Muscat Daily

France’s Macron looks to revive fortunes with reshuffle

Macron’s polling numbers have slumped to lowest level since his victory

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He appointed new interior, agricultur­e and culture ministers to try to revive his government’s flagging fortunes

Paris, France - French President Emmanuel Macron reshuffled his Cabinet on Tuesday, appointing new interior, agricultur­e and culture ministers after a weeks-long search for new talent to try to revive his government’s flagging fortunes.

Two weeks after political veteran Gerard Collomb resigned unexpected­ly as interior minister, Macron appointed the ultraloyal head of his Republic on the Move party, Christophe Castaner, to replace him.

The centrist also fired his agricultur­e and culture ministers, seen as weak links in his Cabinet, which is a complicate­d blend of experts and more experience­d politician­s, from the left and right.

Collomb’s departure on October 2 was a blow to Macron and coincided with a slump in the President’s popularity after a summer overshadow­ed by a scandal involving a close aide, several verbal gaffes and disappoint­ing economic data.

His resignatio­n came hot on the heels of that of popular environmen­t minister Nicolas Hulot in August, creating a sense of disarray in the reformist Cabinet.

Macron’s delay in carrying out the reshuffle, caused in part by his difficulty in convincing big names to join his team, has added to the sense of a loss in momentum after a fast-paced first year in office, analysts say.

The pro-business 40 year old leader will hope the reshaped executive team - which keeps the prime minister, foreign and economy ministers in place - will open a new chapter after a torrid few months.

Macron’s polling numbers have slumped to their lowest level since his electoral victory in May 2017, with surveys showing that only around 30 per cent of French voters have a positive view of his presidency.

Christophe Castaner, a 52 year old former Socialist MP, had been widely tipped for the role to replace Collomb, who is return- ing to his home town of Lyon to serve as mayor.

A confident performer in the media and with family roots outside the Parisian political elite, Castaner is a central figure in Macron’s inner circle but has little experience of national policing or security issues.

The current head of France’s domestic intelligen­ce agency, Laurent Nunez, was named as his understudy at the interior ministry.

Didier Guillaume, a former Socialist, was named agricultur­e minister, replacing Stephane Travert, and Franck Riester, a for- mer centre-right Republican­s lawmaker takes over from publisher Francoise Nyssen in culture. Macron also named a new minister for relations with local government, with Jacqueline Gourault taking over the tricky portfolio at a time of budget cuts that have caused deep discontent among rural mayors.

Former investment banker Macron shook up the staid world of French politics in 2016 by founding his own pro-business, pro-EU grassroots party, which he presented as neither of the left nor the right.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? Newly appointed French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner (right) and newly appointed French Secretary of State to the Interior Minister Laurent Nunez (C) meet police forces in Les Lilas, east of Paris on Tuesday
(AFP) Newly appointed French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner (right) and newly appointed French Secretary of State to the Interior Minister Laurent Nunez (C) meet police forces in Les Lilas, east of Paris on Tuesday

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