The Phnom Penh Post

Ex-French PM seeking to join Macron’s revolution

- Clare Byrne

INCOMING French President Emmanuel Macron was starting to build his centrist government yesterday, with his former Socialist boss jockeying for position in a radically changed political landscape.

Macron, 39, was elected France’s youngest-ever president on Sunday, crushing far-right leader Marine Le Pen after a bruising campaign that left France’s traditiona­l parties by the wayside.

He faces a huge task to unite a fractured, anxious country and to win a parliament­ary majority in June’s general election, without which he could struggle to implement his ambitious reform agenda.

His victory at the head of a year-old pro-EU movement that has presented itself as a home for progressiv­es of all stripes has blown up France’s long-standing left-right political divide.

Yesterday, former Socialist Prime Minister Manuel Valls – a failed candidate for his party’s presidenti­al nomination – said he wanted to run for parliament on Macron’s ticket.

“The Socialist Party is dead, it is behind us,” Valls, a reformmind­ed prime minister from 2014 to 2016 when Macron was economy minister, told RTL radio. “I will be candidate for the presidenti­al majority and I wish to join the list [of candidates] of his movement,” Valls said, while insisting that he remained a Socialist and “a man of the left”.

Macron’s newly renamed “Republique en Marche” (the Republic on the Move) movement reacted warily to the announceme­nt.

Macron’s campaign spokesman Christophe Castaner said Valls “had a good chance” of being accepted into the fold but that he had to submit an official applicatio­n.

Macron, a relative newcomer with just three years’ experience in frontline politics, has promised to rejuvenate France’s jaded governing class.

He has said that half of his can- didates for the 577 seats in the National Assembly will be new to politics.

The rest will be defectors from the Socialists and right-wing Republican­s and members of Macron’s movement and the allied centrist Modem party.

The former investment banker’s victory over Le Pen has been hailed as the strongest sign that populism may be peaking in Europe after setbacks for nationalis­ts in the Netherland­s and Austria. But his rival’s historic score of 33.9 percent, or 10.6 million votes, showed it to be a formidable force that has tapped into acute fears over immigratio­n, national identity and globalisat­ion.

 ?? PATRICK KOVARIK/AFP ?? Then-French Prime Minister Manuel Valls (left) and then-French Economy and Industry Minister Emmanuel Macron meet for a press conference in France last year.
PATRICK KOVARIK/AFP Then-French Prime Minister Manuel Valls (left) and then-French Economy and Industry Minister Emmanuel Macron meet for a press conference in France last year.
 ?? AFP JUAN BARRETO/AFP ?? People attend a protest on Monday in Caracas.
AFP JUAN BARRETO/AFP People attend a protest on Monday in Caracas.

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