As Macron hangs on, here’s what’s at stake for
France
If what voters desire is balance, an executive
committed to a radical program won’t give it to them.
BY GEORGE
DE MENIL
June 17,
2022 4:05 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/macron-parliamentary-eleciton-2022-france-stake/
George de
Ménil is director of studies at Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
(EHESS).
Seven weeks
ago, French President Emmanuel Macron won a second five-year term in a
landslide victory over far-right candidate Marine Le Pen.
Macron, a
pro-market reformer, prevailed again on Sunday, in close legislative elections
that will shape the future of France, but his program is now threatened by the
far left.
At stake is
the makeup of the National Assembly, as a strong push by a new alliance of far
left and traditional left parties could conceivably capture a majority, turning
the presidential result on its head. But if what voters truly want is balance
in France, this isn’t the way to go.
In the
French constitution of the Fifth Republic, both the president and the prime
minister have executive authority, but the prime minister must have the backing
of a majority of the National Assembly. When the two are of opposing parties,
the situation is called “cohabitation,” in which case, the political center of
gravity shifts to the prime minister. This has occurred only twice since the
Fifth Republic’s foundation in 1958.
Macron’s
challenger now is flamboyant orator and far left populist Jean-Luc Mélenchon,
whose platform starts with tried-and-true benefits — a 15 percent increase in
the minimum wage and the rejection of any increase in the retirement age. He
then advocates a return to France’s infamous tax on capital, a cap on
inheritance at €12 million, a commitment to constitutional changes curbing the
power of the president and allowing for popular referenda capable of
over-riding laws passed by the National Assembly, and a proclamation that his
government will pick and choose which European Union laws it will respect and
which not.
The
program’s tone is reminiscent of the Socialist-Communist Common Program with
which François Mitterrand won the election of 1981, and set France back 20
years.
Sunday was
the first of two rounds of voting in 577 separate legislative districts, with
the first round designating the candidates who will face one another in the
second round.
With
uncanny political sense, Mélenchon understood that voting by district favors
national parties that can mobilize numerous leading candidates. He also
correctly perceived that going into the legislative elections with many
similarly minded but fragmented parties was doomed to fail.
Therefore,
calling for all the parties of the left to unite on the night of the
presidential election, he offered as their rallying cry, “Elect me prime
minister!” And though he’s unlikely to emerge as prime minister from the second
round of voting, he did succeed in uniting his own France Unbowed, the
Ecologists, the Socialists and the now small Communist Party all under the banner of the New Popular,
Ecological and Social Union alliance (NUPES).
In the
first round last Sunday, NUPES won roughly the same percentage of votes
nationally as its constituents had garnered five years before. However, all the
pollsters expect it will win three times more seats in next Sunday’s round than
it did five years ago — making it the second largest party in the National
Assembly. (The president’s party is expected to end up short of an absolute
majority but to remain the largest party.)
Both the
far left and the far right remain potent forces in France. And if Le Pen and
her allies were to join forces with Mélenchon and his allies, they could win a
majority. But with diametrically opposed positions on key issues — immigration
being one of the most critical — the intensity of those differences makes an
alliance implausible, though they share a common hostility toward free-market
measures and Macron.
Interestingly,
an overwhelming majority of voters, both left and right, indicated in exit
polls after the first round of the presidential election that if Macron were
elected, their preference would be that he be forced into “cohabitation” — IFOP
put the percentage at 68 percent.
The
beneficiary of a desire for “cohabitation” today would be Mélenchon. But
hopefully, one shouldn’t interpret this preference literally.
If what
voters really desire is balance, an executive committed to a radical and
irresponsible program won’t give it to them. Paradoxically, in a nation as
divided as France, political balance can only be achieved if the center wins a
large, unbalanced majority of seats in the National Assembly.
Macron
surfs on the divisions of his opponents.
The far left and far right neutralize one another, but whether the next
five years are of constructive action or stalemate will depend on the strength
of the center.
Macron radically changed the French political
landscape five years ago by gathering he moderate right, moderate left and old
center around him. And this time around, Mélenchon is unlikely to force him
into “cohabitation.” But the president’s ability to implement ambitious reforms
will hang on his party and its allies’ ability to mobilize moderates of all
persuasions behind its legislative program.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário