Emmanuel Macron wears a mask during a visit to Pantin, April 7, 2020. - Gonzalo Fuentes / AP / SIPA

The French are waiting Monday for announcements from Emmanuel Macron, who should extend the confinement by several weeks and mean that the fight against the Covid-19 is far from being mastered, despite the rather encouraging figures of this long Easter weekend .

The head of state, who must speak shortly after 8 pm, plans, according to his entourage, to extend beyond May 10 the confinement to which the country has been subjected since March 16. The coronavirus epidemic has killed 14,393 people in France, including more than 9,000 in hospitals, according to figures released Sunday by the Directorate General of Health. This represents an additional 315 deaths in the last 24 hours in a hospital environment. A figure down, after a peak at 605 dead Monday - the highest level recorded so far in France.

For the fourth consecutive day, the number of resuscitation patients also decreased in 24 hours, but "by only 35 patients, this is a very slight decrease", specifies the DGS.

A deconfinement date neither too close nor too long

For his fourth solemn speech eagerly awaited since the start of the health crisis, Emmanuel Macron "should evoke an end date of confinement in May, at least after the bridge of May 8-10," according to several of his relatives. "A date sufficiently distant for us to understand that we will then be able to begin a beginning of partial deconfinement, but extremely progressive", but also "close enough to sketch France after," it is argued in the entourage of head of state. "The hour of confinement will last," for his part had warned on Tuesday Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, preparing public opinion for its extension.

Emmanuel Macron is also expected on the method he intends to implement to restart the country after confinement, when he is certain that the return to normal will not be immediate. No question, for example, of immediately reopening shops and schools. "We are starting to understand today that the end of confinement will not be a return to normal," explained Sunday on France Inter Stanislas Guerini, the general delegate of La République en Marche, as if to prepare the spirits: "We must not too quickly projecting into the next day. We are entering for many months "in a crisis" which will be extremely deep ".

The head of state also knows that he must defuse a growing distrust of his management of the crisis. A distrust fanned, according to polling institutes, by the floating around the management of protective masks. Public opinion criticizes in particular the position of the executive against their generalization and its ability to import the promised masks. As with each of his previous speeches since March 12, Emmanuel Macron could also in conclusion draw more precisely his projects for "the day after", including the new priorities that will shape the last two years of his quinquennium.

Consult doctors, elected officials and associations

The head of state postponed his speech to Monday to take the time to consult doctors - including Professor Didier Raoult, herald of the treatment with hydroxychloroquine against Covid-19, with whom he spoke almost every day, according to a relative - but also elected representatives, associations and European counterparts.

"On these cumbersome decisions, he has a real desire for union and rallying, by taking opinions directly on the ground," said a member of his entourage. He was also scheduled to meet Sunday and Monday with the presidents of the two assemblies, Gérard Larcher and Richard Ferrand, as well as several mayors from different regions, or even the German chancellor, Angela Merkel.

Emmanel Macron should not go on the other hand on very concrete decisions, like the generalized wearing of the mask, the method of tests or the tracing of the patients, on which he generally lets express the Prime Minister or the Minister of Health Olivier Véran. Another subject on which it is expected: the question of closing national or EU borders, even if it will be on the menu for a virtual European summit at the end of April.

  • Emmanuel Macron
  • Coronavirus
  • Society
  • Containment