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EMMANUEL MACRON

French President Macron ‘now free of Covid symptoms’

French President Emmanuel Macron is free of Covid-19 symptoms, his office said on Thursday December 24, a week after he tested positive for the coronavirus.

French President Macron 'now free of Covid symptoms'
Image: Ludovic Marin / AFP

The president, who was in self-isolation at an official residence near Paris from where he ran meetings remotely, no longer needs to remain in quarantine, the Elysee Palace added.

Macron “shows no symptoms a this stage”, the statement said, and “the isolation of the President can therefore end after seven days”.

Macron had remained in charge “of the main issues of current affairs of our country” during his self-isolation, and would continue to do so in the coming hours and days, it said.

Macron, who had tested positive for the virus last Thursday showing symptoms of fatigue, coughing and muscle aches, promised daily updates on his
health.

His office reported “signs of improvement” for the first time on Wednesday December 23, having in previous statements described the 43-year old president's condition as “stable”.

The French authorities are concerned that the Christmas holiday period could see a new spike in infections, after the country's total Covid death toll rose to nearly 62,000 this week.

Authorities said late Wednesday that nearly 15,000 new cases had been reported in the previous 24 hours, and 278 new deaths.

A vaccination campaign is to start on Sunday, with health workers and older people among the first to get jabs, the government said.

The EU gave the green light for the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine on Monday, paving the way for the first inoculations to start across 27 countries soon after Christmas.

The French HAS health authority today, December 24, cleared the vaccine for use in France.

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ELECTIONS

Macron asks backing from all ‘able to say no to extremes’ in snap vote

French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday called for backing from people "able to say no to extremes" in snap elections he called after a European poll battering.

Macron asks backing from all 'able to say no to extremes' in snap vote

“I hope that when the time comes, men and women of goodwill who will have been able to say no to the extremes will come together… will put themselves in a position to build a shared, sincere project that is useful to the country,” Macron told journalists at a Paris press conference.

Election news: 5-minute guide to the latest French election news

The president’s Renaissance outfit and allies won less than half the 31-percent result of the far-right Rassemblement National (RN) of Marine Le Pen at Sunday’s European vote.

It prompted him to trigger surprise snap elections for June 30th and July 7th after two years limping along with a minority government.

“The answer, in my eyes, could not come through changing the government or a coalition… dissolving parliament was necessary,” Macron said.

He acknowledged voters’ “difficulty getting by even when they’re working, very everyday difficulties” that had created “anger, sometimes resentment”.

People “feel that they aren’t listened to or respected… We can’t remain indifferent to all these messages,” he added.

But he also lashed out at right-wing Les Républicains, whose leader Eric Ciotti on Tuesday announced an alliance with the RN, as well as a left-wing alliance including the hard-left La France Insoumise (LFI).

The right had “in a few hours turned its back on the legacy of General (Charles) de Gaulle” as well as former presidents Jacques Chirac and Nicolas Sarkozy, he said.

Meanwhile mainstream left parties had allied with an LFI he accused of “anti-Semitism” over its response to Palestinian militant group Hamas’ October 7th attack on Israel and the war in Gaza.

Voters had a choice between “unholy alliances at the two extremes who agree on almost nothing except handing out jobs” versus his own bloc with “a single vision of the country” both at home and abroad.

“We aren’t perfect… but we’ve got results,” he insisted, pointing to job creation, the energy transition and backing for Ukraine as high points.

Macron was also launching his party’s political programme for these legislative elections which included promising a ‘great debate’ on the always-contentious subject of laïcité (French state secularism), the building of eight new nuclear reactors and restrictions on access to smartphones for children.

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