the charismati­c Pierre, prime minister in the 1960s through the 1980s, danced at New York’s Studio 54 with Mick Jagger.

More recently the couple’s son Justin and daughter-in-law Sophie, now also living in the prime minister’s official residence, ran into trouble when the former TV presenter sought to boost her staff support.

Attempts to continue in a career are also highly risky. Cherie Blair, the lawyer wife of Tony Blair, was pilloried for representi­ng Malaysian businessme­n and other wealthy clients during his decade in Downing Street.

Samantha Cameron was on the receiving end of barbs as she maintained a job at the upmarket stationery and luxury goods firm Smythson while David Cameron presided over an austerity government.

Spouses with strong views risk gaining reputation­s as dissenters. Akia Abe, the wife of Japanese leader Shinzo, has written a book titled I Live My

Own Life and is often out of step with his government.

At least none of these women experience­d the humiliatio­n of Veronica Berlusconi, who was forced to blow the whistle on her husband Silvio’s sordid parties with young women in his mansions around the country in what came to be known as the “Bunga Bunga” scandal.

The men appear to have it easier. Joachim Sauer, husband of Angela Merkel, tends to the type of high-brow interests common among quantum chemists. Philip May, the husband of Theresa, has maintained his job in fund management in the City of London.

Perhaps the happiest of all first men – probably all the spouses – in recent history was Denis Thatcher. His social merry-go-round at golf clubs and private members’ clubs with his elderly, wealthy male friends was satirised in Private Eye’s Dear Bill letters.

Who else could refer to formidable Iron Lady as the Blessed Margaret and get away without a withering stare?

Mr Macron’s wife faces a second whispering campaign that could prove more insidious than any first lady controvers­y.

The age gap between them is 24 years. That is the same as the difference between Donald and Melania Trump but only the Nacrons are subjected to slurs.

Ms Macron has been tagged “Barbie Sr” and the “Granny at the Elysee”.

The problems endured by first ladies never seem to follow the male spouses of powerful women – the gentle lampooning of Denis Thatcher was

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 ?? AP, AFP ?? Clockwise from top left, Canadian PM Justin Trudeau and Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte, Joachim Sauer, husband of Angela Merkel, British PM Theresa May and husband Philip, former US first lady Michelle Obama
AP, AFP Clockwise from top left, Canadian PM Justin Trudeau and Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte, Joachim Sauer, husband of Angela Merkel, British PM Theresa May and husband Philip, former US first lady Michelle Obama

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