Yorkshire Post

Anti-EU mood shapes future of France

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OOH, I bet that one stung! The TV debate between the French Presidenti­al hopefuls this week was certainly a feisty affair.

Establishm­ent smoothie, and hot favourite in Sunday’s run-off election, Emmanuel Macron traded colourful Gallic insults with populist challenger Marine Le Pen for more than two hours in a televised confrontat­ion watched by more than 20 million French viewers.

What an entertaini­ng barny! I haven’t seen two people go at each other like that since I witnessed a drunken row in a shady bar in the Pigalle a few years back.

But one comment from Le Pen hit the bullseye like no other. Regardless of Sunday’s result, she said: “France will be led by a woman – either Madam Merkel or me.” Zing! Nothing quite hurts like the truth, does it? Poor Macron looked like he’d just swallowed a particular­ly dodgy

In return Macron accused Le Pen of lying and spreading hatred. Probably his best line was when he described his opponent as “the high priestess of fear”.

A poll among French voters after the debate gave Macron the edge, but for me Le Pen had the best lines.

She accused Macron of planning to close factories and hospitals, adding: Administra­tion, one of the France’s prestigiou­s Macron is a former investment banker who has never been elected to anything.

He also served as an Economy Minister in Francois Hollande’s disastrous socialist government that has reduced France to the sick man of Europe (sadly, thanks to the euro, one of many).

Critics point out gleefully that if he is so full of bright ideas, why didn’t he act on them when he was in power?

Le Pen is nowhere near as polished, but she is a formidable character. If she were behind the bar when you popped in for a quick livener after a day’s sightseein­g, you would certainly think twice before putting your feet on the seats.

She has worked hard to distance herself from the influence of her father and party founder, Jean-Marie, who was accused of anti-Semitism during his time as leader.

Whether this week’s debate will have any influence on the result on Sunday is moot. Macron is about 20 points ahead in the polls and they would have to be spectacula­rly wrong for Le Pen to snatch victory.

But in some ways it doesn’t matter – because the anti-establishm­ent, antiEU direction of travel is now firmly establishe­d.

For the foreseeabl­e future the political debate, as it was with Brexit, is framed between the entrenched establishm­ent elite that has failed Europe so miserably, against a popular insurgency that seeks to restore representa­tive democracy to nation states.

So powerful is this narrative that Macron, previously a pro-EU fanatic, felt forced to re-invent himself as something of a Euroscepti­c to shore up his support.

At the weekend he warned that the EU must reform itself or face the prospect of “Frexit”.

He said: “We have to listen to our people and to listen to the fact that they are extremely angry today, impatient and the dysfunctio­n of the EU is no more sustainabl­e.”

It sounds very Cameroonia­n – but as David Cameron discovered to his cost, the EU is institutio­nally incapable of reforming itself.

Macron said if the EU continued with a “business as usual attitude” after the election the French would see it as a “betrayal”.

That, I suspect, is exactly what will happen if Macron wins, as expected.

And win or lose, Marine Le Pen, and the growing dissatisfa­ction with the EU among ordinary people throughout the continent, isn’t going to go away.

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