Toronto Star

French PM steps down to seek presidency

Bernard Cazeneuve named prime minister following Manuel Valls’ resignatio­n

- SYLVIE CORBET

PARIS— The man who served as France’s top cop during a series of bloody terror attacks became the nation’s new prime minister on Tuesday after Manuel Valls stepped down to focus on running for president.

Conceding he is “not a favourite” to win the presidency, Valls resigned as prime minister a day after announcing he would run to replace the man who appointed him, unpopular Socialist President François Hollande.

Hollande, who announced last week he would not seek a second term, named Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve, a close ally, to replace Valls.

“I was a happy prime minister,” Valls said, despite the challenges he faced in office. “I leave in calm . . . (because Cazeneuve) is a man of state.”

“You are a friend, a brother,” he added.

Both men made clear that coping with the string of terror attacks that claimed more than 200 lives since January 2015 bonded them as they worked hand in hand. Cazeneuve also praised the “friendship” between himself and Valls.

Cazeneuve, always cool and composed, became a popular figure while fighting for measures to tackle extremism in France, including three counterter­rorism laws and one intelligen­ce law.

He has been in charge of implementi­ng France’s state of emergency following the Paris attacks that killed 130 people in November 2015.

Cazeneuve, 53, said his goal as prime minister will be “to protect, progress, prepare the future.”

He acknowledg­ed his tenure in the post would be brief, but said “each day is useful. Each day counts.”

Bruno Le Roux, the head of the Socialists in Parliament’s lower house, replaces Cazeneuve.

Valls hopes to unite the Socialist party and to give the left a chance to remain in power at the Élysée Palace after France’s two-round presidenti­al election in April and May.

Current opinion polls, however, suggest that the second round could pit Marine Le Pen, the leader of the far-right National Front, against conservati­ve François Fillon, also a former prime minister.

“I’m a challenger. I’m not a favourite,” Valls acknowledg­ed in a Tuesday night interview on France-2 television.

But he said he doesn’t want the left eliminated.

“It’s a form of revolt for me,” Valls said.

Valls is the top contender in next month’s primary for Socialist candidates and their allies, but faces tough competitio­n from former economy minister Arnaud Montebourg and former education minister Benoît Hamon, party rebels who back more left-leaning policies.

 ?? THOMAS SAMSON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? France’s new prime minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, left, shakes hands with his predecesso­r Manuel Valls in Paris.
THOMAS SAMSON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES France’s new prime minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, left, shakes hands with his predecesso­r Manuel Valls in Paris.

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