French Election Opens Up as Marine Le Pen Surges
President Emmanuel Macron’s belated entry into the
campaign and his focus on Ukraine have left him vulnerable to a strong
challenge from the right.
Roger Cohen
By Roger
Cohen
April 4,
2022, 3:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/04/world/europe/french-election-le-pen-macron.html
PARIS — At
last, Emmanuel Macron stepped forth. The French president entered a vast arena
this weekend, plunged into darkness and lit only by spotlights and glow sticks,
before a crowd of 30,000 supporters in a domed stadium in the Paris suburbs.
It was a
highly choreographed appearance — his first campaign rally for an election now
less than a week away — with something of the air of a rock concert. But Mr.
Macron had come to sound an alarm.
Do not
think “it’s all decided, that it’s all going to go well,” he told the crowd, a
belated acknowledgment that a presidential election that had seemed almost
certain to return him to power is suddenly wide open.
The
diplomatic attempt to end the war in Ukraine has been time-consuming for Mr.
Macron, so much so that he has had little time for the French election, only to
awaken to the growing danger that France could lurch to the anti-immigrant
right, with its Moscow-friendly politics and its skepticism of NATO.
Marine Le
Pen, the hard-right leader making her third attempt to gain power, has surged
over the past couple of weeks, as her patient focus on cost-of-living issues
has resonated with the millions of French people struggling to make ends meet
after an increase of more than 35 percent in gas prices over the past year.
The most
recent poll from the respected Ifop-Fiducial group showed Ms. Le Pen gaining
21.5 percent of the vote in the first round of voting next Sunday, almost
double the vote share of the fading extreme-right upstart Éric Zemmour, with 11
percent, and closing the gap on Mr. Macron with 28 percent. The two leading
candidates go through to a runoff on April 24.
More
worrying for Mr. Macron, the poll suggested he would edge Ms. Le Pen by just
53.5 percent to 46.5 percent in the second round. In the last presidential
election, in 2017, Mr. Macron trounced Ms. Le Pen by 66.1 percent to 33.9
percent in the runoff.
“It’s an
illusion that this election is won for Mr. Macron,” said Nicolas Tenzer, an
author who teaches political science at Sciences Po university. “With a high
abstention rate, which is possible, and the level of hatred toward the
president among some people, there could be a real surprise. The idea that Le
Pen wins is not impossible.”
This notion
would have seemed ridiculous a month ago. Ms. Le Pen looked like a has-been
after trying and failing in 2012 and 2017. Mr. Zemmour, a glib anti-immigrant
TV pundit turned politician with more than a touch of Donald Trump about him,
had upstaged her on the right of the political spectrum by suggesting that
Islam and France were incompatible.
Now,
however, Mr. Zemmour’s campaign appears to be sinking in a welter of bombast,
as Ms. Le Pen, who said last year that “Ukraine belongs to Russia’s sphere of
influence,” reaps the benefits of her milquetoast makeover.
Mr. Zemmour
may in the end have done Ms. Le Pen a service. By outflanking her on the right,
by becoming the go-to candidate for outright xenophobia, he has helped the
candidate of the National Rally (formerly the National Front) in her
“banalization” quest — the attempt to gain legitimacy and look more
“presidential” by becoming part of the French political mainstream.
Mr. Macron
has fallen two or three percentage points in polls over the past week,
increasingly criticized for his refusal to debate other candidates and his
general air of having more important matters on his mind, like war and peace in
Europe, than the laborious machinations of French democracy.
A
front-page cartoon in the daily newspaper Le Monde last week showed Mr. Macron
clutching his cellphone and turning away from the crowd at a rally. “Vladimir,
I’m just finishing with this chore and I’ll call you back,” he says.
With a
colorless prime minister in Jean Castex — Mr. Macron has tended to be wary of
anyone who might impinge on his aura — there have been few other compelling
political figures able to carry the president’s campaign in his absence. His
centrist political party, La République en Marche, has gained no traction in
municipal and regional politics. It is widely viewed as a mere vessel for Mr.
Macron’s agenda.
His government’s
wide use of consulting firms, including McKinsey — involving spending of more
than $1.1 billion, some of it on the best ways to confront Covid-19 — has also
led to a wave of criticism of Mr. Macron in recent days. A former banker, Mr.
Macron has often been attacked as “the president of the rich” in a country with
deeply ambivalent feelings about wealth and capitalism.
Still, Mr.
Macron has proved adept at occupying the entire central spectrum of French
politics through his insistence that freeing up the economy is compatible with
maintaining, and even increasing, the French state’s role in social protection.
Prominent figures of the center-left and center-right attended his rally on
Saturday.
Over the
course of the past five years, he has shown both faces of his politics, first
simplifying the labyrinthine labor code and spurring a start-up business
culture, then adopting a policy of “whatever it costs” to save people’s
livelihoods during the coronavirus pandemic. His handling of that crisis, after
a slow start, is widely viewed as successful.
“He
absolutely proved up to the task,” Mr. Tenzer said.
