The first round of the French presidential election is over.
On May 7th France will have to choose between a woman who will end
civilization as we know it and a man who married his mother. Not the most appetizing choice.
The world and the markets and the French people breathed a
sigh of relief when they saw that their next president would most likely be a
young technocrat with no real party affiliation who married his teacher, a
woman who is twenty-four years his senior. Being as he is the same age as her
children from her first marriage, one can only wonder whether the future
president of France sits at the adult or the children’s table at dinner.
In political terms, the French president gains his power
when his party controls the French parliament. Since Emmanuel Macron does not have a
real political party—he is a former Socialist—the chance of having his
political loyalists win the parliamentary elections in June is slim, indeed. He
might just become a figurehead.
Some have wondered how the British, for example, would deal
with a French president who married his mother. Can the staid and stolid
British comprehend the true love that blossomed between Emmanuel and Brigitte
from their first encounter in the drama class she was teaching? Was it what the
French call a coup-de-foudre (or coup-de-foutre) when she
a fortyish married woman with three children first cast her eyes on the
beauteous Emmanuel, aged 15. Or was it when he, faced with the choice between
his fellow student, Brigitte’s 15 year old daughter and Maman, made a beeline
for the older woman.
Of course, the British press is on the case. It is more than
happy to shower young Macron—he’s 39—with gales of ridicule. The French people
might be overjoyed that they are not going to be ruled by Marine Le Pen, but
they should brace themselves for the simple fact that their reputation and
status on the world stage is going to take a major hit. By electing a Mama’s
boy they are about to lose a considerable amount of face. If they imagine that Emmanuel
Macron is going to restore injured French pride they are not living in the real
world.
In America we call women like Brigitte Macron cougars. In
France, they come down from an ancient and venerable practice called courtly
love. Dating back a thousand years courtly love was a form of adultery,
committed by a married woman and a teenaged boy. Women whose husbands went off
for months and even years on end to fight the crusades were alone in their
castles with the “help.” Boys who were too young to fight but old enough to
love were easy prey for these women. We know the boys as troubadours, or guitar
heroes.
In principle, these love affairs were not consummated, but clearly
the older women were teaching these boys lessons in love. Since the newspaper
stories about the love of Emmanuel for Brigitte always emphasize that he
pursued her—a married woman—until she divorced her husband and married him, we
should also note that in courtly love poetry the boy always pursues the woman, and refers to her as his Lord.
It takes precious little knowledge of human romance to see
that Brigitte seduced Emmanuel when he was under age. Rumor has it
that they did not consummate their love until he was 18, but let us be clear,
he was played by an older and much more savvy woman. In France this kind of
relationship falls under the category of “corrupting the morals of a minor” but
Macron’s parents did not press charges. I find it difficult to imagine an
American mother, watching her fifteen year old son be ensorcelled by a forty
year old woman, would not have had said temptress thrown into prison.
One understands that the Macron parents were seriously
unhappy to see their son become the boy toy of a much older woman. Perhaps not
as unhappy as the French will be when they discover that, on the world stage,
surrounded by other heads of states their president will be dubbed President
Boy Toy.
The French know all about the Macron marriage. But, they are
so sophisticated that they accept it. After all, what is France if not the
epicenter of romantic love? And, what good was all that immersion in French
Freudian thought if you cannot elect as your next president, Oedipus
reincarnate?
Note the comparison. In Freudian theory you want, above all
else, to marry your mother. In Darwinian theory— more scientifically correct— you
will be attracted to someone who is more
fertile, who can produce offspring. God help us, but British thought retains
its pragmatic streak.
After all, if everyone acted on their Freudian desire a
community would quickly die off. Yes, I do recall, and have mentioned before,
that Oedipus had four children with his mother. The fecundity of Jocasta was
simply a MacGuffin—not to be taken literally.
As you might imagine the Daily Mail can barely restrain its
glee over this story. One of their Agony Aunts—that is, advice columnists—addresses
the salient questions in today’s paper.
Jan Moir cranks up her imagination and writes the latter
that Macron would write, if he had asked her what to do about his problem.
So, faux Emmanuel writes:
How can
I get the world to take me seriously if they think I am a mummy’s boy with a
wife who is 25 years older than him?
On the
world stage, will I look like a swot who married Madam De La Drama because
maybe he wanted forever the classroom chastisement of the spanky-spanky? But
no. That is the fantasy of the English schoolboy, not for moi.
‘Bibi’,
as I call her, was 40 and married with three children when we met. It was
complicated, but I knew I had to be with her. Mama and Papa sent me away to
Paris to stop the romance, but I wooed her from afar.
Being as the French are psychologically sophisticated in
matters of the heart they imagine that the only way a real man would marry his
mother would be if she was to be his “beard,” that is if he was gay and was
hiding it to the world. In order to advance his political ambitions.
Faux Emmanuel addresses this hoary issue:
Now, as
your own BBC reported, a website has suggested I am secretly gay and live a
double life. What? I got so upset, Brigitte had to calm me down with a Babybel
and a carton of juice.
This
wild allegation is impossible!
My wife
shares my life from morning to night and, like Popeye, I am what I am. As I
said at the time, if you hear these rumours about me, it’s my hologram that has
escaped, it can’t be me.
Jan Moir understands the Oedipal aspect clearly:
As
Oedipus knew, a great number of men secretly want to marry their own mothers —
but this is not possible, not even in France.
However,
getting hitched to your favourite teacher is a pretty close second.
In truth, if we want to be theoretically correct, in the world of French psychoanalysis the close second is: adultery.
Moir offers her best advice:
My
advice is to forget about the gay accusations. In European politics, any man
who is handsome, smells nice and wears good suits — I notice some of yours are
bespoke because the buttons on the sleeves actually work! — gets this
treatment.
However,
with regards to looking like a mummy’s boy, we are in much more difficult
territory.
Everyone
knows that when you were economics minister, you took Brigitte along to
important meetings as if she were a fluffy lapdog.
Apparently
her presence cheers you up, and helps you to make better decisions because you
value her opinion and trust her.
She has
also played an active role throughout your campaign, where advisers have noted
‘her presence is essential’ for her little ‘Mani’, as she calls you.
Uh oh.
Obviously, if she is always with him, even at ministerial
meetings, he could not have a double life. But, is she
with him all the time because she knows that he is tempted to have said double
life? Enquiring minds want to know.
Moir advises Emmanuel not to drag his wife with him
everywhere. It looks like he cannot stand on his own:
Brigitte
may be an amazing woman, but don’t drag her everywhere with you. It looks as if
she is waiting for an opportunity to wipe your mouth clean after lunch, or give
you a smack for not standing up when Mrs Merkel walks into the room.
Moir closes with a note of caution: she strongly recommends
that Emmanuel not run off with a younger woman. I doubt that we have to worry about that.
Very sly, mocking both a Freudian fantasy, and a man would-be leader for appearing to be following a Freudian fantasy.
ReplyDeleteIt is interesting France has America backwards, with the Right leading with a woman, and the left leading with a man.
Coincidentally Melania Trump is also about 24 years younger than Donald, but of course they didn't marry until 2005, when she was ~35, and he ~59, so their age ratio was a more respectable 1.7. And anyway, it's expected that a woman wants to marry her father, since he will be a good provider.
And let's not forget Donald Trump's talk about his favorite daughter, Ivanka, like when he was asked what he has most in common with his daughter is sex. But again, men fantasizing about their hot daughter is as American as apple pie, or at least in some circles apparently.
So with all that confusing playboy behavior, I can see the value in distracting attention from our new Conservative standard bearer.
And on the other side, Marine also has a very interesting relationship with her father, following in his footsteps by joining his ultra-right party, and then being forced to evict her own father from the party to try to make it respectable when he was clearly off the deep end of paranoia where he couldn't not take anything impersonally. Everything that happens reinforces his own view of a world out of control, while refusing to look in the mirror at his own inability to stay in control.
It seems fair to presume that Marine will lose in a landslide, even if not as badly as her father did in a similar situation. Obviously it would have been better if a couple 20-something parties were to "agree to agree" to get a seat in the final two, but it does look like French politics is too proud to find common ground for greater good.
I might say National Front party has already won, by getting their issues front and center to their Nation. And if it was possible to address some of their issues slightly better, we'd all feel safer.
Clearly Macron would be best to try to humor the right, and face head-on their issues with more sensible solutions than xenophobia and demonization, but I imagine the National Front is so easy to mock, people would prefer to feel superior and deny the issues are important, and thus keeping the National Front alive and kicking for another year.
Anyway, back to politics as usual, gossiping about candidate's imagined mental complexes than actual issues that have no easy answers.
AO
ReplyDelete"I might say National Front party has already won, by getting their issues front and center to their Nation. And if it was possible to address some of their issues slightly better, we'd all feel safer."
That is what I think a lot of people are missing.
"Clearly Macron would be best to try to humor the right, and face head-on their issues with more sensible solutions than xenophobia and demonization, but I imagine the National Front is so easy to mock, people would prefer to feel superior and deny the issues are important, and thus keeping the National Front alive and kicking for another year."
He and the opposition cannot do this for it would expose all of their positions to open debate in which they could not survive. In essence they must do what they have always done and it has been and will be the end of them.
Clearly Macron would be best to try to humor the right, and face head-on their issues with more sensible solutions than xenophobia and demonization, but I imagine the National Front is so easy to mock, people would prefer to feel superior and deny the issues are important, and thus keeping the National Front alive and kicking for another year."
ReplyDeleteHe and the opposition cannot do this for it would expose all of their positions to open debate in which they could not survive. In essence they must do what they have always done and it has been and will be the end of them.
Here's an interesting article "Is there a case for Le Pen?"
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/29/opinion/sunday/is-there-a-case-for-le-pen.html
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She is right that France as a whole, recent immigrants as well as natives, would benefit from a sustained mass-immigration halt.
She is right that the European Union has given too much unaccountable power to Brussels and Berlin and favored financial interests over ordinary citizens.
And while many of her economic prescriptions are half-baked, her overarching critique of the euro is correct: Her country and her continent would be better off without it.
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May 7th isn't much time for more debate but if Le Pen can keep herself on message of the core failings of current policy, without the racism and blindest fears, she can do much better than her father's 19%, and if she can get 40+% of the vote, even losing means politicians had better listen.
I don't have the knowledge to bet her potential, but I'd say if she exceeds 32-34%, I'd count that a message win.