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[...]If the Yellow Jackets wish to remain consistent with their credo to fight for improved purchasing power, greater social justice and a fairer distribution of wealth, the only justification of their participation in the polls should be the conviction that their aims are more likely to be satisfied in the long run at European rather than at national level.
Arguments to defend such a point of view are not without merit. It could be based on a broader appeal of their movement, including similar groupings in Belgium and Portugal or to be created in other Member States in order to carry weight in the decisions taken by the Parliament. The enormous sympathy that the generated in France, which stretches far beyond the numbers of active demonstrators, should, in theory, offer an option to the voter (particularly to those who regularly abstain) to escape the choice between: on the one hand, the straightjacket of a “rules” based Union defended by traditional Europhile parties and, on the other hand, the support of extremists that are surfing on popular discontent to promote their agenda of dismantling the Union, (which was rejected 18 months ago by a large majority of Frenchmen).
This third option offers President Macron the opportunity to reaffirm his objective of reinforcing the Union aiming for a “Union that protects”, economically, socially and militarily because – rather than in spite of – of the pressure he is under from French public opinion. This would be an audacious gamble at a time when he finds himself more isolated domestically and internationally. However it also reflects an inescapable truth: the objectives of the Yellow Jackets will not be achieved within the context of dismantling the Union and the €. The implosion of the EU implies weathering a period of severe crisis which will be deeper as the result of our total interdependence, whether we are conscious of it or not.
The capacity to coalesce the aspirations of the Yellow Jackets in order to build the foundations of a new meaning, giving the European project ambitious new objectives underpinning the hope for a better future in the troubled world, was underlined by Council President Donald Tusk in his September 2017 address during the Bratislava summit when he declared:
“Citizens expect rightly from their leaders that the latter protect the space in which they live and ensure their safety. If the conviction that we have abandoned this responsibility took further hold, they will search for other solutions.”
If, on the other hand, a significant segment of Yellow Jackets believe that “FREXIT” is an integral part of the response to their demands, then they should have no interest in presenting candidates to the European elections; they would be far more effective swelling the ranks of the lists of the far right, from which many emanate, in order to reach their aims.
Indeed, it is clear that searching for a purely “national” solution to their demands would, if met, come up against the European rules as was shown in the recent Italian budgetary showdown. That is why it is necessary to add at least one important subject to the four proposed by President Macron in the forthcoming “national citizen’s debate” covering “The European Union for what purpose? And, the place of France in the EU”.
It is only by taking into account the “European dimension” of many of the challenges to be faced that one can avoid fostering an introverted mentality that induces xenophobic, anti-Semitic, homophobic, etc. tendencies spreading the shunning and hatred of “others” and leading inexorably to authoritarian regimes at the opposite of the ideals of “liberty, fraternity and equality” for which France so proudly and rightfully stands.
The popular support for the Yellow Jackets is a warning shot – currently peaceful – which compels the body politic to reassess itself from top to bottom. Confidence in “democracy” must be restored through profound behavioral changes (and where necessary, institutional ones) both in France and at European level. The European elections create a unique opportunity to reinvigorate the spirit of collective solidarity and responsibility that has presided over 70 years of peace between its Members, a not insignificant achievement.
In a world that has become hyper-connected and interdependent, in which no European nation can call itself “sovereign”, let us give the citizen a clear choice between:
Full article on Paul N. Goldschmidt website