PARIS, France
French President Emmanuel Macron could choose a new prime minister as soon as Monday, according to his entourage, as he fights political setbacks.
The position of Prime Minister
Elisabeth Borne has been tenuous ever since an immigration bill pushed by
Macron was voted down in parliament last month. It was finally passed with many
controversial changes imposed by the center-right opposition.
Macron, who is also facing a
growing challenge from the far-right National Rally of Marine Le Pen, met with
Borne Sunday night.
His office said the discussion
centered on flooding in northern France and a looming freeze across the
country, but observers said they likely discussed a widely-predicted cabinet
reshuffle.
Francois Bayrou, a centrist
leader whose early endorsement of Macron was key to his initial 2017 election,
told BFM television that “a change is necessary” in the government makeup.
Under the French system, the
president sets general policies, but the prime minister is responsible for
day-to-day government management, meaning they often pay the price when an
administration runs into turbulence.
Macron has over the past week
consulted about reinvigorating his administration with Bayrou, Finance Minister
Bruno Le Maire, and former prime minister Edouard Philippe.
No final decisions appeared to
have been taken before the meeting with Borne however.
A close Macron adviser said
the president was “finalizing his choices” and “things will move at the start
of the week, probably with a new prime minister Monday.”
But another associate of the
president added: “Everything is possible, including doing nothing.” That would
mean Borne could still keep her job.
If she is replaced, the two
leading candidates are Sebastien Lecornu, the 37-year old defense minister, and
Julien Denormandie, the 43-year-old former agriculture minister who has been
close to Macron for a decade.
Choosing between the two risks
exacerbating tensions within Macron’s movement. Denormandie has been with
Macron from the start of his presidential campaign. Lecornu later jumped ship
from the center-right The Republicans party.
Macron’s political party lacks
a majority in parliament and is already riven by disagreements over the
immigration law, which was greatly hardened as a condition for receiving
necessary support from The Republicans.
Some 200 French intellectuals,
actors, and union leaders issued a call Sunday to protest against the law on
January 21, saying it represented a “dangerous turn for the Republic.”
Denormandie almost founded a
start-up with Macron in 2014 before becoming his deputy chief of staff when
Macron was Economy Minister under President Francois Hollande. Denormandie has
been working in the private sector since 2022.
Lecornu joined Macron in 2017,
and would follow in the footsteps of two previous prime ministers — Philippe
and Jean Castex — who also defected from The Republicans.
Lecornu has become a close
adviser to Macron, who has used his experience in local and regional
government. However, one close adviser warned that “we are maybe moving too
quick to condemn” Borne.
In her 20 months as prime
minister, the 62-year-old Borne — France’s second female head-of-government —
has pushed through 30 pieces of legislation and has overcome previous doubts
about her future.
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