EU celebrates, and frets, over Macron’s victory
Election result means no Marine Le Pen — but it does
mean 5 more years of Emmanuel Macron.
BY DAVID M.
HERSZENHORN AND JACOPO BARIGAZZI
April 25,
2022 10:59 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-celebrates-and-frets-over-macrons-victory/
With his
decisive electoral victory over right-wing challenger Marine Le Pen on Sunday,
Macron not only clinched five more years as president of France but also
secured his place — for better or worse — at the center of EU decision-making
through 2027, and likely for many years beyond.
When he
completes his second, and final, term, in the spring of that year, he will
still be seven months shy of his 50th birthday. An encore in a top job in the
EU institutions is hardly out of the question.
But even as
Brussels and most capitals across the Continent breathed a sigh of relief at Le
Pen’s defeat, officials and diplomats on Monday began to contemplate the
ramifications of an EU universe in which France’s self-proclaimed Jupiter
genuinely dwarfs all other aspiring political stars — and can pursue his
ambitious, integrationist agenda for Europe largely unconstrained by French
domestic politics.
In an EU
still dominated, if not fully controlled, by the Franco-German dyad, Macron is
now positioned to claim the mantle of the recently retired German chancellor,
Angela Merkel. But whether he achieves his lofty goals — which include deeper
economic integration, greater independence from the U.S. on defense policy, and
transnational candidate lists in European elections — will hinge on his ability
to convince and cajole fellow leaders to follow his lead, to forge consensus
and broker concrete deals, rather than merely agitate and argue.
“The key
for Europe is finding common ground,” one senior national official who has
spent many hours and late nights in the corridors of the European Council’s
Europa building said, laying out the challenge now facing Macron. “Not minimum
agreement, that was Merkel’s legacy. Expand the space we all consider to be in
the European interest. This is what should be the goal.”
In other
words, to make his mark Macron must do more than manage crises, reactively, by
finding the lowest common denominator, and instead steer his colleagues on the
European Council toward proactive policymaking that will demonstrate the EU’s
usefulness to citizens.
A first
test will come in just a month, at an extraordinary European Council, where the
heads of state and government will wrestle once again with how to address
soaring energy prices — a spike exacerbated by Russia’s war on Ukraine.
“The best
he can do now is go into the May 30-31 summit and get a deal done in support of
European consumers,” the senior official said. “If he delivers this, given
German coalition impotence, there’s a lot more he can do if he is pragmatic and
reasonable.”
Outsized
French voice
Among the
obstacles Macron may face in the years ahead is collective resistance to a
sense of French hegemony. He is already viewed as the national leader most
responsible for the appointment of European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen, and he is known to be extremely close with the Francophone European
Council President Charles Michel. France, after Brexit, is also the EU’s sole
permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, and its sole nuclear
power, giving Paris an outsized voice in diplomatic discussions.
One
Paris-based EU diplomat said it was a marvel to watch France assert its
interests: first, a French official complains about some policy problem or
another; a paper shortly follows, and then the paper is turned into a policy
proposal, which, within a few months, is more or less adopted in EU regulation.
“It’s the country I know with the biggest gap between how effective it can be
in Brussels and the perception of its citizens that Europe is not French
enough,” the diplomat said.
Brussels,
at the moment, is already perceived as extremely French, and Macron’s victory,
however welcome, only confirms that perception.
Among the
challenges that Macron and other EU leaders will face in the months and years
ahead is dealing with Russia’s war in Ukraine. On that front, Macron’s legacy
of conciliatory outreach to Vladimir Putin, and his failure to help implement
the Minsk peace accords, will leave some leaders dubious about letting him
steer the EU’s approach.
In seeking
to become a deal-broker among power-brokers on economic and other policy
issues, Macron will also have to contend with more seasoned counterparts,
including Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who earlier this month won his
fifth term, and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who is now serving in his
fourth government. Neither will be particularly impressed that Macron has
become the first French president to be reelected since Jacques Chirac in 2002.
“He has
certainly made his second and last election, but he will not be able to catch
up with Orbán,” said a senior EU diplomat. “Then he has to create a government
after the June [National] Assembly elections.”
The senior
diplomat said there was fair reason to hope that Macron would rise to the
Europe-wide role. “Of course we hope he will become the European statesman,”
the senior diplomat said. “It would be good for all of us. Let’s give him the
benefit of the doubt for now.”
But in
Brussels, the relief over Macron’s defeat of Le Pen is tempered by the
right-wing candidate’s strong showing and fear that Macron will not move
quickly enough to create space for a mainstream successor.
The French
president is not exactly known for sharing the limelight, and his success in
largely obliterating the traditional center-right and center-left parties in
France has created a risk that his two-term presidency, like Barack Obama’s in
the U.S., will be followed by the election of an anti-immigrant Euroskeptic
with little allegiance to NATO or the EU.
A diplomat
from Southern Europe pointed out that, in five years, Le Pen “stands a great
chance as Macron destroyed both the Socialists and Les Républicains.”
To avoid Le
Pen or a similar extremist winning in 2027, the southern diplomat said: “We
would need a strong centrist candidate.” That is one reason Brussels will be
watching closely for Macron’s choice of prime minister.
EU push
Macron so
far has found only moderate success in pushing his EU agenda. Ideas such as the
creation of transnational candidate lists were brushed aside by other leaders
ahead of the 2019 European Parliament election. Macron pushed for the creation
of the Conference on the Future of Europe, a series of discussions that would
explore various ways that the EU might evolve and better serve citizens.
Whether anything concrete will come of the conference remains to be seen.
Some said
Brussels should savor Macron’s victory before starting to fret about the future
of either Europe or of France.
Nathalie
Loiseau, a centrist French member of the European Parliament and ally of
Macron, said she had encountered “a huge relief of all Europeans who have
bombarded us with messages during the campaign and bombard us again now to
express their joy. It is very impressive.”
Macron’s
reelection, Loiseau said, means that “we will finalize what has already
advanced on digital issues, and defense. We will accelerate the pace on the
Green Deal and we will continue to intensify things on Ukraine through
sanctions and military aid. And we will prepare a meeting on the Balkans, which
is especially important as the region is going through intense tensions.”
Macron’s
spotty record in the EU arena, however, will also create pressure for him to
tone down the rhetoric and dial up specifics, especially on topics like
“strategic autonomy” — the goal of making Europe more independent on defense
and security matters.
It’s not
that ideas like strategic autonomy lack “merit or substance,” a third EU
diplomat said, but that in Paris there’s “a failure to understand the EU is no
heavily centralized republic.”
In other
words, Brussels is not Paris, the EU is not France. “So unless Macron shows
understanding and humility towards those that think differently,” the diplomat
said. it will be difficult for Macron to realize his aspirations. “France,” the
third diplomat stressed, “needs partners.”
Maïa de La
Baume contributed reporting.



Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário