Boston Herald

Macron sets sights on parliament­ary majority

- — HERALD WIRE SERVICES

PARIS — Newly elected to the French presidency, Emmanuel Macron now faces an equally difficult Act II: securing the parliament­ary majority he needs to make good on his campaign promises to lift France out of economic gloom.

With legislativ­e elections just five weeks away, the startup political movement the 39-year-old former investment banker launched one year ago on his meteoric ride to become France’s youngest president lost no time yesterday in girding for the crucial mid-June parliament­ary election battle.

Without a working majority, Macron could quickly become a lame-duck president, unable to push through labor reforms and other measures he promised to the broadly disgruntle­d electorate — shown by a record result for his defeated far-right opponent, Marine Le Pen, and a record number of blank and spoiled ballots in Sunday’s runoff vote.

The transfer of power to Macron will take place Sunday, outgoing President Francois Hollande announced. Macron is already looking the part. He shed his breezier campaign demeanor for a solemn, more statesman-like look in his first appearance­s after his victory and again yesterday, at a sober ceremony with Hollande to commemorat­e Germany’s defeat in World War II.

The pomp of the ceremony, at the imposing Arc de Triomphe at the top of the Champs-Elysees Avenue in Paris, immediatel­y helped lend a presidenti­al air to the previously untested leader who fought and won his first election.

It was the first time Hollande and Macron appeared together in public since August 2016. That was when Macron resigned as Hollande’s economy minister to embark on his risky presidenti­al run as an independen­t — a decision received coldly by the French leader at the time.

Yesterday, though, Hollande gripped Macron’s arm before the two men walked side by side. The ceremony marked decades of peace in Western Europe, something Macron made a cornerston­e of his campaign against Le Pen’s brand of nationalis­t populism. Le Pen campaigned for France to leave the 28-nation European Union and drop the shared euro currency in favor of reinstatin­g a new French franc.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? OUI: French President-elect Emmanuel Macron, left, and outgoing President Francois Hollande, attend a ceremony yesterday in Paris to mark the end of World War II at the Arc de Triomphe.
AP PHOTO OUI: French President-elect Emmanuel Macron, left, and outgoing President Francois Hollande, attend a ceremony yesterday in Paris to mark the end of World War II at the Arc de Triomphe.

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