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May 9, 2017 4:56 pm
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Once Again, France’s Macron Rules out Unilateral Recognition of a Palestinian State

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avatar by Adam Abrams / JNS.org

French President-elect Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech in front of the Pyramid at the Louvre Museum in Paris. Photo: Yonatan Sindel / Flash90.

JNS.org – As French citizens were voting on Sunday, their eventual president-elect reiterated his previous statements ruling out unilateral French recognition of a Palestinian state and committing France to supporting a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian dispute.

On the eve of the election, pro-Europe centrist Emmanuel Macron of the En Marche party — who went on to win the presidential race with 64 percent of the vote, defeating far-right populist Marine Le Pen of the National Front party — said that unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state would create regional instability and damage France’s relationship with Israel.

“I defended the principle of a two-state solution, and France’s commitment to that,” said Macron, recalling a 2015 visit to Israel when he was France’s minister of economy. “Unilateral recognition of Palestine, right now, will undermine stability…[it would damage] the entire [French] relationship with the state of Israel,” he added.

Macron has previously expressed support for Israel’s security and condemned the BDS movement, referring to anti-Israel boycotts as “profoundly antisemitic” and stating that anti-Zionism “leads directly to antisemitism.”

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Following Sunday’s election, World Jewish Congress President Ronald S. Lauder said that he was confident that Macron “will work to support the state of Israel against its enemies in the international arena, in all its constructs, be it from the extreme left or the extreme right.”

French Ambassador to Israel Helene Le Gal, tweeted on Monday that 96.3 percent of French Israelis who cast their ballots in the cities of Tel Aviv, Netanya, Haifa, Ashdod, Eilat and Beersheba opted for Macron. Le Gal also told Israel’s Army Radio that Macron would be “very friendly” toward the Jewish state

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu congratulated Macron, saying, “I look forward to working with President-elect Macron to confront the common challenges and seize the common opportunities facing our two democracies.” Netanyahu said that Israel and France both face the threat of “radical Islamic terror,” and expressed confidence the “longtime allies” would “continue to deepen” their relations.

Leading up to election day, Jewish leaders inside and outside France had expressed concern about the strong showing of Macron’s far-right competitor, Le Pen, in the first round of the French election.

Last month, Le Pen came under fire for comments she made absolving France of responsibility for the roundup of French Jews during the Holocaust. She also had indicated that, if elected, she would have moved to ban the ritual slaughter of animals in France, a policy that would extend to kosher slaughter. Le Pen has also called on French Jews to give up wearing yarmulkes as part of her initiative to ban religious symbols in public and fight radical Islam, while stating her intent to ban dual citizenship with non-European Union countries; this troubled French Jews who also hold Israeli citizenship.

Francis Kalifat, president of the CRIF umbrella group for French-Jewish organizations, called Le Pen’s growing popularity “a real danger to our country’s democracy.” Russian Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar had added, “If Marine Le Pen is elected president of France, the Jews must leave.”

Chief Rabbi of France Haim Korsia had joined Muslim and Christian leaders in endorsing Macron against Le Pen.

“Fully aware that our roles require us to be non-partisan, we are, however, first and foremost responsible citizens and therefore openly are calling for a vote in favor of Emmanuel Macron,” the religious leaders said in a letter to voters, titled “[A] Call to Vote for Mr. Emmanuel Macron.”

The letter was co-signed by Pastor François Clavairoly, president of the Protestant Federation of France, and Anouar Kbibech, president of the French Council of the Muslim Faith. The religious leaders’ open endorsement of a specific presidential candidate was considered a rare occurrence in France.

At the same time, some Jews supported Le Pen specifically because of her commitment to fighting radical Islam and were willing to look the other way on her nationalistic agenda’s implications for matters such as Jewish religious life.

The National Front party was founded by Le Pen’s father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, a convicted Holocaust denier. The party expelled him founder in 2015.

In a bid to combat being portrayed as an antisemite, Marine Le Pen discreetly visited a Marseille monument for French victims of the Holocaust last month, laying a wreath at the site. The wreath-laying took place, with no media present, at a memorial for 30 Jewish women and children who were rounded up by the Nazis in 1943.

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