Emmanuel Macron’s uphill battle to achieve
‘lasting order’ in deeply divided France
Angelique
Chrisafis
in Paris
Wave of unrest after teenager’s death leaves French
president weighing pleas to tackle inequality against calls for tougher
policing
Wed 5 Jul
2023 00.00 EDT
Emmanuel
Macron is facing the biggest domestic challenge of his fraught second term in
office, after the police shooting of a teenager of Algerian origin at a traffic
stop last week led to multiple nights of urban unrest.
The French
president on Tuesday announced crisis funding to help the reconstruction of
burned-out buildings and public services. But questions remain over deep
divisions in French society and the political class.
Teenagers
as young as 13 clashed with police across the country as hundreds of public
buildings were set alight, more than 5,000 cars were burned, 3,400 people
arrested, scores of schools were damaged, 150 post offices attacked, more than
11,000 fires were started and 2,000 shops were looted, with an estimated €1bn
damage to businesses. More than 800 police officers were injured and some of
the poorest estates in the country woke up to find key buildings – from public
libraries to community centres – reduced to ashes.
The
president now faces several difficulties. First is a national image problem.
Amid deep mistrust of politics, crises have piled up one after the other – from
the gilet jaunes anti-government protests of 2018 and 2019 to the millions of
protesters who took to the streets this year against Macron raising the pension
age to 64. Macron’s diplomatic agenda has been affected: he had to return early
from a Brussels summit and postpone a state visit to Germany, only months after
he was unable to welcome Britain’s King Charles amid pensions strikes and
protests.
Deep-rooted
divisions in French politics now seem more entrenched than ever. Since Macron’s
centrist grouping lost its overall majority in parliament in the 2022
legislative elections, the government’s ability to pass legislation has been
limited as it struggles to convince allies on the right. The far-right leader
Marine Le Pen, whose National Rally is the biggest opposition party, is hoping
the urban unrest will win her voters, as her party hammers home the sense of
“savagery” and insecurity in towns and cities.
When Macron
met on Tuesday with more than 250 mayors who had faced violence in towns and on
estates, their pleas for help highlighted the deep political divisions.
Mayors on
the right said more “authority”, policing and firm-hand was required. Some
joined Macron in his calls for parents to better control their teenagers. But
those on the left said there had been a failure to address segregation and
“ghettoisation” of poor estates, where there was discrimination, inequality in
education and a housing policy that concentrated poverty in “sink estates”.
They said the last few years of urban renewal programmes – when millions were
spent on demolition and rebuilding of certain tower blocks on estates – had
failed to address deeper social issues.
A
government official said Macron now wanted to “listen intently” to politicians
on the ground and try to understand the many complex reasons for unrest before
coming up with suggestions.
His
immediate priority in the coming days is restoring what the government source
called “lasting order” – more than 45,000 police officers a night have
continued to patrol estates, which have not completely calmed. Macron
deliberately did not declare a state of emergency like that of 2005 when the
deaths of two young boys hiding from police in an electricity substation in
Clichy-sous-Bois outside Paris triggered weeks of unrest on estates.
The
question is what policy solutions Macron could offer for French housing
estates. When he first took office in 2017 – and even before that, when he was
economy minister – he had focused on entrepreneurship for the deprived
outskirts of cities, saying he would liberalise the economy and end the
persistent inequality that he said “imprisoned” people by their social origins.
But residents on estates say segregation and discrimination have got worse in
recent years.
Last month
Macron travelled to Marseille, which he intended to use a laboratory for
improving life and schooling on tough estates – he will now have to think more
broadly. He has slashed class-sizes in primary schools in deprived areas, but
mayors have said France’s education system remains one of the most unequal in
the world. Philippe Rio, the Communist mayor of Grigny outside Paris, which is
known for its high-rise estates and high poverty rates, said this week that
half of local children left school with no qualifications.
Meanwhile,
rights groups want the executive to take heed of the UN human rights office
spokesperson, Ravina Shamdasani, who said of the police shooting: “This is a
moment for the country to seriously address the deep issues of racism and
discrimination in law enforcement.” But the government has insisted it is a
case of one officer who did not respect rules, and there is no systemic or
institutional problem in the force.
Policy
announcements on the segregation of housing estates will be tricky for Macron.
The sociologist Olivier Galland said: “The problems run so deep, they need a
structural response that won’t show effects until the long term. In the short
term, the only hope is for a return to calm.”

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