Bruno
Retailleau: From medieval role player to French presidential hopeful
France’s
interior minister wants to turn his center-right party back into a heavyweight
political force.
May 14, 2025
4:02 am CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
https://www.politico.eu/article/bruno-retailleau-france-presidential-election-les-republicains/
VÉLIZY-VILLACOUBLAY,
France — On a brisk evening in March, French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau
kicked off a campaign event with some politically incorrect jokes comparing his
own rail-thin physique with that of the burly Senate president, Gérard Larcher,
who seemed to take the ribbing in good humor.
Then,
switching to key conservative talking points, the rising star and presidential
hopeful of France’s battered center-right Les Républicains party slammed
Islamic headscarves as symbols of oppression and stressed the importance of
protecting “the great conquests of the West.”
The audience
inside the packed 800-seat venue gobbled it all up, relishing another punchy
turn by a charismatic provocateur, who promises to restore France to its old
glories. “What we believe in sometimes leads to controversy — and that’s a good
thing,” Retailleau told the adoring party loyalists.
The
gathering in the well-off Paris suburb of Vélizy-Villacoublay was a stop on
Retailleau’s campaign tour to become the next leader of Les Républicains, the
once-dominant center-right party. The successors to Charles de Gaulle have now
been relegated to political purgatory after the election of Emmanuel Macron
upended France’s political landscape.
The vote to
appoint the next leader on Saturday is only open to about 100,000 of Les
Républicains’ card-carrying members, but the electric atmosphere that night and
during Retailleau’s other campaign stops is encouraging party insiders to dare
to hope they have finally found someone who can challenge Marine Le Pen of the
National Rally to be France’s most powerful right-wing politician — and,
potentially, win the presidency.
“We haven’t
seen this much enthusiasm since [former President Nicolas] Sarkozy,” said a
campaign official, granted anonymity due to internal campaign protocol.
With
France’s next presidential election less than two years away, Les Républicains
are dreaming of a return to power behind a candidate who fuses economic
liberalism with an anti-immigration policy that veers close to that of the
far-right National Rally, but without Le Pen’s legal or historical baggage.
For the
moment, Retailleau seems to be that man, primed to capitalize on France and
Europe’s shift to the right. But he’s an enigmatic figure. The bespectacled
64-year-old practicing Catholic languished for years on the backbenches and
sheds his somewhat bookish, studious persona each time he steps up on stage as
a fiery culture warrior.
Little
surprise then that he has a pedigree in play-acting and dressing up. Before
imagining Retailleau amid the gilded interiors of the Elysée, we should take a
trip back to a dilapidated castle more than 300 kilometers southwest of Paris
to understand how he developed his political identity — and learned a thing or
two about the dark arts of showmanship.
Enter stage
right
When
Retailleau was just a teenage horseback riding enthusiast, he volunteered to
take part in a show being staged in the small town of Les Epesses, a few
kilometers away from his hometown.
The
production was organized in 1978 by a 27-year-old named Philippe de Villiers, a
descendant of one of the aristocratic families that survived the French
revolution. Lanky and with a distinctive, theatrical manner of speaking, de
Villiers was a civil servant at the time for the eastern region of Vendée.
Authorities
there had a year prior purchased a castle falling into disrepair in Les Epesses
with the hopes of turning it into a small museum.
But de
Villiers dreamed of something bigger.
He wanted to
create a form of entertainment that celebrated the Vendée’s fierce
counter-revolutionary history and deep Catholic heritage. He started by
organizing a Disneyesque spectacle infused with royalist nostalgia — complete
with fog machines and sword fights — called “Cinéscénie,” and it was an
immediate hit.
Local news
reports at the time said a crowd of 30,000 flocked to Les Epesses to attend the
first performance. Young people signed up in droves to volunteer, with hundreds
participating — including Retailleau, who served as one of the show’s 20
horseback riders dressed in medieval costumes.
Cinéscénie
was such a smashing success that by 1989 — a few years before Disneyland Paris
opened — de Villiers inaugurated a medieval theme park to accompany the show,
named after the castle, Puy du Fou. It now attracts millions of visitors yearly
and ranks among the most visited theme parks in Europe.
At its core,
Puy du Fou was — and remains — deeply political. Historians have criticized its
portrayal of the French revolution in Vendée as a sanitized version of history
that romanticizes royalist and Catholic values.
Volunteering
at the park was a formative experience for Retailleau. De Villiers took a
particular interest in the now-interior minister, who was more than 10 years
his junior, and became something of a mentor to him.
The two
complemented each other well. Retailleau had an unassuming, subdued charm (or
so it seemed) that didn’t appear to upstage the bombastic de Villiers.
The pair
would go on to form a decades-long professional, political and personal bond
that would see them reach some of the highest offices of French politics.
