Six months on, France’s Macron unpopular, but still in control
Paris, Nov. 13: In his first six months in power, French President Emmanuel Macron has chalked up one reform after another in a whirlwind that has nevertheless seen his poll numbers plummet.
The former investment banker’s stunning rise cast aside France’s traditional left and right, creating a solid centrist front for his new Republic on the Move ( REM) party.
In short order, the 39year- old has scored three major legislative triumphs, beginning with a law to clean up politics, followed by flagship reforms to France’s complex labour code and a controversial anti- terror law. The labour reforms sparked strikes and street protests, but they paled in comparison with those that have thwarted similar attempts by his predecessors.
But the young leader’s zeal for reforms — and the use of executive decrees to overhaul the labour code, seen as a strong- arm tactic
— has come with a cost.
President Emmanuel Macron has scored three major legislative triumphs, beginning with a law to clean up politics, followed by flagship reforms to the nations’s complex labour code
The man who won twothirds of the vote in May has an approval rating of just 32 per cent in a YouGov poll out November 2.
But insiders says his poll standings do not worry him. “He has a very longterm outlook and won’t give up,” one close associate said.
The 2017 election left Hollande’s Socialist Party in disarray, while the right- wing Republicans party is split between those who joined Macron’s REM, such as Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, and those who want to stay in opposition.
Macron faces a tricky balancing act as he seeks to lower taxes while also slashing the deficit — something he sees as key to earning credibility with European leaders as he pushes for ambitious EU reforms.
Next on Macron’s frenetic agenda are reforms to unemployment insurance, professional training, housing policy and academic selection.