In Lofty Versailles Speech, Macron Tells the French to Prepare for Change
Along the way he ranged widely, with morale-boosting praise for Franceâs cultural heritage, a plea for âhumane and justâ treatment of refugees, demands for a less technocratic European Union, and a semidisguised dig at the United States under President Trump when he warned against those âdemocracies, longtime allies, now menacing the established order.â
By the standards of American speechmaking, it was abstract. But Mr. Macron was making a point: French citizens were demanding change after years of stagnation, change was needed and he was the man to bring it about.
âItâs about nothing less than reweaving, between French citizens and the republic, the relationship that has dissolved under the mechanical exercise of power,â Mr. Macron said.
âA contractual relationship,â he added. âFrom efficiency, representativity and responsibility, I want the emergence of a contractual republic.â
âOur democracy can only be nourished in action, and in our ability to change what is everyday, and real,â he said. âIt isnât five years of adjustments and half-measures that we have in front of us,â Mr. Macron said. The French were âexpecting a profound transformation.â
For a start, he proposed shrinking by a third the body that was listening to him, Franceâs plethoric Parliament of over 900 members. Then, he told the lawmakers that they had to legislate less.
âLetâs try to put an end to the proliferation of legislation,â he said â" which was not consistent with the rapidly changing economy and society that confronts France.
That plea was consistent with the disdain Mr. Macron has shown from the beginning for the world of conventional French politics.
He stunned the traditional parties on the right and the left, and he is now buoyed by the election last month of a big majority from his own political movement.
âThe French people have shown their impatience with a political world made up of sterile quarrels and hollow ambitions in which we have lived up until now,â he said on Monday.
Polls show the French are now more optimistic than they have been in some years. Mr. Macron aimed to encourage this optimism about the future on Monday.
He called for France to become âthe center of a new humanist project for the world,â telling citizens to beware âthe cynicism that lies dormant in all of us.â
He added, âAnd it is within each one of us that we must shut it up, day after day.â
He got in a dig at the French news media, which he has largely shunned since his election, calling for âan end to these manhunts,â the âincessant search for scandalâ and a âfrenzy that is unworthy of usâ â" and that has already cost him several ministers, tainted by potential financial misdeeds.
However, Mr. Macron himself largely benefited from the most notorious such âmanhuntâ this year. He would probably not have been elected but for revelations in the news media about an embezzlement scandal touching his leading rival, the center-right politician François Fillon.
The Versailles speech was boycotted by members of Parliament on the far left, already taking up arms against Mr. Macron over his plans to overhaul Franceâs labor codes, and already casting the new president as the destroyer of the nationâs social protections. He touched only briefly on his labor overhaul plans on Monday.
But unusually for a French politician, he warned against the encroachments of the welfare state on the citizensâ sense of personal responsibility.
Mr. Macron has been criticized â" most recently over the weekend â" for slighting references to the less fortunate in French society, and to those who are not economically successful. That criticism did not appear to faze him in Mondayâs speech.
âProtecting the weakestâ should not make of them âpermanent wards of the state,â he said.
âCertainly, weâve got to recognize the essential role of public service, and of our civil servants,â he said. âBut protecting the weakest doesnât mean transforming them into helpless minors,â he said. âEvery French person has a responsibility and a role to play in the conquests to come.â
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