Emmanuel Macron

From Conservapedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 1990'sguy (Talk | contribs) at 13:36, April 28, 2017. It may differ significantly from current revision.

Jump to: navigation, search

Emmanuel Macron (December 21, 1977) is a liberal French politician and a former Banker of the Rothschild & Cie Banque.[1] He is one of the French candidates for the presidential election in April 2017. He strongly supports the socialist and globalist European Union.

Biography

Macron was born on 21 December 1977 in Amiens, he studied on the Jésuites de la Providence and later philosophy on the Paris Nanterre University.

Business career

Macron worked for the Inspection générale des finances, a financial administrative body in France. He left this company with a transfer of €50.000.[2] After that he worked in a high rank at the Banque Rothschild & Cie.

En Marche! and the 2017 French presidential election

Macron was a member of the French Socialist Party (Parti Socialiste) in the past, in 2016 he founded the party En Marche! a leftist liberal party which called for a federal European Union, mass-immigration and more anti-Israel policies which continue after five years by President Hollande.[3]

Former United States President Barack Obama spoke with Macron, indicating his support for the candidate in the 2017 French presidential election.[4] By contrast, incumbent U.S. President Donald Trump called his opponent, the eurosceptic Marine Le Pen, the strongest of the presidential candidates, particularly on borders and security.[5]

During the last days of the campaign, Macron stated that terrorism would be "part of our daily lives for the years to come."[6] He voiced opposition to arresting and deporting the known radical Islamists in France due to "intelligence" purposes.[7]

Macron won first place in the first round of the election, advancing to the runoff along with Le Pen.[8]

During the election runoff, a socially conservative group which promotes family values, Manif pour Tous ("Protest for everyone"), strongly urged voters not to vote for Macron due to his extreme socially leftist and anti-family policies.[9]

The media is desperate to influence the election outcome and has framed Macron in a flattering light. They call Macron an independent centrist.[10] Yet he is a left-wing liberal who openly and strongly supports globalism, extreme European integration and the EU, the politically socialist status quo, and left-wing former U.S. President Barack Obama. Macron is no different from the current French president Hollande.

References