French president’s Cabinet mixes old and new, left and right
PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron named a mix of prominent and unknown figures from the left and the right Wednesday to make up the government tasked with pushing through his plans to reduce labour protections, tighten European unity and boost military spending.
The most senior Cabinet job — the post of interior minister — went to Gerard Collomb, 69, the long-time Socialist mayor of Lyon who played a key role in Macron’s presidential bid. Collomb said his duty will be to protect the French people, to fight terrorism and to prevent youth from falling “in the grip” of the Islamic State group.
A few hours after taking office, Collomb made an unexpected visit to Paris’ grand Champs-Elysees avenue, where a police officer was shot to death by an Islamic extremist last month.
Jean-Yves Le Drian, 69, who led France’s military operations abroad as former President Francois Hollande’s defence minister, will stay on in Macron’s government as foreign minister and also be in charge of European affairs. Le Drian, another Socialist, brings deep experience that could prove valuable to the untested 39-year-old president.


