29/08/24View in Browser

Is Macron still the EU’s man?

By Théo Bourgery-Gonse

While the absence of any viable coalition government in France, a situation lasting 50 days and counting, may be new for the French, it is not unusual in other EU countries. That said, the longer this continues, the more it stains Emmanuel Macron’s reputation on the EU stage.

In November 2017, Time magazine ran its cover story with an interview of the newly elected Macron. The title read “The next leader of Europe,” with the asterisk “If only he can lead France.”

Welcoming Macron’s new stature with candid eyes, the piece closed with this: “If Macron pulls off his transformation at home, the ambitions he has to change the world—not just France—could be within reach.”

This is no meaningless last sentence, and it is so far from what Macron’s aura has become seven years into office. (Another sentence reads, “Putin is now a man [Macron] can cut a deal with." Evidently, it did not age well.)

In just the past three months, the French president has suffered two crushing defeats in the polls—the European and snap national legislative elections—the latter of which he called in June.

At the same time, the European Commission opened an Excessive Deficit Procedure (EDP) on France, with its deficit and debt levels some some of the highest in the EU. However, with no government in place to develop a draft budget that could assuage some of the Commission’s concerns, for now, it remains another thorn in Macron's side.

Finally, the country’s political makeup following the snap elections is more fragmented than ever, with no viable coalition or minority government in sight.

The left-wing union, which secured the highest number of seats in the National Assembly (but is 100 short of an absolute majority) has been barred by the ElysĂ©e from future coalition talks, arguing it would fail to bring ‘institutional stability’.

Negotiations are still ongoing with the centre-right and the right.

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KYIV, UKRAINE - People remember their comrades at the Wall of Remembrance of Defenders of Ukraine memorial on 29 August 2024. They carry flowers and candles to the wall of memory in Mykhailivska Square in the centre of the Ukrainian capital. (Photo by Andriy Zhyhaylo/Obozrevatel/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images).

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The Roundup

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While EU imports from Russia slid to record lows in the second quarter of 2024, signs persist that Brussels’ sanctions on Moscow are being circumvented via trade with third countries

EU member states have not helped European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in her quest for a gender-balanced EU executive, with little time left to weigh the factors that would allow her new line-up to pass parliamentary scrutiny.

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Look out for


  • Informal meeting of EU defence ministers in Brussels, Belgium
  • EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell chairs the informal meeting of EU defence ministers.
  • European Commission President Ursuala von der Leyen delivers the keynote speech at  GLOBSEC 2024 in Prague, Czechia.

[Edited by Alice Taylor-Braçe/Rajnish Singh]

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