Édouard Philippe

Édouard Charles Philippe (French pronunciation: ⓘ; born 28 November 1970) is a French politician serving as Mayor of Le Havre since 2020, previously holding the office from 2010 to 2017.

He was Prime Minister of France from 15 May 2017 to 3 July 2020 under President Emmanuel Macron.

Édouard Philippe
Édouard Philippe
Philippe in 2023
President of Le Havre Seine Métropole
Assumed office
5 July 2020
Preceded byJean-Baptiste Gastinne
Mayor of Le Havre
Assumed office
5 July 2020
Preceded byJean-Baptiste Gastinne
In office
23 October 2010 – 20 May 2017
Preceded byAntoine Rufenacht
Succeeded byLuc Lemonnier
Prime Minister of France
In office
15 May 2017 – 3 July 2020
PresidentEmmanuel Macron
Preceded byBernard Cazeneuve
Succeeded byJean Castex
Member of the National Assembly
for Seine-Maritime's 7th constituency
In office
23 March 2012 – 15 June 2017
Preceded byJean-Yves Besselat
Succeeded byJean-Louis Rousselin
President of the
Agglomeration community of Le Havre
In office
18 December 2010 – 25 June 2017
Preceded byAntoine Rufenacht
Succeeded byLuc Lemonnier
Personal details
Born
Édouard Charles Philippe

(1970-11-28) 28 November 1970 (age 53)
Rouen, France
Political partyHorizons (2021–present)
Other political
affiliations
Socialist Party (1990s)
Union for a Popular Movement (2002–2015)
The Republicans (2015–2017)
SpouseÉdith Chabre
Children3
EducationLycée Janson-de-Sailly
Alma materSciences Po
École nationale d'administration
ProfessionLawyer
SignatureÉdouard Philippe

A lawyer by occupation, Philippe is a former member of the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), which later became the Republicans (LR). He served as a member of the National Assembly from 2012 to 2017, representing the seventh constituency of Seine-Maritime. After being elected to the presidency on 7 May 2017, Macron appointed him Prime Minister of France. Philippe subsequently appointed his government on 17 May. He was succeeded by Jean Castex before his reelection to the mayorship in Le Havre.

As prime minister, he led the centrist LREMMoDem coalition into the June 2017 legislative election that returned his government with a sizeable majority in the National Assembly.

During his time in office, Philippe oversaw the passage of a package of labour law and taxation system reforms as part of Macron's self-proclaimed "pro-business" agenda. He also led the controversial police response to the Yellow Vests crisis starting in late 2018, and later became a prominent figure in leading the French government's early response to the COVID-19 pandemic, implementing a 55-day national lockdown starting on 17 March 2020. He resigned as PM on 3 July 2020, shortly after the second round of the 2020 local elections.

In 2021, a year after the end of his premiership, Philippe founded the centre-right Horizons party, which then became part of the governing Ensemble coalition in the context of the 2022 legislative election.

Early life and education

Édouard Philippe, the son of French teachers, was born in Rouen in 1970 and grew up in a left-wing household. He has one sibling, a sister. He comes from a family of dockworkers, a profession in which members of his family are still employed. He grew up in a suburban neighbourhood in Rouen. He was at first a pupil at the Michelet School in Rouen before moving to Grand-Quevilly where he attended Jean-Texier College and later attending Lycée les Bruyères in Sotteville-lès-Rouen.

He obtained his baccalauréat at the École de Gaulle-Adenauer in Bonn, and after a year in hypokhâgne, he studied at Sciences Po for three years and graduated in 1992, and later studied at the École nationale d'administration (ÉNA) from 1995 to 1997 (the "Marc Bloch cohort").

Philippe served as an artillery officer during his national service in 1994. He continued to serve in the operational reserve for several years afterwards.

In his years at Sciences Po, he supported Michel Rocard and was influenced by him, identifying with the Rocardian and social democratic wings of the Socialist Party. His brief flirtation with the Socialists ended after Rocard was toppled from the leadership of the Socialist Party. After leaving the ÉNA in 1997, he went on to work at the Council of State, specialising in public procurement law.

Political career

In 2001, Philippe joined Antoine Rufenacht as Deputy Mayor of Le Havre charged with legal affairs; Rufenacht served as mayor of Le Havre from 1995 to 2010 and campaign director for Jacques Chirac in the 2002 presidential election. Recognising the ideological proximity between Michel Rocard and Alain Juppé, Philippe supported the latter at the time of the creation of the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) in 2002, marking the end of his left-wing activism; the same year, he failed to win his constituency in the legislative elections. He served under Juppé as director general of services of the UMP until 2004, when the mayor of Bordeaux was convicted as a result of the fictitious jobs case implicating the Rally for the Republic (RPR). He then took a job in the private sector, working with the American law firm Debevoise & Plimpton, and was elected to the regional council of Upper Normandy the same year.

In the wake of Nicolas Sarkozy's victory in the 2007 presidential election, Philippe briefly returned to political life working for Alain Juppé, when Juppé served briefly as Minister of Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy, before being appointed Director of Public Affairs at Areva, where he worked from 2007 to 2010. He was also substitute to Jean-Yves Besselat, who served as the member of the National Assembly for Seine-Maritime's 7th constituency from 2007 to 2012. In 2008, he was elected to the general council of Seine-Maritime in the canton of Le Havre-5, and in 2010 was elected mayor of Le Havre after the resignation of Rufenacht, his mentor, and also became President of the Agglomeration community of Le Havre the same year. After Besselat's death in 2012 following a long illness, Philippe took his seat, successfully holding it in the subsequent legislative elections. He was reelected as Mayor of Le Havre in the 2014 municipal elections in the first round, with an absolute majority of 52.04% of expressed votes. Following his resignation on 20 May 2017 as Le Havre Mayor, he retained a seat in the municipal council.

2017 presidential election

He worked for the campaign of Alain Juppé in the primary of the right and centre in 2016, serving as a spokesperson alongside Benoist Apparu. Though Philippe and Apparu, as well as Christophe Béchu, later joined the campaign of François Fillon for the 2017 presidential election after his victory in the primary, the three parliamentarians – close to Juppé – quit on 2 March 2017 after the candidate was summoned to appear before judges amidst the Fillon affair. He said he would not seek to retain his seat in the legislative elections in June to avoid breaching the law limiting the accumulation of mandates. Following the victory of Emmanuel Macron in the presidential election, there was speculation that Philippe was a potential choice for Prime Minister, representing three essential aspects: political renewal (at the age of only 46), affiliation with the centre-right, and familiarity with the political terrain.

Prime Minister

Édouard Philippe 
Aggregated opinion polls ("political barometers") monitoring Philippe's approval

On 15 May 2017, Philippe was appointed as Prime Minister by Emmanuel Macron after speculation he was a contender for the office alongside former Ecology Minister Jean-Louis Borloo, MoDem leader François Bayrou and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde.

Édouard Philippe 
Philippe (centre) with Senate President Gérard Larcher (left) and then-National Assembly President François de Rugy (right) on Armistice Day, 11 November 2017

In the June 2017 legislative elections, Macron's party, renamed "La République En Marche!", together with its ally the Democratic Movement (MoDem), secured a comfortable majority, winning 350 seats out of 577, with his party alone winning an outright majority of 308 seats. Philippe is a member of the Republicans, though he campaigned for La République En Marche! due to the party supporting his role as prime minister. He formed the Second Philippe government on 21 May 2017 following a series of resignations after scandal embroiled ministers François Bayrou, Sylvie Goulard, Marielle de Sarnez and Richard Ferrand. This diminished Democratic Movement's representation in the government significantly.

Philippe secured a vote of confidence and was allowed to govern with a majority government on 4 July 2017. He was confirmed with a vote of 370 against 67. Following the vote, Philippe addressed the parliament, talking about plans to tackle France's debt by raising cigarette tax and cutting spending. Philippe also talked about plans to reduce corporate tax from 33.3% to 25% by 2022. Philippe announced the government's labour reform plan which will give companies more power when it comes to negotiating conditions directly with their employees. Labour reform was one of Macron's biggest election promises and has been seen as the government's biggest economic reform.

On 12 July 2017, Philippe announced a new immigration plan. The plan attempts to speed up asylum claims from fourteen months to six, provide housing for 7,500 refugees by the end of 2019, improve living conditions for minors and deport economic migrants. The draft of the law was to be introduced in September.

On 3 July 2020, Philippe resigned as prime minister. He ran successfully in the 2020 Le Havre mayoral election.

In October 2020, Philippe was one of several current and former government officials whose home was searched by French authorities following complaints about the government's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic in France.

Ahead of the 2022 presidential election, Philippe endorsed Macron for reelection.

