France’s Macron quits cabinet amid presidency rumours

French Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron leaves the Elysee Palace after a weekly cabinet me
AFP

Paris (AFP) – France’s 38-year-old Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron stepped down on Tuesday, fuelling speculation that he will vie to become the country’s youngest ever president in next year’s elections.

A thorn in the side of President Francois Hollande’s Socialist government, the reform-minded minister handed in his resignation after sailing down the Seine River for the meeting at the Elysee Palace with his one-time champion.

The president’s office released a statement saying Macron had resigned and that Finance Minister Michel Sapin would take over the economy portfolio.

The former investment banker and self-made millionaire quit “to dedicate himself entirely to his political movement”, the presidency said, referring to “En Marche” (On the Move), which he founded in April.

Macron would be a fresh face in a presidential field that includes former president Nicolas Sarkozy, 61, and 71-year-old ex-prime minister Alain Juppe — both right-wing candidates.

Marine Le Pen, 48, of the far-right anti-immigration National Front, is standing for a second time in elections set for April 23 and May 7, 2017.

Macron’s departure is a blow to Hollande, whose approval ratings are the lowest of any post-war French president. He has pledged not to seek re-election if he fails to rein in stubbornly high unemployment, which is hovering at around 10 percent.

Hollande, who has already alienated the left flank of the Socialist Party through economic and labour reforms, faces further isolation with the loss of the star of his government’s centrist side.

Macron’s thinly veiled presidential ambitions heap pressure on his former patron, who has said he will not decide on a re-election bid until the end of the year.

Macron launched “En Marche” (On the Move) in April saying he wanted to promote “new ideas … neither of the right nor the left”. 

In a speech last month he left little doubt as to his intentions, pledging to lead the movement “to 2017 and to victory”.

Macron, like most French politicians a graduate of the prestigious Ecole Nationale d’Administration, indirectly criticised Hollande by describing France as “a country worn down by broken promises”.

The remark drew a reprimand from the president, who threatened to sack Macron unless he respected the “solidarity” of the Socialist government he joined in 2014.

– Maverick former banker –

A maverick in politics as well as in his private life, Macron is married to a divorcee with three children who is some 20 years his senior. 

Applauded by liberals for challenging the key planks of French Socialism such as the 35-hour work week, the former Rothschild banker is criticised by die-hard leftists as being too cosy with big business.

His name is on the first of two economic reform packages that were forced through parliament without a vote under Hollande.

Both sparked angry street protests and created a deep divide within the Socialist Party.

But Macron’s straight-talking, anti-establishment flair has seen him win over many young, cosmopolitan French people.

Yet it is unclear how wide the appeal really is of such a young man who has never held elected office.

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