U.S. Braces for Potential French Election
Shockwave
Michael
Crowley
April 21,
2022, 4:35 p.m. ETApril 21, 2022
April 21,
2022
Michael
Crowley
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/21/us/politics/france-election-biden.html
WASHINGTON
— U.S. officials are anxiously watching the French presidential election, aware
that the outcome of the vote on Sunday could scramble President Biden’s
relations with Europe and reveal dangerous fissures in Western democracy.
President
Emmanuel Macron of France has been a crucial partner as Mr. Biden has rebuilt
relations with Europe, promoted democracy and forged a coalition in response to
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But Mr. Macron is in a tight contest with Marine
Le Pen, a far-right challenger.
Ms. Le Pen
is a populist agitator who, in the style of former President Donald J. Trump,
scorns European Union “globalists,” criticizes NATO and views President
Vladimir V. Putin of Russia as an ally.
Her victory
could complicate Mr. Biden’s effort to isolate Russia and aid Ukraine. But the
very real prospect of a nationalist leading France is also a reminder that the
recent period of U.S.-European solidarity on political and security issues like
Russia and democracy may be fragile. Poland and Hungary, both NATO members,
have taken authoritarian turns. And Germany’s surprisingly strong response to
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is already drawing domestic criticism.
“To have a
right-wing government come to power in France would be a political earthquake,”
said Charles A. Kupchan, a professor at Georgetown who was the Europe director
of the National Security Council during the Obama administration. “It would
send a troubling signal about the overall political health of the Western
world.”
He added:
“This is a moment of quite remarkable European unity and resolve. But Le Pen’s
election would certainly raise profound questions about the European project.”
Mr. Macron
was unable to command more than a small plurality of support against several
opponents in the first round of voting on April 10. Ms. Le Pen, who finished
second, is his opponent in the runoff election on Sunday. Polls show Mr. Macron
with a clear lead, but analysts say a Le Pen victory is completely plausible.
An
immigration hard-liner and longtime leader of France’s populist right, Ms. Le
Pen has campaigned mainly on domestic issues, including the rising cost of
living. But her foreign policy views have unsettled U.S. officials. Last week, she
renewed vows to scale back France’s leadership role in NATO and to pursue “a
strategic rapprochement” with Russia after the war with Ukraine has concluded.
Ms. Le Pen also expressed concern that sending arms to Ukraine risked drawing
other nations into the war.
In a debate
on Wednesday, Mr. Macron reminded voters that Ms. Le Pen’s party had taken a
loan from a Russian bank. “You depend on Mr. Putin,” he told her.
Ms. Le Pen
insisted she was “an absolutely and totally free woman” and said she sought
foreign cash after French banks refused to lend to her. She also sought to
deflect charges that she was sympathetic to Russia’s war aims, declaring her
“absolute solidarity” with the Ukrainian people.
Ms. Le Pen
has also pledged to curtail the influence of the European Union, which the
Biden administration sees as a vital counterweight to Russia and China.
One senior
U.S. official noted that France has a recent history of right-wing candidates
striking fear into the political establishment before falling short. That was
the case five years ago, when Mr. Macron defeated Ms. Le Pen in a runoff.
But recent
elections in the West have been prone to upsets, and analysts warned against
complacency in Washington, especially given the stakes for the United States.
One sign of
how much the Biden administration values its partnership with Mr. Macron was
the minor sense of crisis after France withdrew its ambassador to Washington in
September after the disclosure of a new initiative between the United States
and Britain to supply Australia with nuclear submarines.
Mr.
Macron’s government blamed the Biden administration for the loss of a lucrative
submarine contract it had with Australia and was especially angry to learn
about the arrangement through a leak to the news media. Biden officials
expressed profuse support for France in a flurry of meetings and phone calls,
and Mr. Biden called the episode clumsy. France was an “extremely, extremely
valued” U.S. partner, he said.
If Ms. Le Pen were to win, Mr. Biden’s national
security team would be forced to reassess that relationship.
Heading to
a runoff. In the first round of the election, French citizens voted to advance
President Emmanuel Macron and the far-right leader Marine Le Pen to the second
round on April 24. This runoff, which polls predict could be close, will hinge
to a large extent on perceptions of the economy. Here’s a look at the race:
The
incumbent. Mr. 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 war in Ukraine. After a
lackluster campaign, Mr. Macron is trying to tap into the country’s large pool
of voters worried about the environment with ambitious promises.
The
far-right veteran. Ms. Le Pen, a nationalist with an anti-immigrant agenda, is
making her third attempt to become president of France and is facing Mr. Macron
for a second time after losing to him in the 2017 runoff. Though she has sought
to sanitize her image, her proposal to ban Muslim women from wearing head scarves
is controversial.
What comes
next? At 8 p.m. in France on April 24, the French news media will work with
pollsters to publish projected results based on preliminary vote counts, though
projections might not become clear until later if the race is close. Read more
about the runoff here.
The most
pressing question would be the status of economic sanctions against Russia, in
which the European Union plays a crucial role. During the debate on Wednesday,
Ms. Le Pen said she supported sanctions against Russia’s financial system and
oligarchs but opposed banning imports of Russian oil and gas, saying that the
French people should not have to suffer.
“I don’t
imagine Marine Le Pen going to see Vladimir Putin two weeks after getting
elected and talking about a great reset in relations,” said Martin Quencez, the
deputy director of the Paris office of the German Marshall Fund.
“Rather, it
would be more like Le Pen, as president, making it more difficult for the E.U.
and the U.S. to agree on a new posture — a new package of sanctions, and to
agree within NATO on what we need to do on the eastern flank,” he added.
For the
Biden team, the fallout from a Le Pen victory would extend well beyond policies
toward Russia and deal a blow to his project of bolstering democracy against
authoritarianism worldwide, said Daniel Baer, the acting director of the Europe
program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
“Biden sees
this moment as a contest between democracy and autocracy,” he said. “Over the
longer term, certainly having one of the world’s most revered, advanced
democracies elect an illiberal person would be a setback for the cause of
democracy writ large.”
Mr. Kupchan
noted that the vigorous European response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had
papered over simmering concerns in Washington about autocracy in countries like
Poland and Hungary, whose right-wing prime minister, Viktor Orban, was
comfortably re-elected last month.
“Everything
we were worried about before Feb. 24,” the date of the Russian invasion, “is
still lurking beneath the surface,” Mr. Kupchan said. “And if Le Pen did win,
it would mean that illiberalism — the politics of racism, of protectionism,
would be on the surface.”
He added:
“In some ways, all the domestic trials and tribulations are in suspended
animation. But they’re still with us. And the French election shines a bright
light on that.”
Michael
Crowley is a diplomatic correspondent in the Washington bureau. He joined The
Times in 2019 as a White House correspondent in the Trump administration and
has filed from dozens of countries. @michaelcrowley



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