Arab News

Macron’s presidency forever dented by ‘Yellow Vest’ protests

- RANVIR S. NAYAR

In May 2017, Emmanuel Macron pulled off a miracle. Within months of having launched a bid for the French presidency, without a party, any structure and just a handful of a core team of supporters, he managed to win the presidenti­al election by a huge margin. He followed up this victory with another sweeping win in the parliament­ary election, even though practicall­y none of his party’s candidates were known figures, most of them being profession­als who had jumped into the fray. No matter. The French voters trusted these amateurs and gave an unpreceden­ted majority to his party, now named La Republique En Marche (The Republic on the Move). The French vote for Macron and his band of part-time politician­s reflected the total disconnect they had begun to feel with the mainstream political parties, which had been involved in corruption, and with political leaders totally out of touch with the electorate.

In his campaign, Macron had very successful­ly tapped into this feeling of the French voters and promised them a government that would genuinely be of the people and by the people, and which would address the issues that are of importance to the ordinary citizens.

He began his rule in style, rushing through a string of reforms, aided by his party’s brutal majority in the French Parliament. One of his biggest wins was, of course, when he managed to stare down a four-month protest by railway workers over reforms to their working conditions and pushing back their retirement age by a few years. This had been a long-pending reform, but practicall­y all politician­s had to bow down to a near-total stoppage of railway services, leading to chaotic scenes. Macron, however, saw the reform through, highlighti­ng continuous­ly the need for the French to take and digest tough reforms to make the nation’s businesses competitiv­e.

The French broadly stood by Macron’s reforms, despite the inconvenie­nce of seeing numerous protests by the infamous French labor unions, as well as the disruption of normal rail services for months at a time. However, his attitude was increasing­ly being perceived as extremely arrogant, earning him the sobriquet of “Jupiter” or “Napoleon” and a “president of the rich” in the French media; an image that Macron has tried to shake off, but in vain.

Macron has failed to reconnect with the people. It does not help him that, so far, the impact of his reforms has been to lead a significan­t rise in the income of the top 1 percent of French society, while causing a dip in the income of the bottom 20 percent. Numerous sections of society have been hit financiall­y by his reforms, but none as much as pensioners. When a group of retirees complained to him, he told them to grin and bear it — a total PR disaster for a president trying to shake off the image of being for the rich alone.

Adding to his list of blunders, when a jobseeker complained about not being able to get a job, Macron arrogantly told him to cross the street and find another.

The president could still have reversed his fortunes and won his way back into French hearts, but the proverbial last straw for the people came in the form of his taxes to promote a “green economy.”

And, when the “yellow vests,” or ordinary French drivers, began their protests, instead of addressing their issues and trying to explain his reasons, Macron insisted that he would push through the reforms and would not buckle in the face of any protests. This message only added fuel to the fire and reinforced people’s perception of him being locked up in an ivory tower.

After four weeks of extremely violent and surprising­ly widespread and spontaneou­s protests, Macron has had to beat a hasty retreat, canceling all the measures. He may have sought peace, but his presidency will be forever dented and this issue is likely to severely damage his ambitions for re-election in 2022.

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