Personal life

Édouard Philippe 
Édouard Philippe in 2021

Philippe is married to Édith Chabre, the executive director of the School of Law at Sciences Po. They have three children.

Since the middle of the 2010s, Philippe has sported a short beard. He is the first prime minister with facial hair since Henri Queuille (prime minister in 1951) and the first one with a full beard since Alexandre Ribot (prime minister last in 1917). Further, he is one of a few Prime Ministers in the last century (Henri Queuille, Raymond Barre, François Fillon, Jean-Marc Ayrault) to be older than the president he served under, by an unprecedented seven years.

As prime minister, he announced that he had vitiligo, a skin disease responsible for the noticeable asymetrical white patch of hair on his beard. In 2023, he announced that he had alopecia areata.

Honours

Ribbon bar Honour Date and comment
Édouard Philippe  Grand Cross of the National Order of Merit 22 November 2017 – by right as Prime Minister
Édouard Philippe  Grand Officer of the Order of the Legion of Honour 2020

Foreign honours

Ribbon bar Country Honour Date
Édouard Philippe  Australia Honorary Officer of the Order of Australia 11 November 2018
Édouard Philippe  Senegal Grand Cross of the Order of Merit 2019

Published works

Édouard Philippe 
Édouard Philippe dedicating Impressions and clear lines in Fontainebleau, on 29 June 2021.

Philippe has co-authored two works of fiction:

  • With Gilles Boyer (2007). L'Heure de vérité. Flammarion. ISBN 9782081237728.
  • With Gilles Boyer (2011). Dans l'ombre. Jean-Claude Lattès. ISBN 9782709637558. This political thriller recounts a presidential election mired in tricks and betrayals, culminating with the unmasking of the to-be-appointed Prime Minister's criminal history in extremis.
  • Des hommes qui lisent. Jean-Claude Lattès. 2017. ISBN 9782709661430.

In 2015, he prefaced Promenades avec Oscar Niemeyer by Danielle Knapp, published by Petit à Petit.

References

National Assembly of France
Preceded by Member of the National Assembly
for Seine-Maritime's 7th constituency

2012–2017
Succeeded by
Jean-Louis Rousselin
Political offices
Preceded by Mayor of Le Havre
2010–2017
Succeeded by
Luc Lemonnier
President of the Agglomeration community of Le Havre
2010–2017
Preceded by Prime Minister of France
2017–2020
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of the Interior
Acting

2018
Succeeded by
Order of precedence
Preceded byas former Prime Minister Order of precedence of France
Former Prime Minister
Succeeded by
Jean Castex
as Former Prime Minister

Tags:

Édouard Philippe Early life and educationÉdouard Philippe Political careerÉdouard Philippe Personal lifeÉdouard Philippe HonoursÉdouard Philippe Published worksÉdouard Philippe

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Israil Madrimov2023 NFL draftKevin De BruyneAnn WilsonChappell RoanSplit (2016 American film)Luca GuadagninoRaven-Symoné2024 Indian Premier LeagueXHamsterSerena WilliamsErling HaalandList of countries and dependencies by populationDogHiroyuki SanadaGoogle TranslateRoad House (2024 film)Sofia BoutellaRajiv Gandhi International Cricket StadiumJude BellinghamMonica LewinskyAavesham (2024 film)Amanda BynesTwitterErik SpoelstraNicole Brown SimpsonSacha Baron CohenDubaiTaiwanUSS Triton (SSRN-586)George SorosBlackpinkSeven deadly sinsThe Gentlemen (2019 film)Cold War2024 ICC Men's T20 World CupList of ethnic slursDead Boy DetectivesCillian MurphyEnglandNicholas GalitzineMurder trial of O. J. SimpsonWorld War IArizona CoyotesRyan GoslingYouTubeTerence CrawfordFranklin D. RooseveltAndy (goose)Travis ScottAlgebraic notation (chess)UEFA Champions LeagueTerry HillBabe RuthJason StathamRobert DurstDarwin BlanchRoad House (1989 film)Karen McDougalAmber HeardHamasSexLiberation Day (Italy)Leah WilliamsonDeaths in 2024ExhumaInterstellar (film)Article 370 of the Constitution of IndiaKent State shootingsTed BundyVance DrummondWill Smith (defensive end)ByteDanceChinaTurkeyTimothée ChalametMadison BeerWinston Churchill🡆 More