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Opinion

Marine Le Pen is Emmanuel Macron's only serious rival

Summer is here, the president's dismal winter of yellow vests is behind him. He still not loved but he has only one challenger, writes our French blogger

July 31, 2019 11:02
Emmanuel Macron
2 min read

After three weeks of mountain climbs, time trials and sprints, the 106th edition of the Tour de France bike race has finally concluded so summer must be well advanced. The first batch of French vacationers have departed, but Paris is struggling with an overabundance of tourists, record breaking heat and traffic jams provoked by a plethora of public works. The mayor wants Paris greened with city centre forests, vegetal buildings, bicycles, scooters and public transport (hopefully air conditioned).

Summer is also a privileged moment for cultural festivals outside Paris. We have “done” Avignon before, so this year was Aix-en-Provence, a delightful city just thirty minutes north of Marseille. Aix is a tourist paradise of ancient streets and shaded squares. Between regular stops on café terraces, we visited beautiful museums to see paintings by Cezanne, the local boy, and other 19th and 20th century masters. Our highlight was the Tannhauser collection on loan from New York’s Guggenheim Museum, two art collecting giants whose Jewishness is so obvious but scarcely acknowledged in the exhibition.

Evenings were musical starting with modern productions of two famous works. Verdi’s Requiem was brilliantly performed by the choir and orchestra of the “Pygmalion Ensemble”, but in an unconvincing visual setting of apocalypse and redemption. Puccini’s Tosca also suffered from staging distractions, but was rescued by the passionate tenor, Joseph Calleja, and the magnificent young black American soprano Angel Blue. We also enjoyed the “Mediterranean youth orchestra” performing original works of their own composition with a strong oriental flavour. Both sides of the Mediterranean were well represented but there was no musician or singer from Israel.

 “Bio” (organic food) is now all the rage in Paris, with specialty shops and dedicated sections in supermarkets springing up especially in upmarket and hipster neighbourhoods. Menus are diversifying with more interesting vegetarian options. Television and radio programmes on health and safety are omnipresent. So the French do follow global trends, they just don’t want to be rushed.