Emmanuel Macron picked Emmanuel Moulin to run the Bank of France for the next six years, a window that will outlast Macron's own term in office.
The Socialists just made the math harder.
Why The Socialists Said No
Philippe Brun, the Socialist deputy who serves as rapporteur on the governor nomination, told his group to vote against Moulin, building his case on independence rather than policy.
Moulin spent 10 years inside government in senior economic roles, and Brun argued he "cannot claim any independence from the executive power" given that history.
Brun also said in his rapporteur's note that Moulin "does not present the necessary political independence guarantees for the function of central banker," framing the entire vote as a test of institutional separation.
La France Insoumise and the Rassemblement National had already said they would vote no, which means the only party still up for grabs is Les Republicains. The far-left bloc and the far-right bloc rarely agree on much, but both have argued for months that the central bank should not go to a Macron insider.
The threshold to block Moulin is three-fifths of the combined finance committees of the National Assembly and the Senate - if 60% vote against him, he's out.
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Who Moulin Is, And Why The Seat Matters
Moulin has been Director General of the French Treasury since November 2020, which makes him the senior civil servant overseeing the country's debt management, economic forecasts, and dealings with international institutions.
He first joined the executive in 2007 as deputy chief of staff to then-finance minister Christine Lagarde, before becoming Nicolas Sarkozy's economic adviser in 2009. Moulin's team is leaning on that pre-Macron resume to push back on the "Macron loyalist" label and win over Republicain votes.
The Bank of France governor sits on the European Central Bank's Governing Council, which sets rates for the entire euro area, meaning whoever takes the job this round gets a vote on every ECB decision through roughly 2032.
If the Republicains side with the left and far-right blocs, Moulin loses - and Macron loses both a long-term appointment and a political credibility test with about two years still on his term.
What To Watch
The vote sits inside the finance commissions of the Assembly and the Senate, and once those committees vote, the result is binding.
The current Bank of France governor, Francois Villeroy de Galhau, is set to step down in early June to take the presidency of the Fondation Apprentis d'Auteuil, so the replacement question isn't going to sit open for long.
The succession fight is also a quiet read on Macron's political grip with about two years left on his term, since the same parties that just lined up against Moulin will line up against the rest of his second-term agenda.
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