18/01/24View in Browser

Macron: A disappointing performance

By Georgi Gotev | @GeorgiGotev

Like many others, I watched French President Emmanuel Macron speaking to the press on Wednesday (16 January), and I was among those disappointed but not surprised.

Macron has outstanding oratory skills, but beautiful phrases could not mask the lack of political substance expected from the leader of the only EU country with a permanent seat at the UN Security Council and the only one possessing a nuclear arsenal.

The EU needs leadership, and France was expected to provide more of it, especially after Brexit. The best leadership, of course, is to lead by example.

Unfortunately, France is not in great shape to lead, especially since Macron lost his parliamentary majority after a crushing blow in the June 2022 parliamentary elections.

The parliamentary election saw a new left-wing alliance make gains to become the main opposition. At the same time, the far right under Marine Le Pen posted its best legislative performance in its history.

This was a significant blow for Macron, who had just started his second presidential term. This should normally be his best time because, in a second mandate, a president is independent and able to push for reforms and the country’s interests without worrying about his rating and re-election.

His push for pension reform will be remembered by big protests against the reform bill proposed by the government to increase the retirement age from 62 to 64.

France has a bizarre legal way for the government to ignore Parliament. Article 49.3 of the French Constitution allows governments to bypass the National Assembly and force through bills without a vote.

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Photo of the day

Chair of the Nato Military Committee Admiral Rob Bauer (C), Supreme Allied Commander Europe, General Christopher Cavoli (L) and Vice Supreme Allied Commander Transformation, General Chris Badia (R) give a press conference following NATO Military Chiefs of Defence meeting in Brussels, Belgium, 18 January 2024. NATO's highest Military Authority, the Military Committee, meet in person on 17 and 18 January 2024. EPA-EFE/OLIVIER HOSLET

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The Roundup

Hungary doubled down on Thursday on its demands for EU support to Ukraine to be reviewed annually, effectively reserving itself a veto right, as negotiations between EU member states on the issue continue ahead of a decisive 1 February summit.

EU countries and the European Parliament reached an agreement on Thursday on new rules tightening CO2 limits on heavy-duty vehicles (HDVs), paving the way for a significant increase in the number of clean trucks and buses across the bloc.

The German liberal party, the FDP, is pushing to cut red tape at the EU level in its campaign for the European elections, rivalling the conservative CDU/CSU (EPP) which wants to move Europe “from the Green Deal to an Economic Deal”.

President Emmanuel Macron’s decision to scrap Agnès Pannier-Runacher’s Energy Transition Ministry leaves open the question of who will drive France’s energy policy in Brussels.

President Macron has vowed to defend a “sovereign Europe” ahead of European elections in June, but his recent conservative turn and willingness to mirror the far-right’s rhetoric on issues of identity and immigration may derail his campaign away from key EU matters.

France will take charge of steering an ammunition and missile production coalition for Ukraine after it managed to half artillery production times, French Defence Minister Sébastien Lecornu said on Thursday.

Re-Imagine Europa think tank has launched a booklet with tips for navigating polarised conversations on the highly contentious topic of the new rules on plants’ gene editing, which is due to be voted on by the Parliament’s environment committee on 24 January.

Europe’s armed forces that want to cooperate must make sure their cyber-defence technologies and methods are compatible, Belgium’s Defence Minister Ludivine Dedonder warned on Wednesday.

A new make-up of the next Commission team should include a reshuffle of the foreign policy and defence portfolio, according to a draft European People’s Party (EPP) manifesto, seen by Euractiv.

Don’t miss this week’s edition of the EU Politics Decoded: Which parties have their act together?

Look out for…

  • World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Monday-Friday.
  • Commission President Ursula von der Leyen meets Swedish PM Ulf Kristersson and Finnish PM Petteri Orpo in Stockholm on Friday.
  • Commission Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič meets with Jakob Stausholm, CEO of Rio Tinto – in Davos on Friday.
  • Commission Vice-President Margaritis Schinas participates in Brussels Cybersecurity Summit on Friday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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