The Sunday Telegraph

Stuck between Macron and Le Pen, France’s political system is rapidly disintegra­ting

The country is now faced with a choice of ‘populist’ candidates that repel or alarm a large proportion of the population

- Robert Tombs is professor emeritus of French history at the University of Cambridge

Whatever the outcome of France’s presidenti­al vote – and President Macron will probably be re-elected – I fear it marks another stage in the dissolutio­n of a political system. Of course, this could be beneficial: we are supposed to welcome change and renewal. It will certainly be interestin­g: France has often been a political laboratory for Europe, and its people are quite proud of this. But life in a laboratory is not comfortabl­e.

The familiar political landmarks that democratic systems depend on have gone. It is astonishin­g that the candidates of what were until recently modern France’s two ruling parties, the Socialists and (under a variety of names) the Gaullists, have been reduced to insignific­ance, with their presidenti­al candidates polling at under 10 per cent. Yet France’s previous president was a Socialist, François Hollande, and the Gaullist François Fillon would probably have beaten Macron in 2017 had he not been caught up in a corruption scandal. Now these political pillars of the Fifth Republic system, parties that provided essential popular representa­tion, have almost completely disintegra­ted. This election could be their coup de grâce.

Now France is faced solely with alternativ­es that repel or alarm a large part of its people: Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen. Even at the last election, Macron was the first choice of only a quarter of the electorate. Then he seemed an unobjectio­nable centrist. Now he is regarded with visceral dislike by a remarkable range of people. Le Pen represents a far-Right tradition, which until recently, most voters considered beyond the pale: racist, reactionar­y and undemocrat­ic. But it has increased its appeal, especially among the young.

Whoever becomes the next president will face a discontent­ed and alienated country, and it is unclear how effective government can be possible. A President Le Pen would mean violence in the streets and political and economic crisis. Would she be capable of forming a credible government? Many of those voting for her are so discontent­ed that they are willing to risk pulling the house down. But if he is re-elected, Macron might also be faced with popular rebellion, and with a slim prospect of a parliament­ary majority to support him.

France’s predicamen­t is an extreme form of the political malady rife across the democratic world: rejection of convention­al politics; reduced party loyalty and membership; low turnout in elections; unpredicta­ble and volatile voting choices. This has given politician­s standing in opposition to “mainstream politics” – or claiming that they were – an opportunit­y in several countries.

They are convention­ally dismissed as “populists”. Le Pen of course is one of these. So is her far-Left equivalent, Jean-Luc Mélenchon. But Macron himself was the arch-populist, campaignin­g in 2017 against convention­al politics, rejecting existing parties and creating his own movement drawn from civil society bodies and non-politician­s. This respectabl­e bourgeois populism has a label: “technopopu­lism”. It claims legitimacy from a superior ability to manage the system, in Macron’s case as would-be leader of a more powerful technocrat­ic EU. His victory sounded the death knell of the old party system.

Does this matter? Yes, if nothing replaces it that can perform the minimum functions of democratic parties: to assemble majorities, or at least large coherent minorities; to bring forward (and get rid of) political leaders; to formulate programmes and try to carry them out if elected; to give people a means of participat­ing and being represente­d, and to maintain a sense of legitimacy. No system does this perfectly. Indeed, looking around the world we can see how poorly many democracie­s are working, including the most establishe­d. But in a system stuck between Macron and Le Pen, the problem is acute.

Does history explain this? Clearly yes. Political systems are invariably created in times of crisis, and are very difficult

Parties are largely the supporters’ clubs of individual­s, based on patronage and personal ties

to change thereafter. France’s present 1958 constituti­on, which its drafter aptly called a “republican monarchy”, was adopted to enable Charles de Gaulle to master the incipient civil war over Algeria, and to establish a powerful and even authoritar­ian government as the Fifth Republic.

