OPINION
The roots of anger in rural France
Ahead of the presidential run-off, many feel abandoned
by the Macron government.
BY JÉRÉMIE
GALLON
April 21,
2022 4:00 am
Jérémie
Gallon is managing director at McLarty Associates, an adjunct professor at
Sciences Po and a non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. His
latest book is “Henry Kissinger, l’Européen.”
I grew up
in Cosne d’Allier, a village located in Auvergne, a rural region in the heart
of France. During my childhood, I remember people were proud that support for
the far right in our town was weak, as what was then called the National Front
struggled to break the 5 percent threshold. Those days are over.
In the
first round of the French presidential election on April 10, the far right won
33 percent of the vote here. That means, including those who cast their ballots
for the far left, 60 percent of the voters in my village chose an extremist,
populist candidate.
This
pattern was repeated in village after village across France. But why is French
society being driven by the explosive mix of anger and anxiety on which
populists thrive?
From an
international perspective, it may appear hard to explain the rancor — even
hatred — that many French people feel toward President Emmanuel Macron. For
those who have experienced the chaos of Donald Trump’s presidency in the United
States, or suffer daily from the demagoguery and scandals that pepper British
Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s erratic rule, the French president can appear an
almost model leader.
Despite the
crises he faced during his first term, this dynamic, pro-European president —
committed to the fight against climate change — enhanced France’s leadership on
the global stage. He implemented structural reforms that strengthened the
economy, and entrepreneurial dynamism has never been stronger. Even with the
war in Ukraine, inflation remains lower in France than in its neighbors, and
its growth prospects remain comparatively stronger.
To hide
behind standard explanations of ignorance and bigotry is both inaccurate and
lazy. As a child of Cosne d’Allier, I know that its inhabitants are neither
racist nor nostalgic for a France turned in on itself. On the contrary, many
are driven by values and ethics that would be a source of inspiration.
What we
need to do instead is understand the lived experience of French voters outside
of the small Parisian elite. The Auvergne, for example, is a region that has
suffered deeply over the last few decades — factories have closed, one after
the other, and farmers work hard for a modest and dwindling income.
As with
those who voted for Trump in 2016, and again in 2020, many feel that social
mobility is broken, and that — no matter what they do — neither their lives,
nor the lives of their children, are likely to improve. And this is not just a
feeling. Data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
estimates that it now takes six generations — or 180 years — for the descendant
of a French family in the bottom 10 percent of the income scale to reach the
national average. In Denmark or Finland, it takes “only” two generations.
Declining
purchasing power is also a daily fear for many. On the fifth of each month,
once the electricity and gas bills and the rent have been paid, many bank
accounts are already empty. In my village, farmers who have worked all their
lives find themselves with pensions of a few hundred euros a month. And after
paying for petrol and childcare, some of those who get up at 5 a.m. every day
to work at the nearby slaughterhouse have less in their account than those who
have stayed at home all day.
Many rural
dwellers feel — in common with those from poor urban suburbs — that the state
has not done enough to help. On the contrary, they feel they have been
abandoned by the government. Despite the activism of local politicians and
residents, public services are gradually dying out. Post offices, police
stations and tax offices tend to go first; then the schools close, taking with
them the last shops and the village café.
And through
all this, power remains in the hands of the same groups, the same civil
servants that have ruled France for decades. There is a sense that change —
almost any change — must surely be better.
If
reelected on April 24, Macron will have to reform France even more than he has
done in the past five years. This is the only way to avoid a social explosion
of even greater magnitude than the Yellow Jacket movement. It is the only way
to build a more fluid and fair French society. And it is the only way to
breathe real hope back into the streets of my village, and thousands of others
like it.

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