Vive La France? Macron’s Victory is a Temporary Reprieve
The situation is only slightly les miserables
David Ramos / Getty
Cheering for a banker to win the French Presidency is like cheering for tuberculosis to beat malaria: yes, the lesser evil defeats the greater, but at what cost to your soul?
The even-tempered French, in a result which can only be called “le incredible!” decided to vote for the suit over the nightstick, and we are all happier for it. The centrist Macron beat the far-right Le Pen. Change comes in a thousand forms, and sometimes it shows up as a terrifying right-wing populist who wants to feed immigrants into a meat grinder as food for the amphibious mutants of the Seine. There are some who would criticize my explanation of Le Pen as sensationalist, but they have never considered France seriously. What sober person has?
But a successful assault on the French Presidency would have shattered Mother Europa. It would have meant the downfall of her Union. You go bankrupt, Hemingway wrote, “Gradually and then suddenly.” And that’s how the near the French Republic came: had the wind blown a little differently, we would now be dealing with the National Front in power.
And so France is about to swear in its youngest President. That ought to give us pause. Like Obama, Macron is a symptom of the crumbling of the old order, not its salvation. Macron became a possibility because of the loss of faith in the mainstream parties; Obama was a contender due to the Dems’ complicity in Iraq and the predatory economy. Young kings usually come to power when a plague has killed off everybody else. Le Pen actually finished in third place Sunday, behind abstention votes. Sixteen million people didn’t vote for either candidate. Think about that.
The Times gifted the public with a bland, gray feature which could have been written in 1950. There was a bizarre reference to how Macron demonstrated qualities which appealed to “French voters, unlike many Anglo-Saxon ones”—Samuel “Clash of Civilizations” Huntington would have been proud. That story also used the prefabricated sentence “balancing protection of the French welfare state with mild encouragement for business”…whatever in the good graces of gigantic St. Christopher that means. But there was an insightful moment in the otherwise “Yes, but” coverage:
The National Front could win as many as 100 seats in the new Parliament, according to some analyses, making it a formidable opposition party. Indeed, even as Ms. Le Pen was soundly defeated on Sunday, she still managed a showing that not too long ago would have been unthinkable. And in her concession, she made it clear that she was already looking toward the parliamentary elections, and the future.
There are two dangers in assessing the aftermath of the French election. First, normalizing this result: we cannot forget what almost happened. Second, misreading the popular will: the people in charge should not think Business as Usual can resume. That would be a huge error of unspeakable bigness.
What do we mean when we speak of the problems of normalization in politics? This: When we normalize Le Pen or Trump, we lose all sense of proportion, of what is acceptable. The Local, a English-speaking French news organ, noted that: “The interior ministry reports that 20.7 million voters chose Macron, while Le Pen got 10.6 million in total.” The future of half-a-billion EU citizens hinged on ten million voters in the Republic of France.
France and Germany are the pillars of the whole United Europe enterprise. The British can leave, and the Union will stand. The U.K. has their club music and bitterness to retreat into—like the English in every sea conflict ever, they can retreat and re-enter at their pleasure. But the two central powers must not fold. Otherwise, the lights go out in Brussels. In the final analysis, Le Pen was an absurd proposition. But so was Donald Trump in the Republican primary, or Britain voting for Brexit, or the House of Representatives voting to repeal Obamacare. And all came to pass.
Marine Le Pen being in the final heat is not an ordinary wibble-wobble in the political order. Le Pen, and Trump, and Brexit, are obvious signs of an unraveling. They tell us the swaggering post-Cold War system will not hold.
There needs to be a full re-investiture of the social contract. We need a roll-back of neoliberal capitalism, or Le Pen will return again. And next time she will win.