Newsweek

Vive Macron!

Establishm­ent Europe shouldn’t feel too relieved about right-winger Marine Le Pen’s defeat in France

- BY OWEN MATTHEWS @owenmatth

IT WAS THE day the world didn’t end, the day that the tide of populism that gave the world Brexit and Donald Trump turned, the moment when French voters chose pragmatism over protest. That, at least, was the judgment of Europe’s establishm­ent at the victory of centrist Emmanuel Macron in the May 7 French presidenti­al election.

It’s not hard to see why the defeat of the Euroskepti­c, anti-immigratio­n Marine Le Pen was so vital to the West’s future. A victory for Le Pen’s far-right National Front party would likely have heralded the disintegra­tion of the European Union and the end of the continent’s grand experiment with open borders. And it would have caused a deep crisis in a world order based on free trade, mass migration and globalizat­ion—precisely the forces that Le Pen’s insurgent campaign blamed for France’s ills.

Macron—a former economy minister and relative political unknown before he launched his surprise centrist-insurgent bid for the presidency last November —stormed into the Élysée Palace by a decisive 66 percent. And yet, despite the palpable relief at the result in Brussels and in government offices across Europe, Macron’s margin was in fact uncomforta­bly small. In 2002, Le Pen’s Holocaust-denying father, Jean-marie, founder of the National Front, polled under 18 percent to establishm­ent candidate Jacques Chirac’s 82.2 percent. A decade and a half later, the nationalis­t vote in France has almost doubled to 33.9 percent. The danger remains that Le Pen’s anti-globalist, nativist ideology is still only one economic crisis away from power.

Even in defeat, Le Pen has already realigned French politics. Her “project [is to] reconfigur­e French democracy around the question of identity,” wrote Sylvain Crépon, a sociologis­t specializi­ng in the National Front, in the French daily Libération. “It wants the principal divide to be between those attached to national identity (nationalis­ts, patriots) and those who seek to destroy it (globalists, cosmopolit­ans, proEuropea­ns).” The election’s first round saw all

the candidates of France’s mainstream political parties eliminated from the race, leaving two political insurgents to face off in the final round. If Le Pen can replace a “supposedly outmoded left-right divide” based on the traditiona­l tribal loyalties of money and class, then, argues Crépon, “she can present her party as the one true alternativ­e to what she describes as a system of ‘uncontroll­ed globalizat­ion.’”

It was Le Pen’s passionate denunciati­on of globalizat­ion and immigratio­n that made her bid for France’s presidency so alarming for observers around the world. Anti-globalizat­ion and anti-immigrant feelings fueled Trump’s victory last November and were major factors in Britain’s vote to leave the European Union. Most Western nations have a large constituen­cy of working-class voters who fear losing jobs to immigrants and cheaper factories abroad, as well as middle-class voters angry at bank bailouts. In addition, violent extremism and the refugee crisis have brought Europe’s simmering culture wars over unintegrat­ed Muslim minorities to the boiling point. In Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has threatened to defy European rules and close his country’s borders to immigrants; in the Netherland­s, Geert Wilders’s anti-islam Freedom Party came a worrying second in parliament­ary elections in March.

Like Trump, Le Pen put fear and national pride front and center in her campaign. She promised to get tough on terrorism by deporting suspected jihadis and closing mosques suspected of promoting radical views. And despite levels of crime that are average by European standards—and dramatical­ly low by American ones—le Pen vowed to put 15,000 more police on the streets and add 40,000 prison places. (Macron has made similar promises but on a smaller scale.) She also told BBC’S Newsnight in March that “I agree with Donald Trump when he says ‘NATO is obsolete,’ because NATO was created to fight the USSR.”

But it was her appeal to historic French greatness that caused the most disquiet among her European neighbors. Days before the election, plagiarizi­ng a recent speech by former conservati­ve opponent François Fillion, she quoted early 20th-century French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau. “Once a soldier of God, and now a soldier of liberty, France will always be the soldier of the ideal,” she told voters. Le Pen promised to turn back the forces of multicultu­ralism, extend a ban on the Islamic headscarf in public (along with other overt symbols of religion, including yarmulkes) and reduce immigratio­n by 80 percent to just 10,000 people a year. In an acrimoniou­s debate with Macron, she warned that her opponent would allow France to be crushed by the economic power of Germany and would “lie prostrate” before Berlin. “France will be led by a woman, either me or Mrs. Merkel,” joked Le Pen. The rhetoric was disturbing­ly reminiscen­t of an old, violent Europe defined by national rivalry rather than cooperatio­n. “We are the owners of our country,” she told voters in the town of Monswiller. “We must have the keys to open the house of France, to open it halfway, to close the door.”

