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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, May 31, 2017
The Macron Method
Featured image courtesy Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images
MARK LEONARD on 05/29/2017
LONDON
– Emmanuel Macron’s election to the French presidency provides the
European Union with an opportunity to move past the internal conflicts
that have hastened its disintegration. Rather than standing exclusively
with the old elites or the new populists, Macron has promised to rally
broad political support under the banner of European reform. But can he
really breathe new life into an ailing project?
When Macron met with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, he offered a plan
for ending the cold war between northern and southern Europe – which is
to say the tension between advocates of austerity and those in favor of
growth policies. And when he meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin
this week, he could find a way to bridge the divide between the EU’s
eastern and western flanks, which want, respectively, to contain and
engage Russia.
Likewise, Macron has tried to reconcile the idea of a welcoming Europe
with advocacy of a fortress Europe. He wants to take in more refugees,
while urging the EU to create a border force of 5,000 soldiers, and to
accelerate repatriation of illegal migrants.
But while many EU leaders were relieved to see Macron elected, it is
often because they hope he will give a new lease on life to the old
project, rather than a radical break with the past. To bring true
change, Macron will have to transcend the two contradictory but mutually
reinforcing political models that have defined the last decade of EU
governance: technocracy and populism.
Technocracy has been a central feature of European integration from the
beginning. Jean Monnet, the French economist who is considered one of
the modern EU’s founders, was renowned for his ability to turn big
political conflicts into smaller technical issues. This method was
highly successful during the post-war period of European reconstruction,
because it allowed diplomats and officials from different countries to
bypass national disagreements or lingering resentments and address the
continent’s most pressing problems.
But, over the years, EU policy discussions have departed from Monnet’s
model. They now tend to be disconnected from national politics
altogether, driven as much by the logic of EU institutions as by member
states’ needs. Moreover, EU-level decisions have been pickled into rigid
codes to which member states must adhere, even if their governments or
electorates do not support them. Together, these trends have fed the
widespread perception that there are no alternative forms of EU
governance, and that Europe is being run by elites who have little
concern for the interests of the people they are supposed to be serving.
The populist explosion in recent years is a natural reaction to this
disconnected form of technocracy. It is no accident that leaders such as
Marine Le Pen in France, Geert Wilders in the Netherlands, Viktor Orbán
in Hungary, and Nigel Farage in the United Kingdom have all posed as
tribunes of the “people.” Through referenda – their favorite political
tool – they have been able to inflict damage to the EU constitutional
treaty, the EU-Ukraine Association Agreement, refugee-repatriation deals, and, with the UK’s Brexit vote, the composition of the EU itself.
As European technocrats have pushed for covert integration to resolve
the euro and refugee crises, the populists have struck back even harder.
And every time populist-driven referenda against EU treaties force
governments to retreat into technocracy, the populist narrative is
reinforced.
The UK’s Brexit negotiations have already become a battleground between
technocrats and populists, with each side vying for an outcome that will
support its narrative. When British Prime Minister Theresa May says
that she wants to “make a success of Brexit,” she sets off alarm bells
in Brussels and other European capitals, because such an outcome could
inspire populist anti-EU movements elsewhere.
To forestall that scenario, some members of the German government,
fearing that they will be unable to accommodate Macron’s other demands
(particularly concerning eurozone reforms), are hoping to work with him
to make Brexit unattractive. This also seems to be what EU Commission
President Jean-Claude Juncker was getting at recently. “Brexit will show how much more attractive it is to be a member of our Union,” he said. “Thanks to Europe, people enjoy the freedom to live, buy, love, and trade across borders.”
It is understandable that European leaders would latch onto Brexit as
the one thing EU member states can agree on. But, unfortunately, the
Brexit debate tends to bring out EU elites’ worst instincts, not least
because it encourages them to fight for the status quo, rather than for reform and innovation.
If the EU continues to look inward, consumed by the questions posed by
Brexit, the next five years will be as sterile and unproductive as the
last. The big question now is whether Europe can accept the lifeline
that Macron is offering, and look forward to a new project, rather than
backward to old struggles.
To be sure, many observers have poked fun at Macron for refusing to
commit himself to one side in any debate. And satirists have pointed out
that he starts almost every sentence with “en meme temps”
(at the same time). But for a long-gridlocked EU, Macron’s proposed
grand bargains could offer a valuable way forward – one that relies not
on institutional changes, but on political trade-offs.
Macron’s security policies try to square tough anti-terrorism measures
with a more humanitarian approach to refugees. On economic policy, he
has offered reform in exchange for investment. And, given his tough
stance on Russia and support for action in Africa and the Mediterranean,
he might even be able to rally the EU’s southern and eastern members
around a common foreign-policy cause.
If Macron lives up to his promise, he will not stand for technocracy or
populism, but for a genuine third way. That is an admittedly shopworn
term. But Macron could imbue it with new meaning if he can combine,
rather than accept, today’s false choices. He will have to bridge the
EU’s geographic divides, and position himself as pro-European and patriotic, establishment and anti-establishment, open and protectionist, pro-growth and fiscally restrained.
Can Macron’s method allow EU leaders to break the vicious circle of
technocracy and populism, and end the paralysis of the last decade? For
the time being, the only certainty is that – to invoke another hackneyed
phrase – there is no alternative.
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Mark Leonard is Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations.