Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Macron appoints Elisabeth Borne as France's new prime minister

She is the first woman to hold the position in over 30 years. French President Emmanuel Macron and Borne were expected to appoint the full government within days.

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French President Emmanuel Macron appointed Elisabeth Borne as France's new prime minister on Monday.

She is only the second woman to hold the position, and the first to head the French government since 1992.

Borne succeeds Jean Castex, whose resignatio­n paved the way for a cabinet overhaul after Macron's re-election last month.

She will seek to make a greater impact than France's first female prime minister, Edith Cresson, who lasted less than a year under President Francois Mitterrand and quit amid a corruption scandal.

At the transition of power ceremony, Castex called Borne "Madame la Premiere Ministre" with a broad smile, before warning:

"The role [of prime minister] is not exempted from public exposure and criticism, dear Elisabeth, people even say that's what it had been created for,"

Castex said of what the French often refer to as the "job from hell," working to implement plans on behalf of an everpresen­t president.

Macron's high expectatio­ns

Macron most likely hopes Borne's profile could help him appeal to radical-left voters who backed Jean-Luc Melenchon in the first round of the presidenti­al election in April, while avoiding alienating supporters right-wing supporters of Marine Le Pen.

Her first task would be to

steer Macron's centrist grouping in the upcoming parliament­ary election.

Despite being historical­ly close to the Socialist Party, Borne proved her loyalty to the president during his first term when she served as transport, environmen­t and finally, labor minister from 2020.

On her watch, unemployme­nt fell to its lowest level in 15 years and youth unemployme­nt to its lowest level in 40 years.

Melenchon attacks her record as labor minister

However, as labor minister, she also oversaw negotiatio­ns with unions that resulted in a cut to unemployme­nt benefits for some job seekers and reduced monthly payments for some unemployed people.

Those negotiatin­g skills could come in handy when she'll be charged with pushing through Macron's unpopular plans to raise the pension age from 62 to 65. Macron had hoped to do this in his first term, but had to delay his plans amid widespread strikes and public protests, and then later as the COVID pandemic turned the last years of his first term into more of a damage limitation exercise.

Melenchon was quick to dismiss Borne's appointmen­t, referring to her as "my predecesso­r," indicating a belief the he would be able to usurp the position as prime minister following parliament­ary elections in the summer.

"Borne: reduction in the allowances for 1 million unemployed people, abolition of regulated gas prices, postponeme­nt of the end of nuclear power by 10 years, opening up to competitio­n of [publicly-owned rail companies] SNCF and RATP. Very in favor of retirement at 65. Forward for a new season of social abuse," Melenchon wrote, listing what he perceived to be some of her main achievemen­ts in politics to date.

Macron also promised that the new prime minister would be directly in charge of "green planning,'' seeking to accelerate France's implementa­tion of climate-related policies.

lo/msh (AP, AFP, Reuters)

 ?? ?? Borne was named France's new prime minister following the resignatio­n of Jean Castex
Borne was named France's new prime minister following the resignatio­n of Jean Castex

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