Still, much
of the left feels betrayed by his policies, whether on the environment, the
economy or the place of Islam in French society, and Mr. Macron was at pains on
Saturday to counter the view that his heart lies on the right. Citing
investments in education, promising to raise minimum pensions and give a
tax-free bonus to employees this summer, Mr. Macron proclaimed his concern for
those whose salaries vanish in “gasoline, bills, rents.”
It felt
like catch-up time after Mr. Macron had judged that his image as a
statesman-peacemaker would be enough to ensure him a second term. Vincent
Martigny, a professor of political science at the University of Nice, said of
Mr. Macron that “his choice to remain head of state until the end prevented him
from becoming a real candidate.”
The
campaign begins. French citizens will go to the polls in April to begin
electing a president. Here is a look at the candidates:
The
incumbent. President Emmanuel Macron, an inveterate political gambler who in
2017 became the nation’s youngest elected leader, announced his re-election bid
just a day before the deadline, against the background of the crisis in
Ukraine.
A
center-right candidate. Valérie Pécresse, the current leader of the Paris
region, recently won the nomination of the Republicans by adopting a vocabulary
with racial and colonial undertones. She now faces the difficult task of
enlarging her support base.
A
Trump-style provocateur. Éric Zemmour, a longtime conservative journalist and a
right-wing television star, says he is running to “save” a country that he says
is being assailed by Islam, immigration and identity politics.
The
far-right veteran. Marine Le Pen, who has long used fiery rhetoric to fight her
way to power in France, is seeking to sanitize her image. She finished third in
2012 and was defeated by Mr. Macron in the 2017 runoff.
A fiery
French leftist. For months, left-wing candidates barely made a dent with
voters. Then Jean-Luc Mélenchon, a skilled orator and the leader of the
far-left France Unbowed movement, started surging in voter surveys. He now sits
comfortably in third place.
The
worrying scenario for Mr. Macron is that Mr. Zemmour’s vote would go to Ms. Le
Pen in a runoff, and that she would be further bolstered by the wide section of
the left that feels betrayed or just viscerally hostile toward the president,
as well as by some center-right voters for whom immigration is a core issue.
On the
president’s first campaign foray into the provinces, a visit to Dijon last week
where he spent time in a working-class area, accompanied by the socialist
mayor, Mr. Macron offered this explanation of his sometimes seesawing policies:
“When you walk you need two legs. One on the left, and one on the right. And
you have to place one after the other in order to advance.”
It was the
sort of clever phrase that infuriates Mr. Macron’s opponents, leaving them
unsure what angle to attack him from.
Ms. Le Pen
has focused relentlessly on economic issues, promising to reduce gas and
electricity prices, tax the hiring of foreign employees to favor nationals,
preserve the 35-hour week and maintain the retirement age at 62, whereas Mr.
Macron wants to raise it to 65.
Mr. Macron
has warned that the French will have to “work harder,” a phrase dear to the
former center-right president Nicolas Sarkozy, and so a means to lure Mr.
Sarkozy’s faithful followers to the Macron camp.
If Ms. Le
Pen has wanted to appear a softened politician, she is by no means as
transformed from the anti-immigrant zealot she was as she likes to suggest. Her
program includes a plan to hold a referendum that would lead to a change in the
Constitution that would bar policies that lead to “the installation on national
territory of a number of foreigners so large that it would change the
composition and identity of the French people.”
“France,
land of immigration, is finished,” she said in February. She also said the
French must not allow their country to “be buried under the veil of
multiculturalism.” In September 2021, she declared: “French delinquents in
prison, foreigners on a plane!”
The
working-class vote is essentially split between Ms. Le Pen and the hard-left
candidate, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, who has also been gaining ground in recent polls
as the electorate begins to focus on what vote would be most effective in
propelling a candidate into the second round. But at around 15 percent, Mr.
Mélenchon appears to be well adrift still from Ms. Le Pen in the race for the
runoff.
The French
left has proved chronically split to the point of near political irrelevance
for the first time since the Fifth Republic’s foundation in 1958. The Socialist
Party, whose candidate François Hollande won the 2012 election and governed
until 2017, has collapsed, with just 1.5 percent of the vote in the
Ifop-Fiducial poll.
Although
Ms. Le Pen has tried to distance herself a little from President Vladimir V.
Putin of Russia, whom she met in Moscow in 2017, and whose policies she had
backed until the war in Ukraine, she remains allergic to hard-line measures
toward Russia. A victory by her would threaten European unity, alarm French
allies from Washington to Warsaw, and confront the European Union with its
biggest crisis since Brexit.
“Do we want
to die?” she asked in a recent television debate, when asked if France should
cut off oil and gas imports from Russia. “Economically, we would die!”
She added:
“We have to think of our people.”
Roger Cohen
is the Paris bureau chief of The Times. He was a columnist from 2009 to 2020.
He has worked for The Times for more than 30 years and has served as a foreign
correspondent and foreign editor. Raised in South Africa and Britain, he is a
naturalized American. @NYTimesCohen


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