Home News France votes for Macron. But can Macron govern for all of France?

France votes for Macron. But can Macron govern for all of France?

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When he made his speech claiming victory over far-right rival Marine Le Pen Sunday night, French President Emmanuel Macron acknowledged that he had work to do to overcome the nation’s political fractures.

“Our country is beset by doubts and divisions,” he said. “Today’s vote requires us to consider all the hardships of people’s lives and to respond effectively to them and to the anger expressed.”

Why We Wrote This

Emmanuel Macron managed to overcome a far-right challenge once again in French presidential elections. But the greater challenge may be to come: finding a way to unify an increasingly fractured nation.

Mr. Macron’s second term – and the future of the French republic – may depend on how well he is able to change the tack of his administration and adopt a broader, more collaborative policy.

“The way Macron has worked until now is to push his ideas in a very unilateral, vertical way, when it comes to how he interacts with other European leaders or on domestic policy,” says Tara Varma of the European Council on Foreign Relations. “He will have to change his method, to work with opposition parties or with the people through referendums.”

“If [Mr. Macron] doesn’t take charge of a real program where people’s lives will improve,” says Oleg Kobtzeff, a professor of history and politics, “five years from now Marine Le Pen or someone else on the extremes will be president.”

Paris

In his speech announcing victory over far-right opponent Marine Le Pen Sunday night, French President Emmanuel Macron assured the public that his next five years in office would spell a new chapter, with hopes of leading with respect while repairing the nation’s divisions.

“You’ve made the choice of an ambitious humanist project for the independence of our country and for Europe,” Mr. Macron said to a massive crowd beneath a glittering Eiffel Tower. “I’m not the candidate of one camp anymore, but the president of all of us.”

The course of the French presidency – not just in Mr. Macron’s second term, but beyond – may depend on how well he fulfills that promise.

Why We Wrote This

Emmanuel Macron managed to overcome a far-right challenge once again in French presidential elections. But the greater challenge may be to come: finding a way to unify an increasingly fractured nation.

Though the centrist Mr. Macron fended off Ms. Le Pen by what appears on its face to be a sizable margin – 58.5% to 41.4% – those figures belie the polarization of French society. Ms. Le Pen improved on her 2017 presidential bid by seven points. Both far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon and the extreme-right Eric Zemmour command significant blocs of support as well.

That leaves Mr. Macron facing a frustrated and polarized public. If he does not prove that he has concrete plans to address its concerns, like the escalating cost of living for the lower and middle classes, experts say, he risks not only hampering his own ability to govern, but also giving radical parties an advantage in future elections.

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