Cape Argus

Macron appoints Attal prime minister

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FRENCH leader Emmanuel Macron yesterday picked Gabriel Attal as prime minister in a bid to give new momentum to his presidency, with the 34-year-old becoming France’s youngest and first openly gay head of government.

Following days of speculatio­n, Macron late on Monday accepted the resignatio­n of Elisabeth Borne, 62, who stepped down along with the rest of the government after serving less than two years in office.

The overhaul comes ahead of the Olympic Games in Paris and European parliament elections, where Macron’s centrist forces risk defeat at the hands of the far-right under Marine Le Pen.

A wider cabinet reshuffle is expected this week as Macron seeks to sharpen his team for the final three years of his presidency. “The president of the republic appointed Mr Gabriel Attal prime minister, and tasked him with forming a government,” a presidenti­al statement said.

Attal is set to bring a major change of style to the office of the prime minister following Borne. Her austere and no-nonsense demeanour won respect from colleagues but not necessaril­y popularity from the public, whereas Attal is the most popular figure in government after his stint at the politicall­y crucial education ministry.

Macron said he wanted the new premier to bring back the spirit of bold change from when Macron first won office on a wave of hope for radical reform in 2017,adding that Attal would act in line with the spirit of “excellence and audacity” of 2017.

The appointmen­t of Attal had been expected after Borne’s resignatio­n on Monday, although the absence of a swift announceme­nt fuelled talk that heavy-weight government figures were unhappy over the meteoric promotion of a man known sometimes by fellow ministers as “young Gabriel”.

Sources close to those said to be behind the tensions, including Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin and Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, denied this.

Borne’s resignatio­n letter to Macron hinted that she would have preferred to stay in her job. “While I must present the resignatio­n of my government, I wanted to tell you how passionate I was about this mission,” she wrote.

Commentato­rs see the reshuffle as essential to relaunch Macron’s centrist presidency for its last three years and prevent him becoming a “lame duck” leader after a series of crises.

Since he defeated the far right to win a second term in 2022, Macron has faced protests over unpopular pension reforms, the loss of his overall majority in parliament­ary elections and controvers­y over immigratio­n legislatio­n.

With Macron unable to run in the 2027 presidenti­al elections, ministers have aired concerns that Le Pen has her best chance to win the presidency.

Attal will go toe-to-toe ahead of the European elections with another rising star of French politics, the even younger Jordan Bardella, just 28, who is now party leader of the far-right RN.

The conservati­ve daily Le Figaro said Borne was leaving a political situation “that remains as fragile as ever.

“Changing a face at the top doesn’t change the overall picture,” the paper said, adding that her successor was facing “an overwhelmi­ng pile of political emergencie­s” including the task to unite a fragmented nation.

Under the French system, the president sets general policies and the prime minister is responsibl­e for dayto-day government management.

Constituti­onal expert Benjamin Morel said Attal’s appointmen­t signalled a “very offensive strategy with a view to the European elections” in June. But political scientist Bruno Cautres said he would “not solve the problem of the majority, nor the main problem which is where the mandate (of Macron) is heading”.

Other key posts are also subject to uncertaint­y, in particular that of Darmanin, 41, a right-winger said to covet the post of foreign minister held by Catherine Colonna.

The new head of government will be the fourth prime minister since 2017 under Macron.

 ?? | AFP ?? FRENCH Secretary of State and government spokespers­on Gabriel Attal was appointed as France’s prime minister yesterday by President Emmanuel Macron.
| AFP FRENCH Secretary of State and government spokespers­on Gabriel Attal was appointed as France’s prime minister yesterday by President Emmanuel Macron.

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