The Guardian (USA)

Macron dodges tomatoes in post-election walkabout

- Angelique Chrisafis in Paris

Emmanuel Macron narrowly missed being hit by a bag of tomatoes during a surprise visit to a working-class area north of Paris, as he promised a new style of “listening to people” after his reelection as president.

In his first public appearance since Sunday’s vote, Macron strolled around a food market in the town of Cergy, north-west of Paris, shaking hands and posing for selfies. Most people were friendly, some shouted congratula­tions and others asked for help in finding a job, dealing with health problems or making ends meet.

But at one point there were briefly boos, and a bag of tomatoes was thrown towards Macron’s back but missed. A bodyguard opened an umbrella to shield the president, who quickly sidesteppe­d the projectile and continued to greet people and shake hands.

The Élysée Palace said the trip was Macron’s way of “listening to people’s concerns, expectatio­ns and needs”. He told local young people that he wanted to get out on the ground “from the start”. One young woman replied: “Don’t just come here for the photos.” Another onlooker said: “It’s good that he’s getting out of the Élysée.”

Macron won a second term at the weekend, beating the far-right candidate Marine Le Pen by 58.5% to her 41.5%, but on the campaign trail he faced accusation­s of being haughty and aloof and of not understand­ing people’s concerns about the cost of living, housing, jobs and poverty. He had struggled to shake off the tag of “president of the rich”.

Macron said in Cergy: “I want to give a message of respect and considerat­ion to these areas that are among the poorest in the country, right from the start of my mandate.”

He acknowledg­ed that deprived, high-rise neighbourh­oods surroundin­g Paris had some of the highest abstention rates in the presidenti­al vote. Macron said “life was hard” there and some people felt angry or cut off from politics, and not enough progress had been made in recent years to improve their lives.

He said there were problems of discrimina­tion, and a need for training schemes, more doctors and better health care in these areas, as well as job creation. “We’ve brought down unemployme­nt here, but it’s still above the national average because of discrimina­tion and not enough training,” he said after meeting young local entreprene­urs.

Macron, the first French leader to be re-elected for a second term in 20 years, is now focused on parliament­ary elections in June. He will need a centrist majority in the 577-seat house in order to put in place his manifesto plans, including overhaulin­g the benefits system and raising the pension age. Pollsters believe he has a good chance of winning a majority.

Cergy is a leftwing area where the radical-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon topped the presidenti­al vote’s first round. Mélenchon is attempting to strike alliances with other parties on the left to challenge Macron’s centrists in the parliament­ary elections.

Mélenchon’s party, La France Insoumise, which has 17 seats in parliament’s lower house, wants to expand by hundreds more to win a majority for the left. The Socialist party and the Greens (EELV) on Wednesday began talks on possible parliament­ary alliances with Mélenchon to increase the number of seats on the left.

Hurdles remain. The Socialists are traditiona­l rivals to La France Insoumise, and some older Socialists warn against “surrenderi­ng” the party’s principles. The Greens favour an alliance, but some Green figures have said they will not compromise on their proEurope and anti-nuclear stance.

 ?? Photograph: Benoît Tessier/AP ?? Bodyguards protect Emmanuel Macron with an umbrella after tomatoes were thrown at him during his Cergy visit.
Photograph: Benoît Tessier/AP Bodyguards protect Emmanuel Macron with an umbrella after tomatoes were thrown at him during his Cergy visit.

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