Battling two crises, France's Macron faces defining moment
Simultaneously battling the twin crises of the
second wave of the coronavirus pandemic and a resurgence in Islamist attacks,
French President Emmanuel Macron faces a defining moment that will determine
the success of his presidency and even his chances of reelection.
Macron came to power in 2017 on a wave of optimism
that he was a transformational leader who would bring much-needed reform to
France and restore its confidence as a player on the global stage.
But for two years he has been beset by a succession
of crises, first, from 2018 to 2019, more than a year of "yellow
vests" protests against his reforms, and then a crippling nationwide
strike last winter over changes to France's pension system.
And just when the strikes dwindled and Macron began
talking confidently about what was to come in the "second act" of his
mandate, the world was hit by the coronavirus pandemic, which forced a
nationwide lockdown.
As France was beginning to recover from the economic
hit of that lockdown, the virus surged again, forcing Macron to announce a
fresh lockdown last week.
The country is now in shock after the beheading of a
teacher and the killing of three people in a church, attacks that have been
blamed on Islamist radicals and which have propelled the fight against terror
to the top of the agenda. The motives behind the shooting of a priest in Lyon
on Saturday are still not clear.
The current period is the toughest for Macron since
he came to power, said Bruno Cautres, political researcher for the Paris-based
Centre for Political Research at Sciences Po (CEVIPOF).
When confronted with the "yellow vest"
protests, the French leader had the "political capacity" to respond
to the demands and came up with a package worth 10 billion euros, he noted.
"This permanent pressure is offering us no
respite," admitted an advisor of Macron's administration, who asked not to
be named.
"We have lost the control of the agenda."
No-one can blame Macron for the emergence of the
pandemic but the government is under pressure from critics who accuse it of
having failed to prepare for the second wave.
"The virus is circulating in France with a
speed that even the most pessimistic forecasts did not anticipate," the
French leader said in an address to the nation announcing the new lockdown,
prompting an outcry from medics who had indeed warned of such a scenario.
And while France is united in its outrage over the
deadly attacks, there are questions over why security services failed to watch
the assailants, and a debate over whether his strategy against Islamist
radicalism is too hard or too soft.
For almost two years Macron has been unable to
impose his own agenda in the face of fast-changing events, said Cautres.
"The French have the impression of going
through a succession of crises that never go away."
As France enjoyed a relatively normal summer,
unaware of the ferocity of the coronavirus wave that was to follow, Macron
hoped to regain the initiative with a 100 billion-euro relaunch plan and a
strategy of "living with the virus".
Since then however, attempts to move forward on an
ambitious agenda of green policies, economic change, and the overhaul of
France's pension system have been stymied by external factors.
This is a particular concern for a president who has
never enjoyed wild popularity -- with the latest Ifop survey giving him a 38 percent
approval rating -- and whose party flopped in local polls earlier this year.
Eyes are already focused on the 2022 presidential
election where Macron's most likely challenger will be far-right leader Marine
Le Pen. He hopes to avoid the same one-term fate as predecessors Nicolas
Sarkozy and Francois Hollande.
But if he wants to emerge victorious, the French
leader needs to "finally get results", said prominent political
commentator Philippe Moreau-Chevrolet.
"If the health situation does not improve by
the end of the year or the beginning of 2021 it will be truly very difficult
for him. He will be held directly responsible."
"At this anxiety-inducing moment, Emmanuel
Macron probably has the worst job in the world."
But political analyst Pascal Perrineau said that
even if a majority of French was "not convinced by the president and the
majority then they are even less so by the opposition".