Become a Member
Opinion

Summer in Paris: tough times for Macron and the Jews

The heat wave that hit Europe this summer might have nice for the tourists, but French president Macron has been feeling a different kind of heat, writes our French blogger

August 16, 2018 14:22
Emmanuel Macron celebrates at a rally on Sunday night (Photo: Getty Images)
2 min read

Summer started well with record tourist numbers and lovely weather.  American English was back on Paris café terraces, visitors from everywhere admired Notre Dame and bought Amorino ice-cream.  Terrorism took a back seat, at last, but the dangers were still visible in the impressive display of concrete blocks around the Louvre and the 30-million-euro project to build a glass wall around the Eiffel Tower. 

But then a heat wave struck that made Paris feel like Tel Aviv or even Eilat!  President Macron scrambled to face down an unusually united opposition: from extreme left to extreme right, everyone was excited to have a stick to beat him with – the misbehaviour of his young security chief, unduly light punishment and a slow, unconvincing presidential response. Macron finally took personal responsibility, but he lost the political benefit of France’s unexpected World Cup victory by a multicultural team happy to sing the national anthem.  His constitutional reform also ran into trouble in a parliament reluctant to cut its own numbers by a third.

A year after his election, Macron’s substantive accomplishments are remarkable.  Opposition remains splintered and lacks charismatic leaders. But the President no longer walks on water.  His support has solidified on the right but weakened on the left. Labour market reforms have yet to dent the unemployment rate and economic growth slowed in the second quarter, weighed down by transport strikes, higher oil prices and renewed uncertainty. 

The next round of reforms will be more difficult, especially the long-awaited initiative to define “Islam of France” in a country that has become multi-cultural by default, not by design.  Macron must define a place for Islam that does not offend the country’s secular tradition.  He must also do more for the “social” agenda without abandoning fiscal discipline.