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Emmanuel Macron Alamy Stock Photo

Macron vows new start for nation at second term inauguration

It marks the first time a French leader is serving a second term in 20 years.

FRENCH PRESIDENT EMMANUEL Macron has vowed a new start against immense challenges in foreign and domestic policy, as he was inaugurated for a second term after his election victory over the far-right.

In a ceremony at the Elysee Palace, Macron was confirmed by Constitutional Council chief Laurent Fabius as the winner of April’s election and then signed the formal re-investiture document.

Attended by 450 people, including his wife Brigitte and his only surviving predecessors Francois Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy, the ceremony was relatively modest but marked the first time a French leader is serving a second term in 20 years.

Macron faces a daunting agenda of implementing the reforms he vowed when he came to power as France’s youngest-ever president in 2017, as well as dealing with the Russian assault against Ukraine.

“Rarely has our world and our country been confronted with such a combination of challenges,” he said, referring to the Russian invasion, the pandemic and the ecological emergency.

He vowed to be a “new president” for a “new mandate” and create a “stronger France”.

“Every day of the mandate that lies ahead I will have just one compass point. And that is to serve.”

‘Worn-out rites’

He also suggested a more inclusive and understanding style of ruling after his first term saw critics complain the former investment banker had abrasive and arrogant methods.

He vowed a “new method” to govern, far from the “worn-out rites and choreography” of the past.

In a tradition dating back to the Middle Ages, 21 cannon shots were fired from the Invalides military memorial complex to celebrate the inauguration.

With no drive down the Avenue des Champs-Elysees or long red carpet, the ceremony resembled the re-inaugurations of Francois Mitterrand in 1988 and Jacques Chirac in 2002, the last French president to win a second term.

Macron’s second term will only start officially when the first one expires at midnight on May 13.

He is set to keep playing a leading role in efforts to stop Russia’s war against Ukraine, while he carries an immense burden of expectation as a leader on the European stage with Germany still finding its footing in the post-Angela Merkel era.

Macron vowed to “act to avoid any escalation following the Russian aggression in Ukraine, to help democracy and courage to prevail, to build a new European peace and a new autonomy on our continent.”

On the domestic front, Macron must deal with the crisis over the rising cost of living and also brace for possible protests when he finally tackles his cherished pension reform, raising France’s retirement age.

He reaffirmed a vow for full employment in France and vowed to fight against inequality by reforming the health and school systems as well as against “daily insecurities and terrorism that is still there”.

Attending the ceremony were the parents of teacher Samuel Paty who was beheaded by an Islamist extremist in 2020. His mother was moved to tears when the president embraced them.

‘Having difficulty’

Macron won the second round of presidential polls on April 24th with a score of 58.55 percent against far-right rival Marine Le Pen.

The ceremony comes at a time of political flux in the wake of Macron’s election victory, as France gears up for legislative polls that swiftly follow in June.

Macron is expected to name a new premier in place of incumbent Jean Castex to lead a revamped government into the elections, but not until his second term officially kicks off.

He has mooted naming a female politician with a focus on social responsibility — although reports have indicated that overtures to leftist figures, such as former official Veronique Bedague and Socialist parliamentary group chief Valerie Rabault, have been rebuffed.

“Here they are obviously having difficulty finding the right person,” French political historian Jean Garrigues told AFP.

Meanwhile, the Socialist Party along with the Greens and Communists, is forming an unprecedented alliance for the parliamentary elections with the hard left France Unbowed (LFI) party of Jean-Luc Melenchon.

He was by far the best performing left-wing candidate in the first round of presidential elections and is spearheading efforts to mount a convincing challenge to Macron.

Pro-Macron factions have regrouped under the banner of Ensemble (Together) while his own Republic on the Move party, which has struggled to create a grass-roots base, is renaming itself Renaissance.

Garrigues said the problems of the ruling party were “linked by nature to his (Macron’s) political positioning which is both on the right and the left”.

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    Mute Mark Malone
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    Jan 1st 2021, 6:44 AM

    If there is to be a silver lining in all this, I hope that those people that used to breathe down the back of your neck in queues, finally get the awareness to give us some personal space.

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    Mute JillyBean
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    Jan 1st 2021, 6:53 AM

    @Mark Malone: I’m afraid they are still around and continue to do so regardless of restrictions

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    Mute Contrary Mary
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    Jan 1st 2021, 8:40 AM

    @Mark Malone: Been thinking something like this. Manners will come back again. Just got to work on the spitting and urinating everywhere now.

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    Mute Spbeak
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    Jan 1st 2021, 7:23 AM

    There should be greater nuance in the question phrasing e.g. it is not complusory to wear a mask in public spaces, it should be asked if people either wear masks in enclosed spaces (shops/buses etc.) or in crowded public places. Would have been useful also to see fear added to the emotional well-being tracking – probably a prevailing emotion at the start that would hope has declined significantly.

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    Mute Jim Smith
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    Jan 1st 2021, 9:03 AM

    @Spbeak: To suggest that 90% of people wear masks in all public places is just incorrect

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    Mute NotMyIreland
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    Jan 1st 2021, 10:15 AM

    @Spbeak: does worry and anxiety not kind of cover fear?

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    Mute Sean
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    Jan 1st 2021, 10:33 AM

    @Jim Smith: well the survey relies on people reporting their own behaviour the true figure probably a bit lower alright

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    Mute Garry Coll
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    Jan 1st 2021, 11:26 AM

    @Jim Smith:
    Depends I suppose, on what you call a public space for the purpose of mask wearing.
    Walking down a street in the open air is in public, going for a walk on the beach or in a town park with your children is in public, but where social distancing is not an issue, then facemasks are a matter of choice.
    From what I observed during December, facemasks were being worn by nearly everyone, certainly greater than 90%, in the places where social distancing was a difficulty, retail parks, shopping centres and such like. If fact most people seemed to be putting on their facemasks before they got out of their cars and were being extremely diligent and responsible about it.
    Someone else has suggested that the questions asked in this article are a bit vague, I think they are correct.

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    Mute Brian Ó Dálaigh
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    Jan 1st 2021, 3:28 PM

    @NotMyIreland: not really. Fear is a separate, though related, emotion.

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    Mute Gary Kearney
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    Jan 1st 2021, 12:59 PM

    The numbers shown and the ups and down in the infection numbers match. Says everything.

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