French presidential candidate Macron has only one major flaw
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Independent, pragmatic, centrist, Atlantist, globalist: All
are words that have been used to describe 39-year old Emmanuel Macron, who,
barring the totally unforeseen, will become the next president of France after a
May 7 runoff vote against populist, protectionist candidate Marine Le Pen.
Macron won the first round of presidential elections last weekend, receiving
23.9 percent of the vote. Le Pen also advanced to the runoff with 21.4 percent
support.
While the more free-market Macron is stronger on the economic front than
nanny-state defender Le Pen, his statements on immigration and integration are
worrisome.
There's a troubling security problem in France. Terror attacks have claimed
hundreds of lives over the past few years. The situation is palpably worse than
when I moved to Paris a decade ago. Just last week, I did a television interview
at a rooftop studio on the Champs-Elysees, where only hours later a radical
Islamic terrorist opened fire below on a police vehicle, killing one officer and
injuring two others.
According to a poll earlier this year by the Chatham House Royal Institute of
International Affairs, 61 percent of French agreed with this statement: "All
further migration from mainly Muslim countries should be stopped." According to
an Ipsos poll taken last year, only 11 percent of the French consider
immigration to have had a positive impact on their country.
The National Front's Le Pen has centered her campaign on immigration,
sovereignty and national identity. It likely will not be enough. Most polls show
that the French are more concerned about the country's economic and
underemployment problems than the immigration problem. Unfortunately, this
election forces voters to choose between problems. (The "establishment vs.
anti-establishment" issue has disappeared, since both candidates are established
political figures leading non-establishment parties.)
So Le Pen has bet it all on a protectionist immigration focus and risks losing
with a nanny-state leftist economic platform.
Macron's platform takes a more modern free-market approach to French economics
but has a troubling immigration stance.
Macron wants to shorten processing times for refugees to eight weeks and to make
foreign development aid contingent on countries' acceptance of deportees who
fail to qualify for residency in the European Union. Macron said an in an
interview that he's against quotas, calling them "impossible to control,"
apparently not realizing that countries such as Canada have managed quotas just
fine.
"Contrary to what some say, we are not today confronted with a wave of
immigration," Macron said.
Excusez-moi, but France absolutely has an immigration problem. Does Macron have
a vision problem?
Macron redefines the problem as one of integration. "When we know how to
integrate them, to train them, women and men renew our society, give it a new
impetus, the impulses of inventiveness and innovation," he said.
When Macron worked as an investment banker for Rothschild, did the company hire
anyone who showed up at the door and then throw money at them, hoping that
innovation might spring forth? And when Macron was accepted to France's elite
National Administration School, were his fellow classmates chosen at random and
then trained at great taxpayer cost?
Not a chance. So why does Macron insist on a low bar for French immigration?
As an immigrant to France myself, Mr. Macron, allow me to appeal to your far
more reasonable economic sense: You can't have both a nanny state and open
borders. The kind of immigrants allowed into France should be unwilling to take
a single centime from the government in social assistance, training or
education. They should speak fluent French and be ready to work and contribute
the minute they set foot on French soil. You want innovation? Import it. Set the
quota sky-high for entrepreneurs, innovators and the self-employed who want to
come to France.
Mr. Macron, you're kidding yourself if you think that most immigrants are going
to quickly assimilate thanks to taxpayer largesse and your own volition. You
seem like a man with high standards, so why the unwillingness to impose them on
aspiring immigrants for the benefit of France's social cohesion and security?
It's strange that someone like Macron who has climbed to great heights in a
meritocratic environment by virtue of hard work and persistence refuses to ask
that others do the same. Entrance requirements aren't inhumane or cruel --
they're a means of preservation. France deserves nothing less.
COPYRIGHT 2017 RACHEL MARSDEN