In France, the July 2024 elections had ensured victory for two political forces opposed to Macron, viz. the Rassemblement National and the Nouveau Front Populaire. But Macron had postponed the choice of a Prime Minister until the post-Olympic period, two months later. Now, in September 2024, he has appointed Michel Barnier, his ideological twin, as Prime Minister, without taking into account the new political forces in the National Assembly. Macron is thus in the process of creating a new regime divorcing from the democratic institutions of the crisis-ridden Fifth Republic.
Macron proves to be an autocrat
From the outset of his first term in office, Macron has shown himself to be a new type of French politician with autocratic tendencies. He distinguished himself by his megalomaniac style, calling himself a “Jupiterian President”, which he claimed meant that he was above the parties, but which turns out to mean that he is above all French institutions.
This autocratic approach is first and foremost evident in the way he forms his party and chooses his ministers: almost all of them are newcomers with no political stature, chosen for their inability to overshadow the President and for their obedience. Macron decides alone, surrounded by a handful of advisors. He is a man who refuses to compromise and aims for absolute power.
His inhuman repression of the Yellow Vests, who nevertheless represented a huge section of the French people (60-70% of French people recognized themselves in this movement
) proved that he has no intention of giving in to his people, making him unique in the history of the French Republics since the remote days of the Paris Commune.
Macron is clearly under a monarchical illusion, for his practice of power reveals a man believing himself to be some new Napoleon III, a conspirator-emperor who believes in his own intrinsic legitimacy, Macron traces his political lineage to Napoleon III through Socialist president Mitterrand, the 1968 conspirator, nicknamed “the Sphinx” just as Napoleon III himself and who had been known as “God” for his megalomania. Macron’s “Jupiter” is but the new version of the same idea, both devoted to the EU ideology.
However, Macron is mistaken in two respects. In the first case, that of Eurocracy, Macron is little more than a plenipotentiary delegated from abroad, which is bound to bring him a national revolution because sovereignty over France cannot come from outside. In the case of his monarchical illusion, Macron is certainly alone in believing in it, with a very narrow circle of satellites. Macron is nothing but a parvenu, a snob without any source of personal greatness, and he is moreover accused of high treason and hated by his people, which is incompatible with the establishment of a presidentialist autocracy. In other words, Macronism is tending towards a full tyranny of exercise. Barnier’s appointment looks like the beginning of a coup.
Will Parliament react to this obvious change of regime with a series of motions of censure, or by refusing to give its confidence to the Government? In any case, the process of political exclusion of Parliament has only begun, and the crisis implied can only get worse. Macron is thus ushering in an era of highly violent conflict that is now freed from the democratic and institutional straitjacket – in other words, he has just sown a French revolution against a presidentialist autocrat.