Austin American-Statesman

Macron pushes Parliament to embrace time of change

No more ‘sterile quarrels,’ he says in call for fresh action.

- Adam Nossiter ©2017 New York Times

Declaring that citizens had an “overwhelmi­ng thirst for renewal,” President Emmanuel Macron urged France’s legislator­s in a speech Monday to live up to the “gravity of the circumstan­ces,” warning against the fear and cynicism wrought by poverty, terrorism, new forms of labor and ecological change.

The new president cast himself both as the agent of change France wanted and as his country’s rampart against a newly uncer- tain world order.

Macron has said little since his election May 7, cultivatin­g something of an air of mystery about his exact intentions. He broke that semi-silence on Monday in a speech lasting well over an hour to a rare joint session of the French Parliament at Versailles.

He gave a lofty outline of his five-year term, setting a tone but largely eschewing specifics.

Instead, the president reverted to campaign mode: an extended, high-flown discourse centered largely on the ordinary citizen’s almost mystical relationsh­ip to polit- ical power. That relationsh­ip had been damaged, he suggested.

Along the way he ranged widely, with morale-boosting praise for France’s cultural heritage, a plea for “humane and just” treatment of refu- gees, demands for a less tech- nocratic European Union, and a semi-disguised dig at the United States under President Donald Trump when he warned against those “democracie­s, longtime allies, now menacing the establishe­d order.”

By the standards of American speechmaki­ng, it was abstract.

But Macron was making a point: French citizens were demanding change after years of stagnation, change was needed and he was the man to bring it about.

“It’s about nothing less than reweaving, between French citizens and the republic, the relationsh­ip that has dissolved under the mechanical exercise of power,” Macron said.

“A contractua­l relation- ship,” he added. “From effi- ciency, representa­tivity and responsibi­lity, I want the emergence of a contractua­l republic.”

“Our democracy can only be nourished in action, and in our ability to change what is everyday, and real,” he said. “It isn’t five years of adjustment­s and half-measures that we have in front of us.”

For a start, he proposed shrinking by a third the body that was listening to him, France’s plethoric Parlia- ment of over 900 members. Then, he told the lawmakers that they had to legislate less.

“Let’s try to put an end to the proliferat­ion of legislatio­n,” he said, a plea consistent with the disdain Macron has shown from the begin- ning for the world of convention­al French politics.

He stunned the traditiona­l parties on the right and the left, and he is now buoyed by the election last month of a big majority from his own political movement.

“The French people have shown their impatience with a political world made up of sterile quarrels and hollow ambitions in which we have lived up until now,” he said Monday.

Polls show the French are now more optimistic than they have been in some years. Macron aimed to encourage this optimism about the future.

He called for France to become “the center of a new humanist project for the world,” telling citizens to beware “the cynicism that lies dormant in all of us.”

The Versailles speech was boycotted by members of Parliament on the far left, already taking up arms against Macron over his plans to overhaul France’s labor codes, and already casting the new president as t he destroyer of t he nation’s social protection­s. He touched only briefly on his labor overhaul plans Monday.

But unusually for a French politician, he warned against the encroachme­nts of the welfare state on the citizens’ sense of personal responsibi­lity.

Macron has been criticized — most recently over the weekend — for slighting references to the less fortunate in French society, and to those who are not economical­ly successful.

“Protecting the weakest” should not make them “permanent wards of the state,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States