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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Macron turns his sights on France’s town halls for power base

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PARIS: After dynamiting France’s mainstream parties, President Emmanuel Macron is turning his mind to re-election and the need to make inroads in the last bastion of the old establishment: his country’s 35,000 town halls.


Municipal elections are still eight months away, but Macron is already plotting a course to conquer cities big and small, with a candidate for the biggest prize of all — Paris — to be picked by his party later on Wednesday.


Conquering cities such as Marseille, Lyon or Bordeaux is crucial to building a local power base for his party, La Republique En Marche (LREM), which he created with a handful of aides in 2016 as a vehicle for his presidential campaign.


Back then, he promised a grassroots movement that would revolutionise France’s highly centralised political structure. But his failure to connect with ordinary people is one reason he was caught badly off-guard by the anti-government yellow-vest protests that began in October.


“It’ll be essential for him to have a good showing,” said Claude Dargent, a researcher at Sciences-Po university in Paris. “It’ll be an opportunity to win local bastions, because that’s also how you win a presidential election.”


Mayors, whether of small rural communes or large cities, are influential in French local politics and, as the deliverers of policing, transport or planning services, are often citizens’ main point of contact with the state.


The LREM’s choice for its Paris ticket will give some insight into Macron’s strategy for the municipal campaign.


Cedric Villani is an eccentric maths genius, recognisable for his silk cravats and spider brooches, with no political experience prior to his election as a LREM lawmaker in 2017.


Initially seen as an outside bet, he has struck a chord with his straight-talking.


“The current mess in Paris, considerable though it is, does not scare me,” Villani told a rally in the capital last week.


His rival Benjamin Griveaux is one of the “Macron boys” — the clique that helped propel the former investment banker to the Elysee Palace — whose smooth talking could exemplify the arrogance that Macron is accused of demonstrating in his first two years in power.


With the formerly dominant Socialists and centre-right still in meltdown two years after Macron upended France’s political landscape, polls put LREM ahead in the Paris race.


A BVA survey in June had either Villani or Griveaux winning 25 per cent of the vote, four points ahead of the Socialist incumbent Anne Hidalgo, whose campaign against cars in the city has fuelled resentment. — Reuters


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