French Economy Minister Steps Down to Run for President
French Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron resigned
Tuesday, clearing the way for him to challenge his mentor, President François
Hollande, in the 2017 presidential elections. Mr. Macron tendered his resignation during a
meeting with Mr. Hollande in the Élysée Palace, the president’s office said,
allowing the 38-year-old to “dedicate himself entirely to his political
movement.”
Finance Minister Michel Sapin will take control of
the Economy Ministry in addition to his current duties, Mr. Hollande’s office
said. The move sets the stage for Mr. Macron to enter a
crowded field of presidential contenders, complicating Mr. Hollande’s own bid
for re-election.
Mr. Macron, a former investment banker, was a rare
pro-business voice in the Hollande government, and his resignation tarnishes
Mr. Hollande’s standing with the moderate wing of the Socialist Party.
Mr. Macron is hold a news conference later
Tuesday, his spokeswoman said.
Although Mr. Macron had not officially declared he
will run for president, he had laid the groundwork for a candidacy by creating
a centrist political movement called En Marche, or “On the Move.” It draws
supporters from Mr. Hollande as well as former President Nicolas Sarkozy, who
is running in the center-right primaries.
Free from the constraints of ministerial duties,
Mr. Macron will have the latitude to outflank Mr. Hollande in calling for
tougher economic changes than the Socialist Party’s rank-and-file is willing to
support.
Once close personal allies, Mr. Hollande and Mr.
Macron grew apart as the economy minister cultivated his own political
ambitions.
Mr. Macron served as campaign adviser to Mr.
Hollande in 2012 and then as a senior economic adviser based at the presidential
palace. In 2014, Mr. Hollande thrust Mr. Macron into the public spotlight by
appointing him as minister with a mission to conduct a root-and-branch overhaul
of rigid laws holding back economic growth.
Mr. Macron delivered changes to laws in a raft of
sectors, liberalizing bus transport and allowing more shops to open on Sundays.
But the overhaul fell short of some of Mr. Macron’s ambitions to loosen labor
laws, felled by a fierce parliamentary battle with leftists in Mr. Hollande’s
majority.
Since the start of 2016, Mr. Macron has stepped up
his criticism of the president, saying another attempt to overhaul labor laws
this year still does not go far enough.
Wsj.com
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