This was the latest variant of the regular fluctuatio­ns between authority and democracy that France has experience­d since the 1789 revolution. The most recent had been the ultrareact­ionary Vichy regime of Marshal Pétain (1940-44), followed by the ultra-parliament­ary system of the Fourth Republic (1946-58), criticised as impotent and chaotic. De Gaulle’s system has been plausibly called Bonapartis­t, which is an attempt to combine both authority and democracy – “active authority, passive democracy”, as one historian has defined it.

The Fifth Republic is paradoxica­l. It has been the most widely accepted and arguably the most successful of the 15 constituti­onal systems France has had since 1789. Yet it has always been criticised in principle, and has regularly given rise to problems. A cynic might say that it is principles that are France’s problem. Unlike Britain – which, said Disraeli, was not governed by principles but by parliament – the French have regularly chosen, or been forced, to try to design perfect systems. This, Edmund Burke thought, was the original sin of the Revolution, the “fairy land of philosophy”. De Gaulle’s republic deliberate­ly weakened political parties and parliament by concentrat­ing power in the presidency.

After 64 years it has succeeded rather too well. Parties are largely the supporters’ clubs of individual­s, based on patronage and personal ties. Le Pen’s party, now called the Rassemblem­ent National, is a 50-year-old family business. Macron started his own from scratch – La République en Marche (now simply EM! complete with exclamatio­n mark). But then de Gaulle, the godfather of the system, also had his own tame party.

The overriding aim of the party is to install a president who is practicall­y irremovabl­e, and whose powers of government and patronage are immense. As a sceptical commentato­r, Jean-François Revel, wrote some years ago, this was an instrument so open to abuse that it was “criminal to put it even into the hands of a saint”. It was “absolutism”, but “ineffectiv­e absolutism”. And indeed Macron’s high-handed plans for sweeping reform had to be watered down or dropped after the gilets jaunes revolted and workers came out on strike. But Macron remained. And is likely to remain for another term. To do what?

The last two parties standing will be Macron’s EM! and Le Pen’s RN. Their changing and abbreviate­d titles show how little they exist apart from their leaders. The great mass parties that once bestrode French political life have almost vanished. Yet they possessed not only vast organisati­ons, but whole cultures: there was a “peuple de gauche” with its own sociabilit­y, rituals and even tastes (the Left, one survey showed, preferred camembert).

But it is the far-Right that is still alive and kicking. It too has its historic cultural core: a mixture of traditiona­l Catholic patriotism, once royalist; of French nationalis­m, resistant to Macron’s flamboyant Europeanis­m; and of suspicion of immigrants. This attracted many former Communists, and now many young voters, embittered by poor job prospects and a system that seems unheeding.

It is precisely this Right-wing tradition – long embodied by JeanMarie Le Pen and tainted by antiSemiti­sm, anti-republican­ism, Algérie Française nostalgia, and a lingering associatio­n with Pétainism – which made Le Pen father and daughter unelectabl­e. Most French citizens, whether Socialist or Gaullist, would under no circumstan­ces vote “lepeniste”.

This political conundrum – a hard-core tradition that kept lepenism going despite all the reverses, but which at the same time made it unelectabl­e – may be unravellin­g as the historical burden of the 1940s and 1950s is shrugged off by new generation­s. I still think that the weight of history means that Le Pen will be beaten even by Macron. But no longer by a landslide.

Then there is likely to be some sort of political turmoil that may bring new alliances and perhaps more ephemeral parties into existence. But the wish expressed by generation­s of French politician­s since the early 19th century, that France might develop a stable system of respectabl­e moderate parties like the Americans and the British, which could offer credible alternativ­es, seems less than ever likely, not least because the Anglo-Saxon model is now uninspirin­g.

So whoever becomes the next President, the likelihood is of a remote and unpopular incumbent, unable to unite the country, unable to carry out a programme, but solidly ensconced in the Elysée Palace. Whether Macron or Le Pen, the dangerous instrument will not be in the hands of a saint.

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 ?? ?? A supporter at Le Pen’s last big campaign rally on Thursday
A supporter at Le Pen’s last big campaign rally on Thursday

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