French president Emmanuel Macron. Photo: Reuters/Pascal Rossignol
Michel Rose
French president Emmanuel Macron said he would increase the retirement age, cut taxes and further loosen labour market rules if he wins a second term in next month’s election, seeking a mandate to press on with pro-business reforms.
Opinion polls show Mr Macron is likely to win the first round of the election on April 10 and beat any opponent in a run-off on April 24.
His long-standing lead has grown in recent weeks, with voters approving of his diplomatic efforts over the Ukraine war.
“We are at a tipping point where we can make a real difference,” Mr Macron told a news conference, highlighting the war on the EU’s doorstep and the global challenge of climate change.
Stressing his pro-business credentials is not without risk as households feel the squeeze from rising prices, but Mr Macron said he wanted to see through a reshaping of the economy.
Laying out his campaign platform for the first time, he said he would increase the retirement age in France to 65 from 62, slash taxes by €15m per year, make some benefits conditional on community work and reform unemployment insurance to push people to get back to work.
“It’s quite normal, especially when you consider the state of public coffers, that we work more,” Mr Macron said.
Mr Macron is a former investment banker who was elected in 2017 on a centrist platform and his policies have veered to the right during his mandate. However, he had put some of his planned changes, including the raised pension age, on hold amid a series of crises, including the yellow vest protests and the Covid-19 pandemic.
With economic growth surging and unemployment falling to its current 7.4pc,
Michel Rose
French president Emmanuel Macron said he would increase the retirement age, cut taxes and further loosen labour market rules if he wins a second term in next month’s election, seeking a mandate to press on with pro-business reforms.
Opinion polls show Mr Macron is likely to win the first round of the election on April 10 and beat any opponent in a run-off on April 24.
His long-standing lead has grown in recent weeks, with voters approving of his diplomatic efforts over the Ukraine war.
“We are at a tipping point where we can make a real difference,” Mr Macron told a news conference, highlighting the war on the EU’s doorstep and the global challenge of climate change.
Stressing his pro-business credentials is not without risk as households feel the squeeze from rising prices, but Mr Macron said he wanted to see through a reshaping of the economy.
Laying out his campaign platform for the first time, he said he would increase the retirement age in France to 65 from 62, slash taxes by €15m per year, make some benefits conditional on community work and reform unemployment insurance to push people to get back to work.
“It’s quite normal, especially when you consider the state of public coffers, that we work more,” Mr Macron said.
Mr Macron is a former investment banker who was elected in 2017 on a centrist platform and his policies have veered to the right during his mandate. However, he had put some of his planned changes, including the raised pension age, on hold amid a series of crises, including the yellow vest protests and the Covid-19 pandemic.
With economic growth surging and unemployment falling to its current 7.4pc,
Mr. Macron can point to data to show he has rebooted the eurozone’s second biggest economy since he took office, but he said he wanted to go further.
“The rate of unemployment is at its lowest level for 15 years, the youth unemployment rate is at its lowest level for 40 years... none of these results can be considered enough,” the president said.
Mr Macron added that another key aim if he is re-elected will be to make France more self-sufficient, with proposals ranging from investing “massively” in agricultural and industrial independence to building more nuclear reactors and strengthening the army.
France could be one of the first countries to wean itself off fossil fuels, he said, while adding that he wanted to build a “European metaverse” to compete with US tech giants and make Europe more independent on that front too.
The 44-year-old, who is likely to face a far-right or conservative opponent in the run-off round, also said he would get tougher on law and order, including putting more police on the streets, tightening conditions required for long-term residency permits and making it easier to expel people whose asylum request has been rejected. Mr Macron also said he planned more subsidies for single mothers and inheritance tax breaks.
Opinion polls in recent weeks show Mr Macron winning up to 31pc of the vote in the first round, up from around 25pc last month.
But even if he goes on to win re-election, he will need his centrist La Republique en Marche (LaRem) party – which has failed in all recent local elections – and its allies to win a parliamentary election in June if he is to have a strong base to implement his policies.
“The rate of unemployment is at its lowest level for 15 years, the youth unemployment rate is at its lowest level for 40 years... none of these results can be considered enough,” the president said.
Mr Macron added that another key aim if he is re-elected will be to make France more self-sufficient, with proposals ranging from investing “massively” in agricultural and industrial independence to building more nuclear reactors and strengthening the army.
France could be one of the first countries to wean itself off fossil fuels, he said, while adding that he wanted to build a “European metaverse” to compete with US tech giants and make Europe more independent on that front too.
The 44-year-old, who is likely to face a far-right or conservative opponent in the run-off round, also said he would get tougher on law and order, including putting more police on the streets, tightening conditions required for long-term residency permits and making it easier to expel people whose asylum request has been rejected. Mr Macron also said he planned more subsidies for single mothers and inheritance tax breaks.
Opinion polls in recent weeks show Mr Macron winning up to 31pc of the vote in the first round, up from around 25pc last month.
But even if he goes on to win re-election, he will need his centrist La Republique en Marche (LaRem) party – which has failed in all recent local elections – and its allies to win a parliamentary election in June if he is to have a strong base to implement his policies.
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