France’s Macron appoints center-right PM to widen appeal
PARIS
Philippe, a 46-year-old MP and mayor of the northern port of Le Havre, comes from the moderate wing of the rightwing Republicans party and is seen as a pragmatist.
His appointment was seen as a strategic move by 39-year-old Macron, a former minister in the outgoing Socialist government who is trying to woo modernizers of all stripes to his new centrist party, La Republique en Marche (Republic on the Move, REM).
France’s youngest ever president has already attracted dozens of Socialist MPs to his side, triggering a major realignment in French politics that has left the traditional parties floundering.
Like Macron, Philippe is a product of France’s elite ENA college for senior public servants and worked for a while in the private sector.
Relatively unknown outside his Le Havre fiefdom, he has already crossed the floor once in his career, defecting from the Socialists to the Republicans as a young politician.
One of Macron’s aides welcomed his appointment as “a good move,” telling AFP it would help him “break the right.”
Taking office on May 14, the former investment banker who trounced far-right leader Marine Le Pen in the May 7 presidential run-off, said he aimed to restore France’s shattered self-confidence.
The fervently pro-European Macron also said he would help rebuild the flagging European Union.
He headed to Berlin later May 15 for talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on how Europe’s power couple can drive reforms of the bloc.
Like Macron, France’s new prime minister has little truck with the entrenched left-right divide.
After campaigning for Socialist prime minister Michel Rocard as a youth, he switched to the right, becoming a close ally of center-right former prime minister Alain Juppe.
Mayor of Le Havre, his home town, since 2010, the German-speaking father of three, who writes crime novels in his spare time, was elected to parliament in 2012.
His first task will be to help Macron finalize his cabinet choices, to be announced on May 16.
France’s new president has said he wants a mix of experience and new blood -- a balance he has attempted to achieve in his slate of candidates for the June 11-18 election.