A Defiant
Macron Says He Won’t Resign as France’s Leader
A day after
his chosen prime minister was forced to resign, President Emmanuel Macron
denounced his political opponents.
Catherine
Porter Aurelien Breeden
By Catherine
Porter and Aurelien Breeden
Reporting
from Paris
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/05/world/europe/macron-france-prime-minister.html
Dec. 5, 2024
A day after
his government fell in a no-confidence vote, forcing his handpicked prime
minister to resign, President Emmanuel Macron of France lashed out at his
political opponents on Thursday, calling them irresponsible and power-hungry,
and declaring he would not step down.
He also
attempted to calm the country and sketch a way out of the chaos created by a
deadlocked, angry lower house of Parliament. He promised to appoint a new prime
minister in the coming days who could form a government that reflected a broad
cross-section of parties, and could pass an emergency budget to avoid a
shutdown of essential state services.
“A new era
must start, in which everyone must work for France and where new compromises
must be built,” Mr. Macron said in a 10-minute televised address from his
gilded office in the Élysée Palace. “We can’t afford divisions or inaction.”
It seemed
unlikely that the speech would be enough to calm the president’s growing number
of detractors.
The country
was still reeling from the night before, when a majority of lawmakers voted to
topple Prime Minister Michel Barnier and his cabinet less than three months
after it was formed. That made it the shortest-tenured in the history of
France’s Fifth Republic.
The
lawmakers’ move put France’s 2025 budget in limbo, delaying measures needed to
address the country’s towering debt and widening deficit.
Many blame
Mr. Macron for the situation — first for unbridled government spending since
the Covid lockdowns, and then for calling a snap election last summer that
resulted in a highly divided Parliament, with no clear majority.
He said that
the decision to call the election was misunderstood, and once again offered his
rationale for it. And he flatly refused to take the blame for the current
chaos.
“I will
never shoulder the irresponsibility of others, most notably lawmakers who chose
in good conscience to topple the budget and the French government a few days
before Christmas holidays,” he said.
“They are
not thinking of you, of your lives, of your difficulties,” he said. “Let’s be
honest. They are thinking of one thing: the presidential election.”
In recent
weeks, as political deadlock set in at the National Assembly, the calls for Mr.
Macron to resign have increased, not simply from his political opponents, but
also from moderate voices.
Mr. Macron
noted that he had been elected with a mandate of five years, and said he
intended to serve until the end in 2027, when he will be term-limited. “This is
why the only timetable that matters to me is not that of ambitions; it is that
of our nation,” he said.
He said he
intended to use his last 30 months in office being “useful to the country.”
Mr. Macron’s
political opponents were swift to respond.
The leader
of the far-right National Rally, Marine Le Pen, sent a “little reminder to
President Macron” on social media. Toppling the government, she noted, is
“provided for in the Constitution of our Fifth Republic.”
The founder
of the far-left France Unbowed party, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, called the speech
“hollow and pretentious” and pointed out that the no-confidence vote had been
undertaken because Mr. Macron’s government tried to push through a budget bill
without a final vote.
It was not
the prime minister who was the real target of the no-confidence vote, Mr.
Mélenchon said on national television. “It was Mr. Macron,” he said.
Mr. Macron
ended his atypically short speech with a call to people’s better natures,
reminding them that this Saturday, the country will celebrate the reopening of
Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris just five years after it was badly damaged in a
fire — something many had deemed impossible.
“This is
proof that we know how to do great things, that we know how to do the
impossible,” he said.
Catherine
Porter is an international reporter for The Times, covering France. She is
based in Paris. More about Catherine Porter
Aurelien
Breeden is a reporter for The Times in Paris, covering news from France. More
about Aurelien Breeden


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário