When
Emmanuel Macron was reelected in France with a comfortable majority on
Sunday, April 24, there was a sigh of relief in all European capitals.
And the road ahead may look wide open for the French president to carry
out his well-known ambitions for Europe.
Pierre Vimont: Vimont is a senior
fellow at Carnegie Europe. His research focuses on the European
Neighborhood Policy, transatlantic relations, and French foreign policy.
Yet Macron 2.0 will be facing a much more
complex political landscape than the one he embraced in 2017, when first
elected. The EU and, for that matter, the geopolitical realities of the
world surrounding it have gone through a complete transformation. These
underlying shifts may well complicate the ambitions of the French
president as the challenges ahead, imposed notably by the Russia–Ukraine
war, make the French vision of a future EU hard to swallow for many of
its European partners.
After his first election five years ago, Macron had swiftly come up with a substantial European agenda embodied in his Sorbonne speech.
The Sorbonne roadmap was considered at the time an overloaded working
program. But it was nevertheless a harbinger of the many initiatives
that shaped, in the following years, Macron’s vision of a European
future, starting with his concept of European strategic autonomy.
Today, in the aftermath of his reelection,
Emmanuel Macron will be constrained first of all by the need to
conclude the work of the French rotating presidency of the Council of
the EU, which ends in June. There is still unfinished business to be
looked after and eventually transferred in good order to the
next—Czech—presidency: the EU’s future relations with its West Balkan
neighbors, the draft legislation on digital services, the energy
transition plan (Fit for 55), and the outcome of the somewhat overstated Conference on the Future of Europe.
On top of these time-consuming files, the
management of the ongoing crisis resulting from Russia’s invasion in
Ukraine will require special attention, as the unity of purpose and
speed of action demonstrated by the European nations in the first months
of the conflict are starting to crack at the seams, notably on the issue of energy sanctions against Russia.
Ukraine is indeed the name of the game for
Macron’s future initiatives. By its sudden outbreak, sheer violence,
and overwhelming implications, the Russia–Ukraine conflict is
dramatically transforming European thinking and way of action. And it is
doing so in several ways.
First, the EU’s security policy
for now—and as long as the war in Ukraine drags on—is largely hooked to
NATO’s ongoing thinking, be it on its new Strategic Concept or its
future forward defense posture. Because of its limited financial
resources and military capabilities, the EU will be no match to NATO’s collective defense. The implementation of the recently adopted EU Strategic Compass could well bear the consequences of that dire reality.
Second, always a divisive issue amid
member states, the enlargement challenge is brutally rekindled by
Ukrainian prompt candidacy. The political and moral pressure to give way
to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s call opens a debate
inside the EU that has long stirred divisions. This debate will also
determine the fate of the Eastern Partnership policy and future EU
relations with Russia once the present conflict is over.
Additionally, the prospect of new
memberships will reopen old wounds about the need for a more flexible EU
governance with ideas around a two- or three-tier Europe or possible
core groups of like-minded members.
Third, the current plans for the energy
transition will also be impacted by the ongoing efforts of Europe to
wean itself off Russian oil and gas. Several member states’ plans to
swiftly move to non-fossil energy may need to be revised with a more
realistic timeline in the absence of Russian gas as a transitional
solution.
Finally, the ongoing adaptation of supply
chains in many European industrial sectors in the aftermath of the
COVID-19 pandemic—in addition to the economic fallout created by the
Russia sanctions—is triggering a renewed discussion on the need for more
financial flexibility and solidarity amid EU partners. This is
definitely an old division line that could relaunch embarrassing
controversies between Berlin and Paris.
Faced with these internal and external
challenges, the French president will need to define his own vision of
Europe’s future. He may want to take time to sharpen his ideas and
gather some allies among EU leaders. Yet with the traditional conviction
that France must retain a position of balance between the world’s
global powers and that Europe should be on the same line, the quest for a
genuine European sovereignty will remain at the heart of Emmanuel
Macron’s endeavors. He will be confronting a more than ever resistant
group of European nations that are concerned by the Russian threat at
their immediate borders and their own belief that the future of EU
security—not to mention continental stability—rests with a close
transatlantic partnership.
President Macron’s new term of office is
about to put him at the center of a much-needed discussion with his
European partners. But it is a conversation where he will need forceful
allies, starting with the new coalition in Berlin, and where the present
Russian aggression against Ukraine is quickly transforming the
traditional terms of the European debate.