The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Election of young president reflects French optimism

- Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist

Having covered Europe for the last 40 years, I was overwhelme­d with wondrous memories this week as the centrist Emmanuel Macron stepped elegantly out of the Louvre, once the residence of French kings, to celebrate becoming the youngest president of France since Napoleon. I remember the Spanish socialist Javier Solana, “foreign minister” of the then newly formed European Union, courteousl­y ushering me out of his office in Brussels in the late ’90s and saying about the union’s great attempt to unify Europe, “Now there will be no more wars!”

I also remember the secretary general of NATO, the impressive German Manfred Woerner, telling me at the height of the Serbian attempts to annihilate Bosnia in 1993 how he had survived the horrors of World War II, but now, because of American and European dithering in the face of this mass murder, “I am head of the most powerful military alliance in history — and I can do nothing.”

Why are such happy and sad memories important? Because they illustrate clearly the genuine pursuit for a better world and the grave disappoint­ment that characteri­zed the struggle since 1951 to integrate the European nations into one “Europe.”

It was the continent, after all, that could have destroyed the entire world with its wars — and those two only in the 20th century. But Sunday, in this unlikely fellow, the EU may have survived.

There was something splendid about the gracious Macron’s ascendance to the presidency. He walked out on stage at the Louvre to the strains of Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy,” the anthem of the EU. He addressed “My dear compatriot­s,” the French people, and he spoke of “refounding” Europe under the spirit of the Enlightenm­ent.

Around Europe, and indeed the world, liberal voices were enthralled. This chap who suddenly popped up, seemingly out of nowhere, had “saved” France from the ultra-rightist Marine Le Pen and her party with its anti-Semitic and even pro-Nazi past and open Russian support. She had never had a chance before, but this year it looked like she might be president of France.

And many thought Macron, a man of only 39 years who had been an investment banker at Rothschild and who won 66 percent of the vote over Le Pen’s 33 percent, had saved Europe not only from itself and its tortured bureaucrac­y in Brussels, but from the same phantoms that are stalking much of the Western world: massive de-industrial­ization, leaving in its wake “rust belts” in the north of France as well as in America; low investment rates in France; and the threats perceived by massive emigration from the Islamic world. To start with.

But today, many of the choices are amorphous: How do you face the threatenin­g winds of change that globalizat­ion blows? How do you maintain your Judeo-Christian principles about succoring the suffering wayfarer, yet stop an Islamizati­on of your society that may destroy those very roots?

President-elect Macron answers these questions with an enhanced centrism. MORE depth to the EU. MORE welcoming of reasonable pluralism. MORE cooperatio­n between France and Germany, as they march together toward a reformed union.

“But,” you ask suspicious­ly, “what in the world was that you were saying about Napoleon? He was never elected president.”

Well, in fact, it was not the “great” Napoleon, the general and emperor, of whom we speak, but his nephew, one Prince Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, who was elected president of France in 1848.

He also broke through the system to become, at 40 years of age, the youngest French president ever.

Until this week.

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