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The unholy alliance of Macron and Le Pen Their dangerous liaison could reshape Europe

Macro-Lepénisme is here to stay (Victor Joly / Alamy Stock Photo)

Macro-Lepénisme is here to stay (Victor Joly / Alamy Stock Photo)


September 7, 2024   6 mins

Macron has faced relentless criticism for his decision to call a snap parliamentary election in July. Having said he wanted a “clarification” from the people after Le Pen’s National Rally (RN) surged to first place in the European Parliament elections, he lost his majority and gained a hung parliament. There followed two months of political deadlock which plunged France into chaos. It did indeed seem like the president’s petulant gamble had catastrophically backfired.

But in an astonishing twist on Thursday, the Élysée announced that it had finally settled on the name of the new prime minister. And it was a familiar one: Michel Barnier, the EU’s former chief Brexit negotiator. Macron had tasked him with forming “a unifying government in the service of the country”. On the face of it, this might seem like a long shot: Barnier is neither popular, nor even that well-known in France. His party, The Republicans, managed a mere 5% in the recent election. Having served four times as a government minister and twice as EU commissioner, Barnier, 73, long seen as a centrist, liberal-minded neo-Gaullist, is very much a representative of the establishment that voters have just rejected en masse. He’s known as the “French Joe Biden”. And yet this latest in a long line of political gambles for Macron may well prove to be a stroke of genius.

Only two months ago, Macron’s crushing defeat at the hands of Le Pen in the European elections had left him deeply delegitimised. He threw the dice and the subsequent French election succeeded in keeping Le Pen at bay — but in turn empowered a new Left-wing bloc comprising Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s left-populist party La France Insoumise, a sworn enemy of Macronisme. Macron was now squeezed between two foes on both Left and on the Right and institutional protocol, and basic democratic logic, dictated that he should appoint a prime minister from the New Popular Front — the coalition that won the most seats.

This would have spelled disaster for Macron: the New Popular Front vowed, among other things, to repeal Macron’s flagship, but very controversial, pension reform law that raised the retirement age from 62 to 64. To ward off this scenario, the Macroniste bloc and the French establishment performed a remarkable pivot. Having successfully engaged the Left’s support in setting up a “republican front” to defeat Le Pen, it then turned that logic against the Left itself. The “dangerous radicals” who needed to be kept out of power now were no longer those on the “far Right” — but those on the “far Left”. Macron’s party immediately ruled out working with Mélenchon’s.

And so when the New Popular Front finally put forward a prime ministerial candidate — the not-particularly-radical Lucie Castets, a 37-year-old civil servant — Macron released a statement announcing that he was not going to appoint a prime minister from the Left-wing coalition because that they would not be in a position to govern with stability. A shocking denial of democracy, perhaps, but utterly consistent with the French president’s increasingly repressive techno-authoritarian rule, and his longstanding practice of exploiting the Left against the Right to his own benefit, while offering nothing in exchange.

Even though many voices from the NFP condemned the decision as a “disgrace” and an “unacceptable power grab”, Macron was always going to do whatever it took to safeguard his economic reforms and keep the Left out of power. He would readily disregard basic democratic principles to shore up his position — and even, it turns out, strike a deal with Le Pen.

Enter Barnier. Perhaps an unlikely candidate to help broker a deal between the Macroniste bloc and the Eurosceptic National Rally. In his role as the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, he garnered a reputation for being for a radical pro-EU ideologue, who seemed more intent on “punishing” the UK for daring to leave than attempting to carve out a mutually beneficial relationship. His insistence on the EU’s red lines, particularly around the integrity of the single market and the Irish border issue, were seen by Brexiteers as obstructing the UK’s ability to achieve a satisfactory deal, and sharply discouraging for other member states who might have been contemplating similar exits.

In recent years, however, Barnier has made a significant shift to the Right. During the 2022 campaign, as part of an unsuccessful attempt to become the presidential candidate against Macron, he assumed a hard anti-immigration line, claiming it was “out of control” and proposing a three-to-five-year moratorium on non-EU arrivals to France. He also said that France should regain its “legal sovereignty” and not be subject to the judgments of the EU courts. To many, this was little more than political opportunism: an attempt to whitewash his track record as an EU fanatic. His decision to prop up Macron, despite their short-lived rivalry, would appear to confirm this. Indeed, given his current positioning as a Right-leaning man of the establishment, he’s the perfect candidate for Macron’s latest political gamble: a de facto alliance between liberal-centrist forces and the National Rally against the Left.

While no official alliance is needed to approve the new prime minister — and Le Pen would of course never enter a formal agreement with Macron as it would amount to political suicide — the President wouldn’t have put forward Barnier’s name without having first squared it with Le Pen. He wouldn’t have risked the latter supporting a no-confidence motion against the proposed prime minister alongside the Left (which has already vowed to table a vote). Indeed, Le Pen has already signalled an openness to support the new government on individual policies. “Michel Barnier seems to meet at least the first criterion that we had requested, that is to say, someone who is respectful of the different political forces and capable of addressing the National Rally, which is the first party in the National Assembly”, she said.

It’s not hard to imagine what form the deal took: the new government will address some of the issues that National Rally considers priorities — first and foremost immigration — provided the RN doesn’t challenge Macron’s economic reforms and supports France’s Ukraine policy. There is no guarantee that the agreement holds, of course. But, it’s hard not to see this as a swingeing victory for Macron. In one fell swoop, he has marginalised the Left while absorbing the National Rally into the mainstream, forcing it to blunt its edges on economic and foreign policy issues — even potentially dampening support for the party, if it is seen as cosying up to the establishment. Not bad for someone who was considered politically dead just a few months ago.

Of course, it’s not a terrible outcome for Le Pen, who will be able to influence government policy on key issues. Given the pro-Macron bloc and the other centre-right parties don’t have an outright majority, Le Pen’s party holds a de facto veto over government policy. As one centrist lawmaker put it, Barnier’s fate will effectively “held by the National Rally”. And yet it’s hard not to see the establishment as the real winner here: in exchange for a compromise on immigration and security more broadly, Macron has succeeded in guaranteeing a degree of continuity to his agenda in terms of the overall direction of his economic and foreign policy — i.e., EU-dictated budgetary cuts and neoliberal structural reforms, and continued financial-military support for Ukraine under Nato’s banner.

“Both Macron and Le Pen exhibit authoritarian tendencies.”

This outcome was predicted back in 2018, when the French historian Emmanuel Todd put forward the concept of Macro-Lepenisme: a collusion between the forces of the state-financial aristocracy embodied by Macron and the authoritarianism implicitly associated with Le Pen’s political past. Todd suggested that even though Macron and Le Pen represent different ends of the political spectrum, their policies and actions actually revealed a deeper alignment. Both were seen by Todd as supporting a system that benefits the ruling class, particularly the wealthy and the powerful, at the expense of broader societal change. One of Todd’s central critiques is that both Macron and Le Pen exhibit authoritarian tendencies: for example, Le Pen expressed support for the French police’s often-brutal repression of the Gilets Jaunes protests. As this alliance comes into power, it is bound to have implications well beyond France.

In fact, this alliance between centrist-liberal and right-populist forces — a phenomenon that could be characterised as liberal-conservative populism — may soon become the blueprint for other European countries: stricter immigration policies and a cultural pushback against progressivism coupled with a relatively mainstream approach to economic and foreign policy within the EU-Nato framework. As said, one may view this as both a victory and a defeat for right-populism: a victory insofar as it will have succeeded in shifting policy in some areas, principally immigration and public safety; a defeat insofar as it will mean that right-populists will have failed to radically challenge the dominant economic-political order, and will have been reabsorbed into the establishment, as Le Pen in France.

The architecture of the EU itself plays a big role here: the degree of economic and financial control that Brussels exercises over member states, especially those that are part of the eurozone, means that even right-populist parties have little choice but to go along with the EU’s diktats. In this sense, Barnier’s cozy relationship with Brussels will likely be key, as he can be expected to work hand-in-hand with the EU on keeping France in line with the European agenda. It’s no coincidence that in his first statement he heralded a form of “green austerity” for France. As prime minister, people should expect him to “tell the truth, even if it’s difficult — the truth about debt, and the truth about environmental debt, which weighs heavy on the shoulders of our children”, he said.

But right-populist parties also share part of the responsibility: by framing the question of security almost exclusively in terms of stricter controls on immigration, rather than in broader terms of economic security, and refusing to recognise that the EU’s architecture sets structural impediments to real change, they are easy prey for co-option by the establishment. Macro-Lepenisme, it would appear, is here to stay.


Thomas Fazi is an UnHerd columnist and translator. His latest book is The Covid Consensus, co-authored with Toby Green.

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Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
3 months ago

The author asks how the appointment of Barnier and the potential for a rapprochement with the right might play out with other European countries. Well, the sight of Barnier – the Brexit bête noire – in conference with Starmer might be interesting.

The two share a lot of similarities, but Barnier’s politically performative shift to the right could exert some influence on Starmer, certainly in terms of the open wound of immigration. Starmer, after all, has declared his intention to work closely with his European counterparts, and would likely see Barnier as an “elder statesman” role model.

The authoritarian tendencies the author ascribes to Macron and Le Pen extend to Barnier and, as we’re starting to see, to Starmer too. This could offer Starmer a potential way out of the hole he’s dug for himself in pretty short order over immigration. The question is: is he adept enough to take it, and thus start to heal the open wound that oozed out onto our streets just a few weeks ago, and which continues to fester with the threat of poisoning the entire body politic?

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

Since our “leaders” are apparently dancing to a tune few can hear, I doubt if much actually changes….until it changes rather suddenly.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
3 months ago

What a pity that democracies have to go through a cycle where the main parties ignore the people for years – a new party gets created to deal with that “deafness” – then the centrists get scared and start adopting the policies they should have implemented years before. Not very efficient, but I guess it “sort of works”.

Caradog Wiliams
Caradog Wiliams
3 months ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

I’m surprised that you don’t see how normal this cycle is. In the listening phase (like the last ten years or in the UK) the politicians react to every complaint, every paragraph written in anger, every celeb on television, and are frightened to do anything for fear of upsetting a vociferous minority.
In the wings sit other politicians who have ample time to develop a plan – probably a stupid plan but it sounds good and it’s better than nothing. In power, this plan is hugely unpopular with the majority of people, so the plan has to be changed gradually to save face. In the end it becomes no plan at all.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
3 months ago

No surprise for me at all – hence my comment.

Richard Calhoun
Richard Calhoun
3 months ago

The normal listening phase the politicians have constantly ignored, the biggest issue for the electorate, that is immigration.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 months ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

ignoring the people is very much on-brand for the people forever talking about the value of democracy.

Caradog Wiliams
Caradog Wiliams
3 months ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

I read so much about ‘democracy’ that I don’t know what it means any more. It is further complicated by the fact that millions of people can’t be bothered to vote. Even de Tocqueville didn’t want democracy to mean the ‘majority’. Please define.

mike otter
mike otter
3 months ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

TBH its got to be an improvement on revolutions like France or revolts like UK or Spain?

Simon Denis
Simon Denis
3 months ago

I quote from the article:
“In fact, this alliance between centrist-liberal and right-populist forces — a phenomenon that could be characterised as liberal-conservative populism — may soon become the blueprint for other European countries: stricter immigration policies and a cultural pushback against progressivism coupled with a relatively mainstream approach to economic and foreign policy within the EU-Nato framework.”
In other words, the Thatcher-Reagan approach, after all. Bring it on – and quickly. Otherwise, we’re toast.

King David
King David
3 months ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

You mean the White SUPREMACIST approach? The War on Black people approach? Reagan gave us John Robert’s of SCOTUS who has gutted the Voting Rights Act and Legalized white supremacist Gerrymandering. Great for Caucazoid Neanderthals not so good for Homo Sapiens.

mike otter
mike otter
3 months ago
Reply to  King David

I can see why you may beleive this – but remember it cuts two ways – a stupid pecker-head voter is as bad for society as an urban gang banger voter. The haircuts may differ but neither covers up their red necks lol. Also – who brought out the three strikes rule..? biden you sc*m, who thinks the working class are fools?, biden, you s*um, biden biden biden biden, biden you s**m – Thanks GG Allin – i have the whole song down – best played in a Bluegrass/Hank the 3rd style. What GG could do to Charlie Pride and Patsy Kline I do to his work!

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
3 months ago
Reply to  King David

Economic opportunity is the only path to racial equality.

Rainer Zuhlke
Rainer Zuhlke
3 months ago

The approach to “save democracy” from Le Pen by pushing a far-left coalition co-led by an effectively stalinist Melonchon, was very strange from the beginning.
Compare this to the recent state elections in Germany, after which democracy should be “saved” from the AfD by forming a coalition government between the conservative and a far left-nationalist party, the BSW, led by a the hard-left, communist Wagenknecht.
Without any sympathies for the far-right or the far-right, there should be firewalls against both sides, not exclusively against one side (right). Being one-sided in terms of firewalls only reflects the left bias of the majority of mainstream media.
While the actual root causes for the rise of rightist and leftist parties across Europe are not mentioned – centre-left and green-alternative parties pushing politics against the majority of the respective populations.

Stewart Cazier
Stewart Cazier
3 months ago
Reply to  Rainer Zuhlke

Firewalls are close to central control over who is allowed to stand. Iran or Russia anyone?

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago
Reply to  Rainer Zuhlke

The firewall should be thst anyone who invades their country with immigrants be at the least jailed for life.

Nell Clover
Nell Clover
3 months ago

The UK Conservative Party has offered stricter immigration control in successive elections for most of my adult life. It was in government from 2010 to 2024 and repeatedly found excuses to do nothing and indeed it encouraged the precise opposite: the largest wave of immigration in history.

Barnier’s apparent damascene conversion to the need for stricter immigration control is just as hollow. His performance during Brexit proved he’d say and do anything – no matter how illogical or counterproductive and damaging to his personal reputation – to maintain the “centrist” orthodoxy. His words on immigration are just that: cheap words to stop the loss of votes to parties that threaten the “centrist” vision.

The author explains right at the beginning of the article how Macron works. He plays off left and right against each other but gives nothing back. The author then forgets this truth and rushes to a conclusion about this week’s deal with Le Pen that is completely at odds with this truth. The reality is there’ll be no change to the trajectory on immigration or anything else. Macron and the state will overturn democratic principles if need be.

Kat L
Kat L
3 months ago
Reply to  Nell Clover

All true but it appears that many conservatives had their hands tied due to the changes that Blair had put into place?

Nick Faulks
Nick Faulks
3 months ago

All we learn from this article is that Fazi doesn’t like le Pen, something we knew already.

Cathy Carron
Cathy Carron
3 months ago
Reply to  Nick Faulks

Yup – he wrote, “And the authoritarianism implicitly associated with LePen’s past” – with a phrase like this and no real proof or further explanation….

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
3 months ago
Reply to  Cathy Carron

“Implicitly associated” by the likes of Fazi and the rest of the media.

Michael Stewart
Michael Stewart
3 months ago

What the author omits is that this is also the result of the moderate left’s idiotic alliance with the Corbynistas in Melenchon’s party. Macron could have had to appoint a social democrat like Bertrand or several others but the socialist leader, Faure, said he’dvote with Melenchon and Le Pen to bring a moderate socialist leader down. For Faure, his bottom line was not to have to support any coalition government: to maintain his leftist purity for the presidential in three years. In that sense it’s Faure who’s given Macron his victory.
With any luck, it’ll be Glucksmann not the EdMillibandista Faure who ends up leading the socialists in 27. Glucksmann stands a chance, as the European election showed.
The main point is that this is the Left doing more than Macron‘s – though Barnier was a brilliant choice (being talked about for several weeks beforehand as precisely such a backstop, if the Socialists fouled up.)

Peter Mott
Peter Mott
3 months ago

“he garnered a reputation for being for a radical pro-EU ideologue” Typo. “French historian Emmanuel” This is Todd.
Excellent article.

Frederick Dixon
Frederick Dixon
3 months ago

Tough on immigration, and a “pushback against cultural progressivism” combined with mainstream economics? I can see that medicine going down very nicely, and not only in France.

Arthur G
Arthur G
3 months ago

This is what every sane person wants.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 months ago

He’s known as the “French Joe Biden”.
It takes a great deal of fairy dust and magical thinking to believe this is a good thing.

David Hewett
David Hewett
3 months ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

It is a foolish and vapid comparison. Barmier does not exhibit any features of dementia or other cognitive dysfunction. Biden’s cognitive abilities have been suspect for years.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago
Reply to  David Hewett

At least dementia Joe has an excuse for execrable policies.

Matthew Book
Matthew Book
3 months ago
Reply to  David Hewett

I think the comparison was with the malleable principles of Biden that reveal him to have been a political opportunist for his whole career. The comparison is not about dementia.

King David
King David
3 months ago
Reply to  David Hewett

And your Fuhrer Trump has been Mr. Intellectual eh?

David Lindsay
David Lindsay
3 months ago

Centrism and right-wing populism are con tricks to sell exactly the same economic and foreign policies to different audiences by pretending to wage a culture war. Fascism is inherent in both of them, and it never arises except by their joint enterprise.

While pre-existing conservative phenomena have been known to ally with Fascism, usually to their own ruin, it is the liberal bourgeoisie that keeps Fascism in reserve for when it might ever face any serious demand to share its economic or social power with anyone who did not have it before the rise of the bourgeois liberal order, or to share its cultural or political power with anyone at all.

And now, Michel Barnier, who is arguably better-known in Britain and certainly in Brussels, has been made Prime Minister of France by Emmanuel Macron because that is who Marine Le Pen wants, or can at least work with, to keep out the New Popular Front that came first at the only relatively recent legislative elections. Barnier himself comes from a kind of Old Centrist legacy party that came fourth.

But a Fascist movement never gets anywhere unless it has been at least cultivated and often directly created by that sort and by Macron’s, they will always back it against the Left because that is why they have it, and no Fascist has ever come to power except by some form of that arrangement, nor ever will. It is downright stereotypical for the final stage before official Fascism to be placeholding by one last aged centrist authoritarian from the old elite. Cheered on by Keir Starmer and by his Westminster Village fan club, here we are. Think on.

Davy Humerme
Davy Humerme
3 months ago

Excellent article Thomas. Like you I am a left libertarian but like you I can see that controlling immigration and combatting ethno-seperatism are popular priorities the elite progressives don’t want to address. They therefore instigate an alliance of convenience. The Soumisse left are largely (unlike say the Wagknecht left in Germany,), wedded to globalist progressivism, including open borders and an anti-israel alliance with hard-right Islamist’s. Their only real economic play is against the pension reform. The pension reform is overdue, but I predict Melanchon will just go tonto woke to differentiate himself from the cruel and inhuman right and provoke a new 1968. Meanwhile Le Pen needs to watch her white working class flank because the pissed of proles will file in behind the serious nationalist right. Popcorn politics.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago
Reply to  Davy Humerme

“Left libertarian” seems rather oxymoron. Care to elaborate please?

Stephanie Surface
Stephanie Surface
3 months ago
Reply to  Davy Humerme

What is a left wing Libertarian and what is a hard right Islamist? Just curious…

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago

Both terms somehow evoke a world similar to that of the underrated movie, “Brazil.”

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
3 months ago

Left because you care and big government is good at dippers(good for dipper salesmen at least) and libertarian because you need someone you can tax?

Santiago Excilio
Santiago Excilio
3 months ago

Great article by Fazi. I find the internecine machinations of the French political landscape fascinating, certainly compared with the more prosaic “four legs good, too legs Baaaad” pantomime that goes on in the UK.

However, that aside, I don’t think the accommodations reached in France will necessarily spell an end for wider right wing populism. The hard fact remains that the social democracy model adopted by European states over the last forty years or so is now running out fiscal road and immigration, legal or otherwise, is merely acting as an accelerant. The denouement will come – irrespective of whatever near terms accommodations are arrived at.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago

Until the thread that connects all of the faux democrat posers running France, Britain, USA, Canada, Australia, etc is followed back to its origin and permanently severed, we are going to be trapped by our alleged leaders.

Christopher Barclay
Christopher Barclay
3 months ago

“There is no guarantee that the agreement (between Macron and Le Pen) holds, of course.” Probably because there is no agreement. If the RN do not support the vote of no confidence, it will be because Le Pen believes that the longer a centrist government is in office, the more the centrist vote will have been hollowed out by the time of the 2027 Presidential election.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago

History will likely consider an “unholy alliance” to be any coalition that holds WEF leaning members, and/or communists.

Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke
3 months ago

Macro-Lepenisme may be here to stay but the balance between Macro and Lepenisme will shift.

Christopher Chantrill
Christopher Chantrill
3 months ago

It seems to me that Macron has done a pretty clever thing, given that all far-right parties must be quarantined by all good people. Appoint a prime minister who will move a bit to the right without being polluted by the far-reight extremist disease that all good people abhor.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago

Great satire.

Mark epperson
Mark epperson
3 months ago

The wave of the future if the inept uber liberals clowns that govern the West want to keep their limos, tv appearances, and a growing bank account for selling out the people needs and wants, not theirs.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
3 months ago

The closing paragraph is interesting. The author finds away to in effect blame the victim, while also acknowledging, barely, the elephant in the room: the bureaucratic imperial state of the EU.

Arthur G
Arthur G
3 months ago

This is exactly how right-populism is going to succeed in Europe. The mainstream right-center parties will have to adopt their desires on immigration and nationalism in order to gain populist backing for continued broadly free-market economics, and pro-NATO policies.
The center knows the far left is an absolute disaster waiting to happen. Look what the Greens have done to Germany’s economy.

Richard Calhoun
Richard Calhoun
3 months ago

The National Rally have made huge progress on immigration with this deal it seems.
Meanwhile the Govt under Barnier will retain the power over the economic political order within the EU.
Great deal, except the economic political order is about to be stripped away by a global economic crisis, in which France’s economy is particularly vulnerable.

mike otter
mike otter
3 months ago

Pretty sure Le Pen would gladly accept Barnier’s pro EU instincts in return for some of his worst anti “POC” sentiments. He is of his age. Born in De Gaul’s dictatorship? Also both are Corporatists in the Mussolini/Franco mould – believing “private capital” is only OK if its owned by the “state” or “party”. Imagine a new tranche of Citroen DSs, Renault 4CVs or Peugeot 203s… but worse than that – electric!!! the mind boggles