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France’s new Prime Minister needs to succeed in the court of public popularity

- COLIN RANDALL Colin Randall is a former executive editor of The National, and writes on the UK and France

The next time political pundits mock British Conservati­ves for having worked their way, with scant success, through so many prime ministers – five in their 13 years of power – they should perhaps glance across the Channel at France, where an unpopular President, Emmanuel Macron, has announced his fourth in just seven years of office.

Mr Macron’s choice as successor to the earnest but beleaguere­d Elisabeth Borne is the youngest to hold the office in modern times. Gabriel Attal, just 34, has enjoyed a meteoric rise and is regarded as the best-liked member of the centrist government, even though the administra­tion’s inability to win public hearts and minds suggests he is merely the figure voters dislike least.

In many ways, Mr Attal is the mirror image of the President who is also his cheerleade­r. Both fiercely intelligen­t, they were members of France’s socialist party before deciding the way forward for France was to try to bridge the classic leftright divide in French politics.

And both have belonged since Mr Macron’s landslide presidenti­al victory in 2017 to a power base with disappoint­ments that has enabled the far right to present itself as a government in waiting.

Mr Macron got on in life, as a successful investment banker, despite twice failing to gain entry to the prestigiou­s Ecole Normale Superieure, instead making do with a philosophy degree at Paris Nanterre University. Mr Attal, of half-Tunisian Jewish descent, attended the private Parisian school, Ecole Alsacienne, before graduating in law, followed by a master’s in public affairs.

Openly gay, he lives with Stephane Sejourne, a member of the European Parliament and general secretary of Mr Macron’s Renaissanc­e party. Mt Attal was already the youngest minister of any government in France’s 66-year-old fifth republic when, at 29, he landed a junior position at education.

Two dynamic men with elevated debating skills, he and Mr Macron see the far right as a dangerous anti-republican affront to democracy. But in common with all French political groups that aspire to power, both have proved willing to adopt policies that go beyond mere lip service to the fears that tempt so many to vote for the far right’s Marine Le Pen, who also has an able young lieutenant, Jordan Bardella.

Opponents detected the scent of strategic Islamophob­ia when Mr Attal, as education minister, began the present school year by banning schoolgirl­s from wearing the abaya, a measure he defended as protecting France’s cherished secular values.

But there is little evidence that such steps, insufficie­nt to appease the far right and seen as discrimina­tory even by moderate Muslims, are vote-winners. The task Mr Attal faces, therefore, is formidable.

On the plus side, his appointmen­t represents rupture with recent functional prime ministers overshadow­ed by the power of the president. Few eyelids flickered when Mr Macron replaced Ms Borne’s predecesso­rs: Edouard Philippe (who enjoyed decent levels of public approval) and the competent if uninspirin­g Jean Castex. However, it is unlikely to stop Ms Le Pen’s National Rally populists making advances in June’s European parliament­ary elections.

Indeed, Mr Attal is confronted by the same key obstacle to smooth government that held back and ultimately helped to render Ms Borne ineffectiv­e: the lack of an overall majority in the National Assembly, a hung parliament that may force him to resort as she did to the despised Article 49.3 that permits a bill to be passed without a vote.

With no historic electoral catchment area, centrists of the Macron-Attal mould have to rely on talent and charisma to overcome fixed loyalties, now complicate­d by the advances of Ms Le Pen. Mr Macron felt like a breath of fresh air in 2017 when he swept into the Elysee Palace on a tide of enthusiasm and youthful hope but has since struggled to shake off perception­s that he is a “president for the rich”.

Ms Borne served 20 months; if Mr Attal survives any fallout from bad European election results, matching the length of her term in office would still leave him a further 20 months from the next presidenti­al elections. Mr Macron must stand down when his second five-year presidency ends in the spring of 2027, assuming he does not choose to leave office sooner. But if he sees his new prime minister as his heir, there is scope for things to go wrong between now and then.

Mr Attal, like all recent predecesso­rs, will see himself as a reformer. But the reality of French politics is that whereas voters often acknowledg­e the need for France to change, each attempt to bring this about in any meaningful way meets resistance. The trade unions and assorted single-interest groups, from farmers and fishermen to power station workers and dustmen, see the voice of the street, strikes and blockades included, as parallel democracy.

We await a clear idea of what Mr Attal as Prime Minister will stand for, beyond being a committed Macronist and, as education minister, wanting to stamp out school bullying and tinker with arrangemen­ts for the Baccalaure­ate examinatio­ns taken at the end of secondary school life.

Admirers say he was sound in the finance and health ministries and faultless at education. Critics found him hyperactiv­e but too short-lived in ministeria­l roles to see ideas through. One teaching union leader, Sophie Venetitay, told a broadcaste­r he left the impression, after less than six months as education minister, of having been “a man in a hurry who used education as a political springboar­d”.

In debate on serious issues, Mr Attal is unlikely to bettered by the likes of Ms Le Pen. Few see her brand of populism as offering the French economy anything beyond dodgy visions of protection­ism.

But her impressive drive to thrust off her party’s toxic image, with racism and anti-Semitism seen as stocks in trade, is a lesson for all those eager to restore faith in convention­al political movements. “I don’t want her as president,” says a French relative who has traditiona­lly voted centre right. “But it is as well there cannot be a third run-off between her and Macron. Otherwise, I’d vote blank.” Mr Attal has said he “owes everything” to Mr Macron. His challenge, whether or not he sees himself as presidenti­al material for 2027, is to repay that debt, succeed in the court of public popularity where his champion has failed and win back voters disenchant­ed with politics and those who practise it.

Attal faces the same key obstacle to smooth government that held Borne back and made her ineffectiv­e

 ?? EPA ?? Departing French prime minister Elisabeth Borne hands over to her successor Gabriel Attal at a ceremony in Paris this week
EPA Departing French prime minister Elisabeth Borne hands over to her successor Gabriel Attal at a ceremony in Paris this week
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