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Does Macron seek to exploit 'divides' within NFP to 'impose his politics on National Assembly'?
FRANCE 24 English
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9/2/2024
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00:00
Let's cross the channel for an outsider's eye on all of this.
00:03
Andrew Smith, lecturer at Queen Mary University of London.
00:08
Thank you for being with us here on France 24.
00:12
Cheers.
00:13
I have good news for you, Andrew.
00:14
If before you went on vacation, you were worried that you might have to update your syllabus,
00:18
it's not the case.
00:19
We still don't have a prime minister.
00:22
It's extraordinary, isn't it?
00:23
It's this sudden moment.
00:24
The Olympic truce has been running.
00:26
You've had this moment of real celebration, the summer holidays.
00:29
And there is a real sense, I think, today of people getting back to work, of this kind
00:33
of entrée, the idea of going back to school, but also of politics needing to click back
00:37
into action as well.
00:39
And it's been quite extraordinary watching some of the kind of political coverage as
00:43
these convoys arrive at the Elysée Palace.
00:46
And it seems like you've got these suitors to the king suddenly talking about who will
00:50
be given the reins of power.
00:51
And I think there is quite a lot to kind of talk about there in terms of what's going
00:55
on and who controls this.
00:56
I think, you know, you've got Emmanuel Macron who is trying to remind people that there
01:01
is no government without the president in France.
01:03
Essentially, you've got this big game of musical chairs going on, but he's the constant presence
01:08
at the center of it and the one that controls the music.
01:11
So I think he is trying to reclaim the initiative and reclaim the political center stage at
01:15
this moment when everyone is kind of reentering politics.
01:19
Of course, the president did lose the elections on paper, at least.
01:25
And in the past, you've had power sharing, what they call cohabitation in this country.
01:31
And there he had to hand the reins to a clear leader of the opposition.
01:36
This time around, he's taking his time.
01:38
Yeah, it's a challenging one.
01:41
You have this odd situation.
01:42
Of course, we know the Gaullist Fifth Republic is essentially set up in such a way that the
01:47
public finds a majority.
01:49
The French people create those majorities in the National Assembly, in Parliament.
01:55
That's not down to politicians on the whole.
01:57
That's not down to anyone.
01:58
And in those situations of cohabitation you've mentioned in the past, there's been a fairly
02:03
clear situation that says, okay, this party essentially won that election, and they will
02:09
govern.
02:10
One of the issues we've had is in the last legislatives, if we actually talk about who
02:14
won, well, really, the person that won was everyone that opposed Emmanuel Macron.
02:19
And the difficulty is the largest party is an electoral alliance, the New Popular Front,
02:23
of course, featuring this union of left parties, but also featuring the kind of far left and
02:28
France Insoumise, France Unbowed.
02:29
And it's one of the problems you have, as we've seen in recent days emerge.
02:33
Of course, on Friday, Emmanuel Macron kind of symbolically considered their pick for
02:38
prime minister and essentially said, well, it's not going to work because it will be
02:42
censured and vetoed effectively by the rest of government.
02:45
It'll be voted down before it can ever sit.
02:48
And so in his mind, he wants to protect the institutions.
02:51
That's his claim, and find a candidate for prime minister who actually could survive
02:56
that test of being censured by the parliament.
02:59
Why didn't he just name the one that the largest bloc, as you say, put forth, let that candidate
03:07
fall on its sword in parliament, and then start again, give him a clear hand?
03:11
Yes, a useful one, isn't it?
03:14
Why not just have a go and see what happens?
03:18
Essentially the interview with Lucie Castaix, the pick for prime minister from the New
03:23
Popular Front left alliance, is a kind of former civil servant, left oriented, but not
03:30
necessarily tied to the politics of the far left.
03:33
And it was seen that she was quite a good compromise candidate across the left wing
03:38
alliance.
03:39
The difficulty you had essentially Macron was trying to figure out whether the far left
03:44
would have ministries under a potential Castaix government.
03:49
And she said, you know, that's certainly something that would happen.
03:50
They would govern according to the program that was agreed by the New Popular Front.
03:55
And that was the moment in which he called it.
03:57
Now, controlling the idea here, controlling the timetable, the schedule, is the one thing
04:02
Emmanuel Macron really has at this moment.
04:04
And he's trying to use this against the left a number of times.
04:08
Of course, with the legislative elections, when he called them after his surprise dissolution,
04:13
he kind of hoped essentially the left wouldn't have time to unite.
04:16
They did.
04:17
He hoped essentially that the left wouldn't be able to come together and nominate a candidate
04:22
for prime minister.
04:23
And we saw, of course, there was a lot of ruction around that.
04:26
But they did manage it.
04:27
They did declare this was going to be the candidate they would support.
04:31
And so it seems perhaps, again, like one of the ways he could potentially find a route
04:34
through this crisis is by nibbling off support from the social democratic center of the Parti
04:41
Socialiste, of course, on the right of the left wing alliance, if you will, who he might
04:45
be able to convince to support a different sort of candidate.
04:48
And so this is perhaps him again playing with that timetable, playing with the schedule,
04:53
and gambling that the kind of divides within the new popular front may be something that
04:57
allows him to impose his politics on the National Assembly.
05:01
Of course, what goes around comes around.
05:04
Macron was finance minister under François Hollande.
05:07
The two don't get along very well, even though the former president was invited today to
05:14
the Elysee Palace.
05:17
Hollande's last prime minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, he's also had his words in the past with Macron.
05:24
It was sort of a stillborn idea trying to get Cazeneuve in as prime minister to divide
05:30
the socialists.
05:32
It was, I think, a little bit.
05:33
And it's a challenging one.
05:34
It seemed for a while that this was the candidacy that might work.
05:37
Like you mentioned, there is some kind of discernible difference.
05:41
This wouldn't just be Macronism, but would be a shift towards not handing over the reins
05:46
of power, as it were, but giving up a little bit more space towards the center left of
05:51
the Socialist Party.
05:52
We know, of course, Hollande's re-entered politics during the legislatives.
05:56
We've seen Cazeneuve say that, actually, this would be something where if you were to govern,
06:00
it would be with an eye on what the people had voted for in the legislatives.
06:04
It couldn't just be a continuation of Macron's policy.
06:08
But there has been a lot of criticism of that potential.
06:11
We saw some of that come, of course, from the far left.
06:14
We saw deputies of France Insoumise say that this really would be beyond the pale, as it
06:20
were.
06:21
And we also saw Nicolas Sarkozy, of course, another former president whom Emmanuel Macron
06:24
spoke to, saying this represented what he called the dying gasps of Hollandeism, and
06:29
the idea that this was only a hearkening back to the past.
06:33
And that, I think, is something important as well.
06:34
Of course, he's had former President Sarkozy to speak to, who we know is a kind of consigliere
06:41
of the right, a very influential figure across many people in the center-right.
06:45
And of course, Xavier Bertrand as well, another candidate at one point to become the leader
06:51
of the center-right, and another prominent figure within that moment.
06:55
It looks to me less like he would be having Bertrand as a potential pick for prime minister,
07:01
as well as that would alienate so many other rivals within the center-right, especially
07:05
Laurent Wauquiez, who's one of the big figures on the Republicans.
07:10
So many internal divides there that it would seem not necessarily the best of picks immediately
07:16
for prime minister.
07:17
So more likely for me that he's speaking to the center-right, Sarkozy and Xavier Bertrand,
07:23
and trying to see if they will stomach some of the candidates he's likely to put forward
07:27
for prime minister for them.
07:29
Essentially trying this as a kind of focus group of former presidents, prime ministers,
07:33
and party grandees to see if those political families might accept the kind of figure he
07:38
would put forward.
07:39
Yeah.
07:40
So taking his time, you mentioned at the outset that this is a constitution put forth by Charles
07:47
de Gaulle in 1958.
