EU flag under the Arc de Triomphe comes down as
culture war boils
The government insists it did not cave to far-right
critics and always planned to remove the flag by Sunday.
BY LEONIE
KIJEWSKI
January 2,
2022 3:01 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-council-france-macron-presidency-flag-arc-triomph/
Within just
48 hours, an EU flag went up — and then back down — under the Arc de Triomphe
in Paris, sparking a far-right culture war over national identity and leaving
the French government insisting it had not bowed to critics.
France
initially hoisted the flag on December 31, part of a celebration of France
assuming the rotating EU presidency for the first half of 2022. Almost
instantly, however, far-right politicians latched onto the move, arguing it was
a sign the French government had abandoned the country's identity. By Sunday,
the flag had come down, with the government saying that was always the plan and
striking back at the far-right attacks.
"The
flag was scheduled to be withdrawn on Sunday," Clément Beaune, the
country’s European affairs minister, said during an interview Sunday with
France Inter. "There was no retreat."
That didn't
stop far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen from declaring a “great
patriotic victory" on Twitter Sunday afternoon.
“The
government was forced to remove the European Union flag from the Arc de
Triomphe,” she said. “Thank you to the massive mobilization of all the lovers
of France and the Republic to make Emmanuel Macron back down.”
The moment
symbolizes the forces at play as France heads toward a presidential election
this spring. French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to vie for a second
term but is facing pressure from the right — not only from Le Pen but also from
far-right candidate Éric Zemmour. Macron has sought to use France's turn
helming the EU presidency to show how France can influence the EU and benefit
from its membership. Le Pen and Zemmour have similarly used the moment to push
their own Euroskeptic arguments.
That was
the backdrop on New Year's Eve when the French government raised the EU flag
under the Arc de Triomphe, while also bathing the Eiffel Tower and other major
landmarks in EU blue. France officially took over the presidency of the Council
of the EU on Saturday and will retain it for half a year. In this role, the
country will be responsible for chairing meetings of EU ministers.
Le Pen
decried the flag-raising as "an attack on the identity of our country, an
insult to those who died for the Fatherland,” arguing the EU flag had replaced
the French flag.
The Arc de
Triomphe is a memorial to French soldiers who fought and perished in battle.
“This
provocation offends those who fought for France. I ask E. Macron to restore our
national flag,” she said in another tweet, generating more than 14,000 likes
and thousands of retweets.
On Sunday,
Beaune shot back at her remarks, warning of polemics. “Daring to summon the
memory of the veterans, I say it, that is an abject shame,” he said.
And the
European flag had never replaced the French one, he said.
“They’re
talking nonsense. They lied,” he said on France Inter. “We have never, ever
removed a French flag.”
The French
flag, he said, is only hoisted under the Arc de Triomphe on special occasions,
such as the national day on July 14 — on this occasion, it hadn’t been up. The
far right, he argued, preferred “emptiness over the European flag.”
The spat
comes a few months before the French presidential election is scheduled to
begin on April 10.
Perhaps
unsurprisingly, Zemmour struck similar tones to Le Pen: “The Arc de Triomphe
under Macron: after the ransacking and the packing, the contempt,” he said.
Center-right
presidential candidate Valérie Pécresse also chimed in, pushing for two flags
to fly under the monument.
“Presiding
over Europe yes, erasing the French identity no! I solemnly ask Emmanuel Macron
to restore our tricolor flag next to that of Europe under the Arc de Triomphe.
We owe it to all our fighters who shed their blood for it,” she said.
Beaune
warned Pécresse's stance makes her an accomplice to the extreme right. This
was, he said, “a serious political error.”
While
Beaune insisted that he was “proud” that the flag had flown “for a few days,”
the display was ultimately short-lived.
An Elysée
spokesperson also denied the flag was taken down under pressure, saying it had
been removed overnight Saturday into Sunday as initially scheduled.
Clea Caulcutt contributed reporting.
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