PARIS (Reuters) – President Emmanuel Macron named Jean Castex, a top
civil servant and local mayor who orchestrated France’s coronavirus
lockdown exit strategy, as his new prime minister on Friday as he acted
to reinvent his administration and win back voters.
Castex, 55,
hails from the centre-right of French politics and served for two years
as the second-highest ranking official in the Elysee Palace during
Nicolas Sarkozy’s presidency.
An Elysee official described Castex as a senior civil servant whose
experience in local politics would help Macron connect with provincial
France. Castex was a “social Gaullist”, the official said in reference
to the more interventionist, socially minded wing of France’s
centre-right.
The announcement followed the resignation of Edouard
Philippe ahead of a widely anticipated overhaul of the government by
Macron.
Macron is reshaping his government as France grapples with the
deepest economic depression since World War Two, a sharp downturn that
will shrink the economy by about 11% in 2020 and reverse hard-fought
gains on unemployment.
Investors will be watching to see if
Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, who has overseen reforms to liberalise
the economy and spent big to keep companies like Air France and Renault afloat during the crisis,
keeps his job.
“The return from summer holidays will be difficult,
we must get ready,” Macron told regional newspapers in an interview
published late on Thursday.
Macron and Philippe dined together on
Wednesday and met on Thursday. The Elysee source described Thursday’s
discussions as warm and friendly. Both men agreed on “the need for a new
government to embody the next phase, a new path,” the aide said.
FRESH START
Macron said last month he wanted to start afresh as
France embarks on a delicate and costly recovery from its coronavirus
slump. Then came his party’s dire showing in nationwide municipal
elections on June 28.
The local elections revealed surging support
for the Green party and underlined Macron’s troubles connecting with
ordinary people. His La Republique en Marche party failed to win a
single major city, depriving the president of a local power base ahead
of 2022.
The most notable win was Philippe’s success in his old
redoubt of Le Havre and his resignation clears the way for him to become
mayor of the northern port, from where he could emerge as a rival to
Macron in two years time.
Cardboard boxes were delivered to the prime minister’s offices minutes after the government stepped down.
Macron is taking a gamble by replacing Philippe, who is more popular then the president, political analysts say.
But
keeping Philippe would have suggested that Macron was too weak to let
go of his prime minister and that his party lacked the depth for a full
cabinet overhaul.
https://www.oann.com/french-pm-philippe-resigns-as-macron-readies-reshuffle/