French President Macron wins no-confidence votes
July 31, 2018The French government survived two votes of no confidence on Tuesday. The motions were introduced by opposition parties in response to the government's handling of a political crisis surrounding a presidential security aide.
The government comfortably won the largely symbolic votes in France's lower house of parliament, where French President Emmanuel Macron's centrist party enjoys a large majority.
Macron's ex-bodyguard Alexandre Benalla was caught on video beating a male demonstrator during May Day protests and dragging away a woman while wearing a police armband — usually worn by plainclothes officers — and a police helmet, even though he is not a police officer.
Read more: Macron ex-aide Alexandre Benalla handed initial charges over protester attack
Benalla was fired last week, but opposition leaders criticized the government's reaction as too slow. Last week, Macron said he was proud to have hired Benalla, whom he described as a "devoted" employee who had "taken an unusual path" professionally.
The opposition right-wing Republicans party, which brought one of the two motions, also took aim at Macron's refusal to comment on the incident for several days. Christian Jacob, who introduced the motion, accused Macron of displaying arrogance in his response, and of displaying "monarchical leanings."
A second motion was put forward by the Socialist Party.
Plunging ratings
Macron's approval ratings sank to below 50 percent in May — down from a peak of 59 percent just after he took office last year. In June they plunged to 40 percent, according to a Harris Interactive poll.
The president's ratings improved slightly in July, according to Harris, a month that was also marked by France's victory at World Cup in Russia. However, a second poll, published on Sunday by French newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche showed that Macron's popularity slipped to a new low of 39 percent in July.
Confidence votes are fairly common in France, yet only one government in the country's 60-year-old Fifth Republic has been brought down by one: that of Georges Pompidou in 1962.
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