PARIS, France
France's charismatic new prime minister will lead a Cabinet that has edged to the right, with the reemergence in a reshuffle of several key figures from the government of former rightwing president Nicolas Sarkozy.
Thirty-four-year-old Gabriel
Attal, who President Emmanuel Macron named as prime minister on Jan 9 after the
resignation of Elisabeth Borne, will still have several major players from
Borne's Cabinet to call upon, but new members, including Stephane Sejourne as
minister for foreign affairs and veteran Cabinet member Rachida Dati as culture
minister, give the hitherto centrist government a rightwing feel.
Olivier Faure, leader of the
Socialist party, said the government, which had previously tried to appeal to
both left-wing and rightwing voters, now looks set on heading off the threat
from the far-right by resurrecting "Sarkozy's dinosaurs" and moving
to the right itself.
The Liberation newspaper also
pointed out the Sarkozy influence after Thursday's reshuffle, with the headline
"The Sarko connection".
Socialist party lawmaker Boris
Vallaud told The Guardian newspaper Macron had followed up on the government's
hardline overhaul of France's immigration system, which many lawmakers said was
suggestive of the ruling Renaissance party drifting to the right, by confirming
it with the reshuffle.
Attal countered by telling the
TF1 television channel he simply favors people who can get things done.
"What I want is action,
action, action" and "results, results, results", he said.
The new Cabinet surrounding
Attal, France's youngest ever prime minister and its first openly gay leader,
is, however, mainly about ensuring Macron withstands the challenge from the
far-right in European elections on June 9.
Macron, who was vilified last
year during violent protests against his pension reforms, reportedly said at
the new Cabinet's first meeting he wants "quick results" and is not
looking for "managers" but "revolutionaries".
"I don't want ministers
who administer, I want ministers who act," AFP quoted him as saying.
The Guardian newspaper noted
that eight of 14 key ministers have backgrounds in former president Sarkozy's
The Republicans party. Dati, who served as justice minister under Sarkozy
between 2007 and 2009, is joined by Catherine Vautrin, who served under former
rightwing president Jacques Chirac, and Emmanuel Moulin, a former adviser to
Sarkozy, who is the new prime minister's chief of staff.
Interior Minister Gerald
Darmanin, who also served in Sarkozy's government but who was in Borne's
Cabinet too, hung onto his job, as did Bruno Le Maire, the finance minister.
Margot Faraci, an expert on
global leadership who advises banks on leadership trends, told The Express
newspaper Macron essentially appointed Attal because his lack of a
parliamentary majority, his dwindling popularity, and difficulty connecting
with voters left him desperate.
"It's common for
politicians to arrive on a wave of popularity and find themselves in unpopular
territory as the reality of governing sets in," she said, noting that
Macron's appointment of Attal was "an exercise in supreme pragmatism"
because he will "piggyback on Attal's popularity and give himself the best
chance of both increasing his own popularity now and staying in power in the
next (presidential) election" in 2027.
Macron's declining popularity
has come as Marine Le Pen and her far-right National Rally party has
flourished. The French people will watch to see if Macron's Renaissance party
offers a real alternative to Le Pen, and France's allies will want to see whether
France comes back into alignment with NATO, the US and the UK, or becomes more
isolationist.
The Financial Times said it
will also be interesting to see whether Macron will be able to share the
political limelight with his ambitious new protege.
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