With popularity waning, France's Macron must remain steadfast
By: Rachel Marsden
Last week, during a trip to Bucharest, Romania, French President Emmanuel
Macron declared that "France isn't a reformable country. Many have tried; they
didn't succeed, because the French detest reforms." He did say, however, that
the country was "transformable."
Watching the speech, I sensed that Macron was frustrated. The abrupt gesture he
made -- as if he were swatting at a pesky fly with the back of his hand -- when
he referred to "the people" and their rejection of change drew widespread
criticism. I didn't see contempt, but rather exasperation.
Macron also conveyed vulnerability with his semantic gymnastics and agitation.
The leftist sharks have been circling, and now they have drawn blood. While it's
just a drop, one can't forget that this is France -- a country with a history of
bloody leftist revolution. It doesn't take much to start a feeding frenzy.
Macron and his majority government have introduced and passed a flurry of
reforms since taking power in June: everything from increasing government
transparency to reducing corruption to making the French labor market more
meritocratic and globally competitive. This week, Macron is tackling immigration
by meeting with European and African leaders in Paris to seek a solution to the
flood of asylum seekers coming to Europe.
Meanwhile, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of the far-left France Insoumise party,
has whined about having to work evenings and delay his month-long,
taxpayer-funded vacation because he must perform the laborious task of voting in
parliament. He's singing the "hands off my entitlements" tune that so many
French citizens know by heart.
A new French Public Opinion Institute poll shows that Mélenchon is considered
the most viable opposition leader in France, even though his party and its
French Communist Party allies hold only 27 of the 577 seats in the National
Assembly. Blame the power vacuum on the other party leaders, who are still
stumbling around and trying to figure out their identity after voters subjected
them to an electoral pummeling a few months ago. When faced with a choice
between the same old unproductive leftist rhetoric and changes that might pull
the country out of the downward spiral it's been in for so long, the French
apparently would rather cling to the familiar comfort of continued demise.
The French actually do want change and renewal, but they want it to occur by
magic. They mistake their presidents for Houdini.
Since he took office in May, Macron's approval rating has dropped from 62
percent to 40 percent. Over the same honeymoon period, former center-right
President Nicolas Sarkozy's approval rating rose from 65 percent to 69 percent,
and yet the system chewed up Sarkozy and spit him out. Like Macron, Sarkozy had
also hoped to unshackle the country from its deeply entrenched socialist
infrastructure. He ultimately failed, as his enthusiasm faded over his five-year
term, and he seemed resigned to a fate of political impotence. His 2012 loss to
Socialist Francois Hollande mostly erased whatever had remained of Sarkozy's
policies.
Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher once said of her free-market
reform agenda, "Yes, the medicine is harsh, but the patient requires it in order
to live." She fired Cabinet ministers who disagreed with her actions. She
survived an assassination attempt by terrorists. She dug in her heels and didn't
budge -- much like U.S. President Donald Trump is doing in the face of
opposition from the left. This is the only way to win.
Legendary statesmen -- from Thatcher to Ronald Reagan to Winston Churchill --
all faced staunch opposition before their actions bore fruit. Macron's mistake
would be to back down as the battle for France's survival gets underway.
Mélenchon has already called for a September 23 protest against what he
describes as a "social coup d'état by Emmanuel Macron," echoing his previous
calls for a "moral insurrection" against Macron's reforms. For leftists,
democracy only exists when they're in charge -- even if it means hijacking the
agenda of a democratically elected president and government. The far left will
always attempt to use the citizenry as a human shield against rational action,
hoping to woo enough pawns with their emotionally charged wailing.
Macron has no choice but to keep forging ahead and seizing every opportunity to
change French mindsets. France is the nervous swimmer who stands paralyzed on
the high diving board, afraid to take the plunge. If you give him a shove and
he's forced into the water, he might yell at you all the way down, but he'll be
proud of his achievement by the time he bobs back up to the surface. France
badly needs such a shove.
COPYRIGHT 2017 RACHEL MARSDEN