Macron reelected but Le Pen’s big score shows
France increasingly divided
The French president has won another term but faces
rough ride after far right reaches historic high.
BY CLEA
CAULCUTT
April 24,
2022 8:04 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/macron-re-elected-for-second-term-as-french-president-projection/
PARIS —
Emmanuel Macron was reelected as president of France on Sunday but a powerful
showing by his far-right rival Marine Le Pen — her strongest ever — spells
trouble for his second term and sends a warning shot to NATO and the European
Union.
The
centrist incumbent swept to victory by a comfortable margin, with some 58.5
percent of the electorate backing him versus 41.5 percent for Le Pen, according
to a preliminary tally. That gives Macron a second five-year term.
But the
president’s victory is clouded by the fact that his rival — an
anti-immigration, nationalist candidate who advocates banning the Islamic
headscarf in public, has courted Russian President Vladimir Putin and wants to
turn the European Union into an “alliance of European nations” — won more votes
than any far-right candidate in the history of the French Republic.
More than
12 million people chose Le Pen, about five million more than during her last
presidential bid in 2017 — an increase that suggests that her strategy of
trying to bring her party into the political mainstream has been largely
successful.
The result
carries also warnings for the EU and NATO.
In the
midst of Russia’s war on Ukraine, with footage of bombed-out cities featured
daily on TV news, a huge chunk of the French electorate backed a candidate who
has called for forming an alliance with Moscow and said she would pull France
out of NATO’s integrated command if elected.
“This
result is [the sign] of a great mistrust against our leaders and against
European leaders, a message they cannot ignore,” Le Pen told supporters in her
concession speech. “Voters have shown they want a strong opposition power to
Macron.”
Her strong
showing will be seen as a warning in Brussels, which is still rattled by
Britain’s vote to leave the European Union and is locked in judicial battles
with Poland and Hungary over rule-of-law disputes.
But the
most immediate challenge will be for Macron, who embarks on his second term in
a deeply divided country where political anger could easily boil over into
street protests and violence.
The
president acknowledged those divisions in his victory speech.
“Our
country is full of doubts and divisions, so we will need to be strong. But
nobody will be left by the wayside,” he said from an octagon-shaped stage set
in front of the Eiffel Tower.
Unrest
around the corner
While the
vote means continuity will prevail in France, it also shows that divisions that
have plagued French politics for decades are not shrinking, but getting larger
with every successive election.
Le Pen is
on her third presidential campaign but she has not ruled out another and is by
no means finished politically. She has recovered from her defeat in 2017 and
significantly expanded her party’s base. In her concession speech, the National
Rally party chief struck a combative tone and hinted that she would be leading
her troops into battle when voters elect a new French parliament in June.
“It’s a
striking victory,” Le Pen told cheering supporters in Boulogne, a suburb of
Paris that has historically been her party’s home base.
Hinting at
potential alliances that could strengthen Le Pen’s party even further,
far-right presidential candidate Eric Zemmour, who was knocked out in the election’s
first round, called for the formation of a “patriotic bloc” uniting his and Le
Pen’s supporters.
“We must
forget our quarrels and unite our forces. It is possible, it is essential, it
is our duty. Let’s build the first coalition of the right and the patriots as
soon as possible,” Zemmour said after the election results were announced.
Macron
crippled the mainstream center-left and center-right forces during his rise to
power and Sunday’s vote showed that the once-powerful Socialist and Les
Républicains parties are beyond saving. Neither party was able to gather more
than five percent of votes in the first round, meaning that they will not be
eligible to have their campaign expenses reimbursed by the state.
Their
collapse accelerates the reformatting of France’s political landscape, away
from a right-left divide, toward a split between nationalist anti-establishment
populists and centrist pro-European progressives.
Embarking
on his second term fresh from two years of COVID policies, amid high inflation
and the war in Ukraine, Macron is unlikely to enjoy any sort of honeymoon
period. Calls have already gone up to kickstart what’s known in France as a
“social third round” of the presidential election — one that takes place in the
streets, in the form of protests. Left-wing voters who held their noses and
voted for Macron to keep the far right out of power are particularly motivated
to apply pressure to Macron’s administration.
“It’s going
to be a rocky ride,” a top official at Macron’s La République en Marche party
told POLITICO ahead of Sunday’s vote.
“I don’t
think there’ll be a big wide-ranging protest movement, but I do think we see a
range of protests in different parts of the country, some like the Yellow
Jacket [grassroots protest movement].”
Protests
have already kicked off in French universities, with activists angry about
having to choose between the far right and a pro-business candidate. Some
leaders of the Yellow Jacket movement, which rocked France in 2018 and 2019,
are already calling on citizens to take to the streets.
Discontent
has also spread among leftwing voters, whose candidates were all knocked out of
the first round of voting on April 10. Twenty-two percent of the electorate
voted for far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon in the first round and were
particularly divided over options in the second.
The France
Unbowed party leader emerged as a champion of the left-leaning anti-Macron
crowd, scoring highly in suburbs with a large immigrant population and with
youth across the country, thanks in part to his green agenda.
As Macron
enters his second term, there will be plenty of opportunities for protest. The
president was elected on a platform of reforming state pensions and pushing
back the retirement age from 62 to 64 or 65 years old. He also wants to reform
and introduce more autonomy in French schools, an ambition that will put him on
a collision course with France’s powerful teachers’ unions.
Macron’s
first mandate was hardly easy, marred by the COVID-19 pandemic and the Yellow
Jacket protests that began over a green fuel tax. This time around, he vows
that he has learned from mistakes, and promises a new method aimed at building
consensus to push through reforms.
But with
inflation and energy prices going up, many observers believe the country is
being primed for a backlash.
The third round
In the
short term, Macron’s opponents are already readying for battle ahead of the
parliamentary election in June. The president needs a majority in the National
Assembly to be able to push through his reforms and campaigning is not expected
to be easy.
Traditionally,
French voters tend to vote the same way in presidential and parliamentary
elections, so that the elected president and his government aren’t at
loggerheads as they begin their term.
But for
France’s left, the parliamentary election offers an opportunity for revenge.
Mélenchon came a close third in the first round of the presidential election
and his camp hopes to capitalize on his success and thwart Macron’s reform
plans.
Much
attention will also be on Le Pen’s National Rally, which will face competition
or cooperation in the parliamentary election with Zemmour, who garnered 7
percent of the vote in the first round of the presidential election.
The hard
right usually fares badly in parliamentary elections as mainstream parties tend
to unite to block them out of office. In 2017, the National Rally only got
eight seats out of 577, though Le Pen got 33 percent of the vote in the
presidential election that year.
Le Pen
pitched herself as the spokesperson for the downtrodden, the forgotten French
against the urban elites. The French president has vowed to unite the country,
but questions over how those voices are heard have never been more acute.
This
article has been updated.


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