07:50
When the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, visited the Élysée Palace last week, was
07:56
he visiting Charles de Gaulle's country, or was he visiting Napoleon Bonaparte's country?
08:01
I ask the question because, you know, as we said at the outset, it's first day of school.
08:07
The high civil service is at its desk.
08:09
The institutions are running.
08:13
Your thoughts?
08:14
Yeah.
08:15
It's a challenge, isn't it?
08:16
Because, I mean, technically this is a moment where we are seeing sort of this kind of running
08:21
stress test of the constitution.
08:23
We know there are things existing.
08:25
But it doesn't feel like there's a power vacuum, is what I'm saying.
08:28
Exactly.
08:29
Yeah.
08:30
This is very much the idea that the prime minister, I mean, the prime minister at the
08:32
moment, the outgoing prime minister who has already tendered his resignation and is still
08:36
hanging on in there, apparently at the Élysée right now, Gabriel Attal, was always seen
08:41
not as somebody who was a figurehead, not as somebody who was the kind of the leader
08:44
of the country, but more as really kind of using his former role as spokesperson for
08:49
Macron's majority, but actually sitting there in the assembly.
08:52
So there, that seems very kind of bonapartist, I guess, that's a useful way to think about
08:57
it, perhaps.
08:58
And it is really this idea of the constitution being tested.
09:01
We know there are limits on, for example, when the budget needs to be submitted.
09:05
But are those limits of the constitution?
09:07
Or are they part of the kind of organic law, essentially the kind of the practices and
09:10
precedents governing how the constitution is assembled?
09:13
There may be challenges to that as well, if there's a delay to the passing of a budget.
09:17
And actually, we see the public reacting to this in quite a strange way as well.
09:21
There is, of course, a lot of anger about what's happening, and a question of legitimacy.
09:26
Like you mentioned, the idea of what are politicians doing at this precise moment?
09:29
But one of the interesting things is we've seen some of the polling that's just happened,
09:32
the Élab polling that just took place last week or so, and the idea that almost 67% of
09:37
French people would support an idea of a technocratic government.
09:40
And this seems to be one of the things that Macron is trying to push through, finding
09:43
somebody, some figure that won't alienate too many on the left and too many on the right.
09:48
And that's where some of those names have started to be kind of floated out there.
09:52
We've seen in Le Monde today, Thierry Baudet, the president of the Economic, Social, and
09:55
Environmental Council, has been floated as another kind of potential candidate, with
10:00
also somebody who might be a potential chief of staff, which makes it seem quite an advanced
10:05
rumor, as it were.
10:06
And that's the kind of figure who is broadly oriented to the left, came out against the
10:10
far right, but is potentially the kind of person that could be accepted.
10:14
Now, we know that France is not the Netherlands.
10:17
France is not Belgium.
10:18
France is not Italy.
10:19
It cannot continue with this idea of a caretaker government running current affairs and day-to-day
10:25
events in perpetuity.
10:27
France needs to find a figure in which they can actually believe, a figure who will communicate
10:32
those policies.
10:33
And, as you say, if there is to be democratic legitimacy for the parliament, that cannot
10:38
simply be the president.
10:40
He has a role.
10:41
The parliament equally has a role.
10:43
And that is something, I think, that is really up for grabs at the moment and actually needs
10:46
to be defended.
10:48
That legitimacy and that political role for the parliament is something that is absolutely
10:52
crucial in this moment.
10:53
And that's a big danger for what Macron is trying to do, playing this delaying tactic
10:58
with the schedule and really risking the idea of the political legitimacy of the government
11:03
itself.
11:04
Long term, that type of kind of staggering caretaker government will only strengthen
11:08
the political extremes and likely lead to a broader political unrest, as we've seen
11:13
in previous years.
11:15
Andrew Smith, many thanks for speaking with us from London.
11:19
Stay with us.
11:20
There's much more to come.
11:21
More news, plus the day's business and in sports, the latest on the Paralympics taking
11:26
place here in France.
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