Connecticut Post

Gabriel Attal is France’s youngest, first openly gay prime minister

- By Sylvie Corbet

PARIS — France saw its youngest-ever prime minister and first openly gay one named Tuesday as President Emmanuel Macron seeks a fresh start for the rest of his term amid growing political pressure from the far right.

Gabriel Attal, 34, rose to prominence as the government spokespers­on then education minister and had polled as the most popular minister in the outgoing government.

His predecesso­r Elisabeth Borne resigned Monday following political turmoil over an immigratio­n law that strengthen­s the government’s ability to deport foreigners.

Macron will work with Attal to name a new government in the coming days, though some key ministers are expected to stay on.

“I know I can count on your energy and your commitment,’’ Macron posted on X in a message to Attal. The president made a reference to Attal reviving the “spirit of 2017,’’ when Macron shook up politics and shot to a surprise victory as France’s youngest-ever president on a pro-business centrist platform aimed at reviving one of the world’s biggest economies.

During the handover ceremony, Attal said: “I could read and hear it: the youngest president of the Republic in history appoints the youngest prime minister in history. I want to see it only as the symbol of boldness and movement. It is also, and perhaps above all, a symbol of confidence in young people.”

Attal said his goals include making security an “absolute priority” and promoting values of “authority and respect of others.” He also vowed to strengthen public services including schools and the health system and push for “better controllin­g immigratio­n.”

Macron, 46, has shifted rightward on security and migration issues since his election, notably as far-right rival Marine Le Pen and her anti-immigratio­n, antiIslam National Rally have gained political influence.

The president’s second term lasts until 2027, and he is constituti­onally barred from a third consecutiv­e term. Political observers have suggested that Macron, a staunch supporter of European integratio­n, wants his new government to prepare for June’s European Union elections, where far-right, anti-EU populists are expected to increase their influence.

Critics from both left and right took aim at Attal for his limited experience, his Paris upbringing seen as out of touch with people struggling in the provinces, and his loyalty to the president.

Le Pen posted on X: “What can the French expect from this 4th prime minister and 5th government in 7 years (under Macron)? Nothing,” calling on voters instead to choose her party in the European elections.

In a statement, Eric Ciotti, head of the conservati­ve party The Republican­s, said, “France urgently needs action: it needs a different approach.” The Republican­s would remain a “responsibl­e opposition” to the centrist government, he added.

The founder of the hard-left France Unbowed party, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, writing on X, mocked Attal for “returning to his position as spokesman. The function of prime minister is disappeari­ng. The presidenti­al monarch alone rules his court.”

Under the French political system, the prime minister is appointed by the president, accountabl­e to the parliament and is in charge of implementi­ng domestic policy, notably economic measures. The president holds substantia­l powers over foreign policy and European affairs and is the commander-in-chief of the country’s armed forces.

Attal, a former member of the Socialist Party, joined Macron’s newly created political movement in 2016 and was spokespers­on from 2020 to 2022, a job that made him well-known to the French public. He was then named budget minister before being appointed in July as education minister, one of the most prestigiou­s positions in government.

Attal quickly announced a ban on long robes in classrooms that took effect with the new school year in September, saying the garments worn mainly by Muslims were testing secularism in the schools.

Attal will face the same obstacle as his predecesso­r: Macron’s centrists lost their majority in parliament last year, forcing the government into political maneuverin­g and using special constituti­onal powers to be able to pass laws.

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