Le Pen also attacked the euro, calling it “the currency of bankers. It’s not the people’s currency.” Macron, by contrast, is a former banker at Rothschild and a fervent advocate of the euro “not just as a policy” but as the foundation of Europe’s unity. Though Le Pen backed off her Euroskepti­cism in the final weeks of the campaign, she stuck to her promise to hold a referendum on France’s membership in the eurozone—and since it is the second-largest economy to have adopted the common currency, a French exit would have spelled the euro’s death.

The problem, for France and Europe, is that the forces of discontent that fueled Le Pen’s challenge are not going to disappear. On the contrary, Macron’s promise to loosen France’s labor

code to make it easier to hire and fire workers, cut down on massive state spending that currently accounts for 57 percent of gross domestic product and work with the Germans to strengthen the institutio­ns of the eurozone all point to trouble ahead. In a typically truculent manner, France’s powerful unions planned protests even in advance of the election result, in a show of force designed to remind the winner that public-sector workers have the capacity to bring the country to a halt. Macron’s predecesso­r, the right-winger Nicolas Sarkozy, attempted a similar reform a decade ago but was thwarted by massive opposition from organized labor. France’s economy is already sluggish. A fresh eurozone crisis, perhaps triggered by Italian bank defaults, could do the same to Macron’s platform and discredit his Europhilia in the eyes of French voters.

The war against nationalis­m is far from over. A key part of Macron’s appeal was that he represente­d no traditiona­l party. But his lack of a political machine is also likely to be a serious liability in June’s parliament­ary elections, when his newly minted En Marche! party will face entrenched political veterans. In his victory speech, Macron told voters that “I will need you six weeks from now” to give him “a true majority, a strong majority, a majority for change…. Europe and the world are waiting for us to defend everywhere the spirit of the Enlightenm­ent that has come under threat in so many different places. They’re expecting us to defend freedom. They’re expecting us to defend the oppressed.”

France’s president, unlike the U.S. leader, shares executive power with the prime minister, who is chosen from whichever party controls a majority in the parliament. If En Marche! fails to win such a majority, Macron could find himself essentiall­y paralyzed. “If this next mandate is a failure, you can be sure Marine Le Pen will win next time,” journalist Anne Sinclair told French TV channel TF1.

“I am surprised that the strength of the Front Nationale… still surprises France,” says Anne Nivat, whose recent best-selling book, The France in Which We Live, explores the country’s deep social divisions. “It is not a new phenomenon that just arrived with these elections. It’s nonetheles­s still a subject about which there is a lot of denial…. Yes, there are people who vote Front Nationale. Yes, there are problems which no one has been able to solve. We need everybody to stop being in denial.”

Le Pen’s entire political career has been devoted to the dédiabolis­ation—“de-demonizati­on”—of her father’s party by distancing herself from the most obviously racist members of its establishm­ent, including Jean-marie Le Pen himself. She nearly succeeded, reaching out to marginal groups traditiona­lly wary of the National Front, such as gay people, the Jewish community and practicing Catholics. She also came close to building a poll-winning alliance of the alienated, the scared and the left behind—and was especially successful in attracting traditiona­lly Socialist-voting members of France’s working class.

Macron has also acknowledg­ed that the old party system in France is dead. “The world changes,” he told a crowd in Toulon earlier this year. The idea that “one must be right or left [is] a finished taxonomy, as if political life were a frozen species, butterflie­s that had to be pinned to a wall.” The question remains whether that seismic shift will continue to favor Macron.

In the acrimoniou­s April debate, Le Pen accused Macron of being an “arrogant… spoilt… cold-eyed... smirking banker” who was complacent on terrorism and intent on “butchering France” in favor of “big economic interests.” This time, voters rejected her dystopic vision of a France under siege. The center, for the time being, has held. But the global insurgency by the world’s have-nots is by no means over. Brexit, refugees and a slow-burning euro crisis are existentia­l threats to not only Macron’s political career but the idea of a united Europe itself. Le Pen and the global anti-liberal insurgency have suffered a setback. But they have not been defeated.

LE PEN’S ANTI-GLOBALIST, NATIVIST IDEOLOGY IS STILL ONLY ONE ECONOMIC CRISIS AWAY FROM POWER.

 ??  ?? POWER COUPLE: A key part of Macron’s appeal was that he represente­d no traditiona­l party, but that may also hinder his efforts to win a robust majority in the parliament.
POWER COUPLE: A key part of Macron’s appeal was that he represente­d no traditiona­l party, but that may also hinder his efforts to win a robust majority in the parliament.
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