OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
France Is Still in Trouble
April 26,
2022, 1:00 a.m. ET
Credit...Gonzalo
Fuentes/Reuters
By Philippe
Marlière
Dr.
Marlière is a professor of French and European politics at University College
London.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/26/opinion/macron-france-le-pen.html
France can
breathe again.
On Sunday,
President Emmanuel Macron was re-elected, taking 58.5 percent of the vote to
Marine Le Pen’s 41.5 percent. After a couple of agonizing weeks where the
country contemplated the possibility of the presidency falling to the far
right, the result seemed to herald the return to business as usual.
Yet it
would be premature to celebrate. French democracy, in truth, has never been in
worse health. Mr. Macron scored two million fewer votes than he did in 2017,
and the two major parties of the postwar era, the Republicans and the
Socialists, have all but collapsed. In their wake, French politics is now
driven by three forces — headed by Mr. Macron, Ms. Le Pen and the leftist
Jean-Luc Mélenchon — pulling in opposite directions. Add in record levels of
abstention, and you have a recipe for instability.
But the
problem goes beyond politics. Mr. Macron’s divisive presidency gave rise to an
extraordinary explosion of popular anger and resentment. This took many forms,
from the Yellow Vests protests — a movement initially against a rise in the
fuel tax that metastasized into all-out opposition to the president — to
bellicose culture wars. The French people have been at once animated and
anesthetized by the past five years. The national mood, given to febrile
outbursts and hurt withdrawals, is uneasy.
That brew
of volatile feelings is not going anywhere. In the coming years, as the country
deals with the continued fallout from the pandemic, geopolitical crises and
price hikes, it may be given ample cause for expression. Mr. Macron won, yes.
But France is still in trouble.
To be sure,
there were similar cries of despair in 2002, when Jean-Marie Le Pen made it to
the second round. But the situation then was much more contained: It was
considered a freak contest and a one-off accident. Jacques Chirac, who won a
resounding 82 percent, was so confident of victory that he refused to debate
his opponent. A million took to the streets of Paris to “stop Fascism,” and
voters flocked to Mr. Chirac, a center-right candidate, to ensure Mr. Le Pen
had no chance of victory.
Things
looked very different this time. When Mr. Le Pen’s daughter, Marine, made it to
the second round for the second election in a row, nobody was surprised — and
nobody marched in protest. The “republican front,” an emergency coalition of
mainstream voters and parties against the far right, was weaker than it’s ever
been. Mr. Macron’s victory was for a time seriously in doubt and far from
emphatic when it did come. The far right may have been stopped at the ballot
box this time, but its ideas and candidates are now firmly part of the
mainstream.
The
election in 2017 looks, in retrospect, to have been a missed opportunity. Mr.
Macron, a political newcomer, spoke of upholding the French republican values
of liberty, equality and fraternity. He pledged to set up more democratic
political institutions and to hold elites accountable. He promised to tackle
France’s colonial legacy and acknowledged French cultural and religious
diversity. For many, it was a breath of fresh air. Here was a young president
with a mandate and a motive to renew French democracy and society.
It didn’t
happen. Early in his tenure, Mr. Macron was compared with Justin Trudeau,
energetically bringing progressive reform to a tired country. Today Mr.
Macron’s critics see him as a very different leader: a French Margaret
Thatcher. His five years in office have been marked by contempt for democratic
oversight, condescension for the poor and cruelty toward migrants. In the
process, he disappointed and even enraged those who’d hoped he would be true to
his campaign promise to be the president for all.
Politically,
the effects have been parlous. By siphoning off large chunks from both
center-left and center-right electorates, Mr. Macron helped bring about the
demise of France’s two major parties. As a result, politics has become
fragmented and debates have become polarized. Traditional party oppositions on
socio-economic matters have been supplanted by endless culture wars on Islam,
immigration and national identity. In this atmosphere, the left under Mr.
Mélenchon has radicalized, winning the support of the young and multiracial but
putting off more moderate left-wing voters.
The far
right, for its part, has taken the opportunity to pose as the only plausible
opposition force to the president. In a disillusioned and dissatisfied society,
that’s found some purchase. Éric Zemmour, the media pundit turned politician,
led the way in staking out extreme positions on Islam and immigration. Ms. Le
Pen, softening her image, followed in his slipstream. The strategy was
successful: About a third of the electorate cast their votes in the first round
for the far right, an unprecedented high.
The upsurge
of support for the far right is hardly straightforward. But it’s clear that it
expresses, among other things, an amorphous anger afoot across France. The
Yellow Vests, whose members came from across the political spectrum,
illustrated the depths of disquiet in the country — something the pandemic
seems only to have exacerbated. In the past two years, a forceful anti-vaccine
movement has taken root. The old ideologies of socialism and conservatism have
been replaced by conspiracy theories and political confusion.
That’s
dangerous. In the final two weeks of the campaign, Mr. Macron offered
concessions to the left, among them revising a planned pension reform and
committing anew to environmental protections. Already superficial, these
promises do little to suggest the president will change course. If he doesn’t,
the anger and bitterness of his compatriots will surely swell. That could spell
more radicalized social movements from the left and rancorous resentment from
the far right. Legislative elections in June could be an early taste of the
difficulties to come.
Far from a
model democracy, France is a country ill at ease with pluralism, multiculturalism
and political liberalism — a condition revealed by the steady rise of the far
right. That’s bad enough. But it’s hard to dispel the feeling that something
worse may be around the corner.
Philippe
Marlière (@PhMarliere) is a professor of French and European politics at
University College London.


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