COMMENTARY
Has Emmanuel Macron broken France?
The French president promised a new consensual kind of
politics. He is now reforming France against its will.
Emmanuel Macron's electoral promises from 2017 are
coming back to haunt him today
BY JOHN
LICHFIELD
MARCH 18,
2023 2:19 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/emmanuel-macron-france-politics-pension-reform-elisabeth-borne/
John
Lichfield is a former foreign editor of the Independent and was the newspaper’s
Paris correspondent for 20 years.
In 2017,
Emmanuel Macron promised a new, consensual kind of politics. He would, he said,
be a revolutionary-in-a-suit, dismantling the special interests and smashing
the barriers that restricted opportunity and stifled French prosperity.
As recently
as last June, Macron spoke about “a new method of governance.” The French
people were, he told French regional newspapers, “tired of reforms which come
from above.”
Nine months
later, there are riots in several French cities. There are blocked motorways,
transport and energy strikes, and mountains of uncollected rubbish in the
French capital as Macron used his special constitutional power to impose a
pension reform detested by 70 percent of French adults.
Far from a
“suited revolutionary,” Macron has become a traditional French leader
confronting the immobilization of the French people. Like Nicolas Sarkozy and
François Hollande before him, he is trying to reform France against its will.
And yet
there is something hysterical about the present political mood in France which
goes beyond the protests faced by Macron’s predecessors.
This is
partly Macron’s own fault. He promised a consensual, bottom-up approach, cutting
out the vested interests and frozen thinking of political parties and trades
unions.
He has
ended up imposing, almost by edict, a fairly modest pension reform that is
rejected by the vast majority of voters and misrepresented (successfully) by
the trades unions and the opposition parties that he hoped to marginalize.
Macron left
almost all pension reform salesmanship to his prime minister, Elisabeth Borne,
and the rest of his government. They have done a muddled job of selling the
confused but sensible reform of a system that is permanently in deficit and
will struggle to survive unless the official retirement age is gradually
increased.
But is it a
“brutal” and “violent” reform, as even the moderate union leaders claim?
Hardly.
France’s
official retirement age will rise gradually from 62 to 64 by 2030. In other
words, French people will still be retiring earlier in seven years’ time than
most Europeans do now.
The
hysteria of the pensions debate reflects a shattered political landscape. Since
the old left-right system fell apart a decade ago (something that Macron
himself encouraged and gained from) politics in France has become nastier and
more polarised.
The left is
more categorically left. The right has drifted towards the far right. Macron
has never properly institutionalized or channelled his “new center.”
He is
accused by both left and right of “wrecking” or “breaking” France. Within 15
months of his first election victory in 2021, he faced an unprecedented
grass-roots rebellion over petrol and diesel taxes in rural and outer-suburban
France by the Yellow Vests movement.
Within 11
months of his re-election in April last year, he now faces the biggest union
protests for two decades, which threaten to spill over into outright
insurrection.
But has
Macron “broken” France?
Unemployment
under his watch has fallen from 9.4 percent to 7.2 percent. Youth unemployment
has fallen even more dramatically. Macron’s changes to labor law and reduction
in payroll taxes — disputed at the time — can claim part of the credit.
Spending on
the state health service has increased significantly for the first time this
century (but the hospitals are struggling and doctors complaining about their
low pay). French people weathered the COVID-19 pandemic and last year’s surge
in energy prices reasonably well thanks to vast programs of government
spending.
The failure
of Macron and his people to communicate their case is often puzzling — a
mixture of arrogance and resignation.
The
pensions dispute is a good example. Most of the more militant workers — on the
railways, the Paris Metro, in electric power plants — are defending special
pension regimes which allow them to retire in their 50s.
These
regimes are permanently in the red: €3 billion a year for rail workers alone.
The deficit is covered by the state, in other words from the taxes of people
who retire much later than rail workers. Most of the special deals will be
phased out as part of the Macron-Borne reform.
The
government has been strangely reluctant to use financial arguments of this
kind. As a result, the reform has been successfully portrayed by the left and
far right as a “bankers’” reform — as if a country with accumulated public debt
of €3 trillion (114 percent of GDP) need not worry about its creditors.
What now?
The unrest will subside. Borne’s government will almost certainly survive a censure
motion in the national assembly on Monday. Her reward will, almost certainly,
be getting sacked by Macron within a month.
The new
prime minister will try to make a new start, but the rest of Macron’s second
term will be darkened by the confrontation over pensions. He has promised to
reduce unemployment to 5.5 percent (ie, full employment) by the end of his
second term but it will be a struggle for his minority, centrist government to
pass the labor law changes that he wants.
Above all,
Macron has no obvious successor. Several centrist politicians aspire to follow
him but the Macron “brand” and approach will not be a big vote winner in 2027.
He has
failed to make a direct connection with the French people, cutting out
political parties and trades unions. He has failed to convince the French that
they suffer from the blockages and vested interests of special interest groups.
Macron has,
in some respects, succeeded. “Macronism,” as first defined, has failed.
With the
left radicalized and splintered and the center-right crippled by selfish
internal quarrels, Marine Le Pen and the far right wait patiently in the wings.
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