Bangkok Post

Macron takes reins, vows to rejuvenate EU

New president says voters ‘chose hope’

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PARIS: Emmanuel Macron has been inaugurate­d as France’s youngest ever president, saying yesterday the country had chosen “hope” and promising to relaunch the flagging European Union.

Mr Macron, a 39-year-old centrist, took the reins of power from Francois Hollande a week after he won a resounding victory over far-right leader Marine Le Pen in a tumultuous election.

After a warm welcome from Mr Hollande at the Elysee Palace, the two men held a closed-doors meeting during which Mr Macron was handed the codes to launch France’s nuclear arsenal.

Unpopular Mr Hollande became the first sitting president not to seek re-election in the French fifth republic, which was founded in 1958.

In a moment heavy with symbolism, 64-year-old Mr Hollande — who launched Mr Macron’s political career by appointing him first as adviser and then economy minister — was then driven away from the palace to applause from his staff and the new president.

Mr Macron, a former investment banker who had never even contested an election before, was then proclaimed president by Laurent Fabius, president of the Constituti­onal Council.

“In order to be the man of one’s country, one must be the man of your time,” Mr Fabius told him.

“You are now the man of your time ... and by the sovereign choice of the people, you are now, above all ... the man of our country.”

In his first speech, Mr Macron said the French people had chosen “hope” and shown a willingnes­s to change in the election.

He promised that the EU, hit by the United Kingdom’s pending departure, would be “rejuvenate­d and relaunched” during his time in office.

“The world and Europe need France now more than ever and they need a strong France with a sense of its own destiny,” he said.

To underline his European ambitions, Mr Macron will visit German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin today in his first foreign trip.

The new president’s wife, Brigitte, a 64-year-old who was his high school drama teacher, listened to his sombre 12-minute speech wearing a light blue Louis Vuitton outfit.

At the end of the formalitie­s, a 21-gun salute rang out from the Invalides military hospital on the other side of the River Seine.

Mr Macron was later to be driven to the Arc de Triomphe to lay a wreath at the tomb of an unknown soldier.

The new president faces a host of daunting challenges including tackling stubbornly high unemployme­nt, fighting Islamist-inspired violence and uniting a deeply divided country.

Socialist Hollande’s five years in power were plagued by a sluggish economy and bloody terror attacks that killed more than 230 people and he leaves office after a single term.

Security was tight, with around 1,500 police officers deployed near the presidenti­al palace and the nearby Champs Elysees avenue and surroundin­g roads blocked off.

After a formal lunch, Mr Macron visited Paris’s town hall, a traditiona­l stop for any new French president.

Mr Macron’s first week will be busy. He is expected today to reveal the closely guarded name of his prime minister, before flying to Berlin.

It is virtually a rite of passage for French leaders to make their first European trip to meet the leader of the other half of the so-called “motor” of the EU.

Ms Merkel welcomed Mr Macron’s decisive 32-point victory over Marine Le Pen, saying he carried “the hopes of millions of French people and also many in Germany and across Europe”.

In June, Mr Macron faces what the French media are calling a “third round of the presidenti­al election” when the country elects a new parliament in a tworound vote.

The new president needs an outright majority to be able to enact his ambitious reform agenda.

The year-old political movement “Republique en Marche” (Republic on the Move) that he formed to launch his presidenti­al bid intends to field candidates in virtually every constituen­cy in the country.

It unveiled 428 of its 577 candidates this week, saying it wants to bring fresh faces into the National Assembly lower house of parliament. Half of them have never held elected office, and half of them are women.

 ?? AFP ?? Journalist­s wait at the entrance of the Elysee Palace prior to the Emmanuel Macron’s formal inaugurati­on ceremony as French President yesterday in Paris.
AFP Journalist­s wait at the entrance of the Elysee Palace prior to the Emmanuel Macron’s formal inaugurati­on ceremony as French President yesterday in Paris.

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