Oroville Mercury-Register

Macron faces angry voters as he fights for 2nd term

- By Sylvie Corbet

MULHOUSE, FRANCE » Facing a tougher-than expected fight for reelection, French President Emmanuel Macron has hit the campaign trail at last — and it isn’t always proving welcoming.

But he’s not shying away from angry voters, instead engaging in lively, sometimes confrontat­ional debates. Since he and farright nationalis­t rival Marine Le Pen qualified Sunday for France’s April 24 presidenti­al runoff, Macron has seemed eager to go in the field to explain his policies and try to convince people to hand him a second term.

On Tuesday, he was asked hard questions during a visit to the eastern city of Mulhouse.

“Why didn’t you help the poorest?”

“Why do hospitals suffer from shortages of beds and shortages of health workers?”

“How can you propose to push back retirement age from 62 to 65 when so many people are jobless?”

The 44-year-old leader appeared determined to explain his policies at length

— but sometimes grew impatient when people kept contradict­ing him.

Before Sunday’s first round presidenti­al vote which had 12 candidates, Macron skipped most campaign activities, focusing his time at the Elysee Presidenti­al Palace on diplomatic efforts to end Russia’s war in Ukraine. Domestic critics decried the

perceived lack of debate in France’s presidenti­al campaign.

Now the role of candidate has taken over. Macron is considered the favorite by the polls, but Le Pen appears to have significan­tly narrowed the gap from 2017, when he trounced her in the same presidenti­al runoff.

On Monday, Macron

went to an economical­ly depressed region in northern France that is considered Le Pen’s stronghold. The next day, he visited the eastern cities of Mulhouse and Strasbourg, where farleft candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon, who came in third Sunday, got a majority of the first-round vote.

Upon his arrival in Mulhouse, Macron literally ran toward the small crowd waiting for him. He met some supporters, but also angry, discourage­d workers from a nearby public hospital who came to challenge him.

“We are exhausted,” some nurses told him. “Improve our working conditions!”

A 61-year-old health care worker said he worked for 30 years and but is earning only 1,885 euros ($2,051) a month.

“I am not thinking about myself. I am thinking of my children, my grandchild­ren,” he said, explaining his vote.

Macron mentioned changes his government had made amid the COVID-19 pandemic, including a small salary increase for hospital workers.

“Have your earnings been increased?” he asked.

“We don’t feel the impact of it,” the man answered.

Another health care worker asked him about hospitals “losing beds” as the pandemic is still going on.

“I know, that is the challenge we are facing,” Macron acknowledg­ed, explaining that the issue is about a lack of trained hospital staff, a situation amplified in a region where many French seek work in neighborin­g Germany and Switzerlan­d where wages are higher.

“Two years ago, I made commitment­s… and the salaries were increased. And 183 euros ($199) per month, you can’t say that’s nothing,” Macron insisted.

Another big obstacle repeatedly came Macron’s way: his planned pension changes. Macron wants to raise the minimum retirement age from 62 to 65, which he argues is needed so France can keep financing the pensions. Le Pen says she would maintain the retirement age at 62. The issue prompted major street protests in late 2019, and Macron then had to postpone his plans amid the COVID-19 crisis.

“We must work longer,” Macron said. “It’s not true we can keep financing our social model if we don’t push back (the retirement age).”

He kept repeating that the retirement changes would be implemente­d very gradually through 2031 and opened the door to softening the reform, as he seeks to attract voters who chose other candidates in the first round.

 ?? JEAN-FRANCOIS BADIAS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? French President Emmanuel Macron speaks with supporters and medical staff as he visits Alister, a training center for functional rehabilita­tion, in Mulhouse, eastern France, on Tuesday.
JEAN-FRANCOIS BADIAS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS French President Emmanuel Macron speaks with supporters and medical staff as he visits Alister, a training center for functional rehabilita­tion, in Mulhouse, eastern France, on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States