Emanuel Macron was re-elected President of the French Republic today and in the coming days will have to make crucial political decisions, adhering to the inevitable protocol.
What will follow in the coming days? On Wednesday, April 27, the president of the Constitutional Council, the supreme judicial body of France, will officially announce the winner of the elections, after the counting and verification of all ballots is completed.
Resignation of the government? Not so sure
Prime Minister Jean-Castex announced earlier last week that his government would step down after the presidential election, in line with “tradition”. But his term could be extended for several days, maybe even weeks. In fact, on Friday, Macron himself said that he was thinking of having a “transitional week” and that Jean Castex would still be prime minister “next week”. Maybe until the parliamentary elections in June? Some, in the close circle of the president, do not rule it out.
In the event of his resignation, Castex will remain in office, managing current affairs, until a new prime minister is appointed.
Five years ago, Macron appointed Edouard Philippe as prime minister a day after he was sworn in. The new government was announced 48 hours later.
Before Saturday, May 14: swearing-in ceremony
Emanuel Macron’s term ends on May 14: therefore, before that date, the swearing-in ceremony must take place at the Elysee Palace.
This will be the fourth time in the Fifth Republic that a president has renewed his term – a follow-up that usually makes the ceremony less spectacular and interesting. In 2002, then-President Jacques Chirac (1995-2007), after being re-elected, avoided crossing the Avenue des Champs-Elysées, as he had done seven years earlier.
And after the ceremony, what?
In 2017, after being sworn in as president, Macron visited Percy’s military hospital. In early April, he told TF1 television that he intended to return “to the side of our wounded soldiers in one of the military hospitals”.
As for the visit to the Paris City Hall, a tradition that began in the Fourth Republic, the president can skip it, as François Mitterrand did before him when he was re-elected president in 1988.
The official photo of the president will remain, except unexpectedly, the same. François Mitterrand and Jacques Chirac refused to be photographed again after their re-election.
Sunday 12 and 19 June: parliamentary elections
Will Emanuel Macron secure a new majority in the National Assembly? His associates do not consider a “cohabitation” possible, but his political opponents do not rule it out.
As a sign of how tough this battle will be, many politicians running for the presidency, from Marin Le Pen to Jean-Luc Melanson and environmentalist Yannick Zandon, have called on their supporters to mobilize in the run-up to the election. June.
Source: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ
Source: Capital

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