Post-Tribune

French President Macron tests positive for the virus

World leader joins Trump, Johnson and Bolsonaro among those to be sickened

- By Roger Cohen

PARIS—President Emmanuel Macron of France has tested positive for the coronaviru­s and will work in isolation for the next week, prompting other European leaders he has met to take precaution­ary measures and complicati­ng Europe’s efforts to overcome a crippling second wave of the pandemic.

The presidenti­al Élysée Palace announced the illness Thursday without clarifying Macron’s symptoms or the gravity of his condition. As one of Europe’s youngest leaders, at 42, the president is not among the most vulnerable to the virus, but its effects are known to be unpredicta­ble.

Gabriel Attal, the government spokesman, said: “Late last night, the president began feeling COVID-19like symptoms. He immediatel­y isolated himself and took a PCR test. The result was communicat­ed to us this morning.” He added that efforts were underway through contact tracing to identify anyone who met recently with Macron.

The Spanish government announced that Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, who had lunch Monday with Macron, has suspended his official activities until Dec. 24. In Portugal, Prime Minister António Costa, who lunched Tuesday with Macron, said he would self-isolate and get tested for COVID-19. Charles Michel, a top European Union official, will go into isolation after a meeting Monday with Macron, a spokesman said.

How Macron contracted the virus is a mystery.

Other world leaders who have had it — including President Donald Trump, President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil and Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain — were more cavalier or skeptical about the pandemic. Macron, however, has been consistent in emphasizin­g the gravity of the threat, but France has been reticent about revealing details of its president’s health.

Macron, in an apparent attempt to reassure people, made his first public appearance since testing positive, at a planned conference on French developmen­t aid late Thursday. Speaking via video link and wearing a medical-grade mask, he did not show apparent signs of the sickness and did not mention it in his speech.

The cascade of leaders isolating themselves came at a difficult moment. Europeans across the continent are restive over restrictiv­e measures that have become a tiresome way of life. After six weeks of a second lockdown, an 8 p.m. curfew across France went into effect Tuesday. It will last at least another month.

Macron will celebrate his 43rd birthday in isolation Monday. His wife, Brigitte Macron, who is 67, tested negative for the virus. She is also working in isolation.

The partial disappeara­nce from view of several leaders is likely to sharpen anxiety across a continent facing its most severe recession since World War II. Millions of people have been furloughed. The French economy, the second-largest in the eurozone, is expected to shrink 9% this year.

Billions of euros have been spent to cushion the devastatin­g effect of the virus, but prospects for a quick recovery faded as the number of cases across Europe rose to new heights this fall. The French central bank said Monday that economic activity would not recover to pre-pandemic levels before

2022. Germany, the Netherland­s and the Czech Republic are among the countries that have recently imposed lockdowns.

The French weekly Le Point reported that Macron had dined Wednesday night at the Élysée Palace with a dozen of his political allies, all socially distanced from one another at a long table and wearing masks except when eating. The government has advised that no more than six people should gather around a table over the holidays. At the meal, Macron showed no symptoms, participan­ts said.

The president’s approval rating has been hovering around 38%, relatively high for a French leader. It fell

as low as 24% in 2018. His tough responses on issues including security, terrorist threats and immigratio­n have reflected the mood of a significan­t section of a buffeted country.

Whether he would now get a boost out of sympathy for his condition or see concern over a political vacuum affect his popularity was unclear. The next presidenti­al election is 18 months away.

“This may enable Macron to have greater weight and authority in getting people to observe the lockdown rules,” Jaques Rupnik, a prominent political scientist, said.

Hopes for better times are vested in a vaccine. Prime

Minister Jean Castex, who will also work in isolation after attending the weekly Cabinet meeting Wednesday with Macron, announced this week that inoculatio­ns would start in the last week of the year.

France is expected to receive a first shipment of 1.16 million doses by then, once European and French authoritie­s have approved t h e P f i z e r - B i o N Te c h vaccine. But the vaccine will be no immediate panacea.

Since the pandemic began, there have been almost 2.5 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 in France and nearly 60,000 deaths, among the worst numbers in Europe.

 ?? CHARLES PLATIAU/REUTERS ?? At 42, French President Emmanuel Macron is the youngest world leader to test positive for COVID-19. Macron will work in isolation for the next week.
CHARLES PLATIAU/REUTERS At 42, French President Emmanuel Macron is the youngest world leader to test positive for COVID-19. Macron will work in isolation for the next week.

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