De Villiers
harnessed Cinéscénie’s success to take a role as a deputy to France’s culture
minister in 1986, and Retailleau followed him into the world of politics two
years later when he won a seat on the Vendée council. Press at the time called
him “Philippe de Villiers’ man.”
A year later
in 1989, Retailleau became chairman of the Puy du Fou theme park.
Waiting for
his cue
For years,
de Villiers and Retailleau worked well together operating the Movement for
France, a small but vocal party that championed national sovereignty and
Euroskepticism as well as outlawing immigration and same-sex marriage over the
course of de Villiers’ two failed presidential bids in 1995 and 2007.
Ambition,
however, tore their bond apart.
In 2009,
then-Prime Minister François Fillon, a member of Les Républicains, was eyeing
Retailleau — a French senator at the time — for a junior ministry. But de
Villiers, still licking his wounds after barely scraping 2 percent of the vote
in a disastrous presidential campaign two years earlier, could not stomach his
protégé’s success. De Villiers vehemently opposed the nomination, and Fillon
stood down to, in his words, avoid a “nuclear war” with an important political
ally.
What
followed was a very public falling out. De Villiers removed Retailleau as chair
of Puy du Fou. Retailleau abandoned the Movement for France shortly thereafter,
citing strategic differences, and joined Les Républicains in 2011 — eventually
going on to serve as a key deputy to Fillon in his failed 2017 presidential
bid.
For Patrick
Louis, a former member of the European Parliament and secretary-general of the
Movement for France who has remained staunchly loyal to de Villiers,
Retailleau’s party change did not mean his beliefs had.
“Retailleau’s
greatest strength is that he’s guided by a political philosophy,” Louis said.
“I still believe he shares our mindset — we support free enterprise, but we’re
conservatives who think society must stay rooted in its traditions, and
cultural quality must be preserved.”
The timing
would prove fortuitous. Though Sarkozy was nearing the end of his first term,
he had shifted Les Républicains to the right from the days of President Jacques
Chirac and was pushing for what would later be described as an “unapologetic
right.”
Les
Républicains would, however, fall into irrelevance in the decade that followed,
with many of its moderate voters absorbed by Macron’s centrist pro-business
platform and the movement’s more right-leaning members siphoned off by Le Pen
and the National Rally.
Retailleau
patiently waited, regularly appearing in the media in a vain attempt to garner
name recognition beyond French political circles.
Things
suddenly started to look up last summer, when Les Républicains somewhat
miraculously returned to government after a snap election delivered a hung
parliament. The conservatives struck a deal with Macron’s camp to form a
coalition and block the vote’s surprise winner, the left-wing New Popular
Front, from seizing power.
Macron
appointed Brexit negotiator and conservative doyen Michel Barnier as prime
minister in September, who in turn tapped Retailleau for the interior ministry.
It finally
gave the horseman from the mock battles at Puy du Fou his moment in the
spotlight — just as Macron’s centrist movement was at its weakest.
Showtime
In the
months that followed, Retailleau’s popularity has skyrocketed.
Louis
attributes Retailleau’s new fame to his authenticity. But on the campaign
trail, Retailleau has publicly shed his earlier intellectual, measured
reputation for the showmanship expected of a frontline politician. He clearly
understands that, as Oscar Wilde famously put it: “The only thing worse than
being talked about is not being talked about.”
Retailleau’s
call to ban Islamic headscarves in athletics and reconsider birthright
citizenship, as well as his comments that “there were also happy times” in
France’s centuries-long colonization of Africa have kept him in the headlines
since becoming interior minister.
That
strategy isn’t without risk: Retailleau came under fire after being slow to
respond when a Muslim man was stabbed to death in a mosque in France last
month, drawing criticism even from within his own camp.
Retailleau
is widely expected to win the Les Républicains leadership race and move the
party deeper into right-wing territory when it comes to immigration and culture
war issues. The National Rally, however, says it doesn’t see him as a threat
when it comes time for the race for the Elysée.
“There’s no
real electorate for Retailleau,” said one of Le Pen’s closest allies, who was
granted anonymity in order to speak candidly. “He’ll seem too extreme for
Macron’s voters, and not credible enough to win over ours.”
The next
presidential election is still a ways off, and it’s still not a given
Retailleau would represent the party in the contest.
A late April
survey from pollster Odaxa shows Retailleau netting 10 percent in the first
round of the contest. That score would be an improvement over Les Républicains’
previous candidate, Valérie Pécresse, who netted a dismal 4.8 percent of votes
in 2022.
But with Le
Pen scoring 31.5 percent and former Prime Minister Édouard Philippe coming in
at 20 percent, Retailleau’s presidential hopes are still a long shot.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário