French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe resigns as France looks to rebuild after coronavirus

Edouard Philippe and Emmanuel Macron

Paris: France is to name a new prime minister ‘in the coming hours’, the country’s presidency said Friday, shortly after announcing Edouard Philippe’s resignation amid an expected reshuffle. Edouard Philippe had been the Prime Minister since 2017.

President Emmanuel Macron is seeking to open a new chapter for the two remaining years of his term that will focus on efforts to re-launch the French economy deeply hit by the coronavirus crisis.

In an interview given Thursday to several local newspapers, Macron said he is seeking a ‘new path’ to rebuild France. He praised Philippe’s ‘outstanding work’ in the past three years. “I will need to make choices to lead (the country) down the path,” Macron said.

The reshuffle comes days after a green wave swept over France in local elections. Macron saw his young centrist party being defeated in France’s biggest cities and failing to plant local roots across the country.

Also read: France braces for biggest strike in decades over Macron’s pension plan

The reshuffle was planned even before the voting, as Macron’s government faced obstacles and criticism before Sunday’s election and during the virus crisis. As the pandemic was peaking in the country in March and April, authorities came under fire for the lack of masks, tests and medical equipment.

Before that, Macron’s pro-business policies, widely seen as favouring the wealthier, had been hampered by the yellow vest economic movement against perceived social injustice. This winter, weeks of strikes and street demonstrations against a planned pension overhaul disrupted the country.

 

 

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