During a press conference, scheduled for 4:00 p.m. at the Elysee Palace, the head of state planned to focus on Europe.

But journalists should take this rare opportunity to question him on political issues, and in particular on his unconfirmed candidacy for the presidential election in April 2022.

"The campaign will come on time," however, continues to hammer Gabriel Attal, the government spokesman, defending a head of state "at work" until the end of the five-year term.

Before answering the questions, Emmanuel Macron will explain why he attaches so much importance to this rotating six-monthly presidency of the 27, the 13th exercised by France since the 1950s and the first since 2008.

Since his election in 2017, celebrated to the sound of the EU's anthem, the president has been the leader of pro-Europeans against “nationalists” and “populists”, and praises the advances obtained at 27, such as the 750 billion euros post-Covid 19 recovery plan adopted in 2020.

"It is the identity of Emmanuel Macron that no one, on the right or on the left, can challenge him, and that he will carry until the elections," says a member of his entourage.

The Head of State announced Monday that the priorities of the French presidency, known as PFUE, revolved around three axes: "revival, power and belonging".

Economic recovery is "necessary" in "response to the crisis" of Covid-19, he detailed, before defending the need to strengthen the power of the EU by making it more autonomous, in particular militarily.

For him, "European sovereignty strengthens the sovereignty of France", which is better equipped to defend its interests in the world with its 26 partners than alone.

He regrets, however, that the “feeling of belonging” of the French to the EU has “withered” in recent years.

Busy agenda

In front of the press, he should detail his ideas to reform the Schengen agreements, advance the "climate package" with carbon taxation, better regulate the digital giants, harmonize the minimum wage, and rebuild "a treaty of friendship with the 'Africa".

For this, dozens of meetings are planned, mainly over the first three months because of the presidential election.

They will begin with a speech followed by a debate in the European Parliament on January 19.

However, France's room for maneuver will be limited because if the rotating presidency gives momentum to certain priorities, it then remains to build a consensus of 27, which is never easy.

As a result, the PFUE "may require a lot of energy" from Emmanuel Macron at a time when he will already have to manage national affairs while campaigning, warns a majority official.

"I hope that the French presidency is not going to be a moment of communication of three months", warned Tuesday the president LR of the European Affairs committee of the Senate Jean-François Rapin.

According to an Odoxa poll for Le Figaro, the French are twice as likely (32% against 15%) to consider that presiding the EU will be an asset rather than a handicap for Emmanuel Macron and 63% ensure that the proposals of the candidates on Europe will count in their choice of vote.

The environmental candidate Yannick Jadot regretted Wednesday "that France did not choose to change the date of its presidency (...) biased and cut in two by the presidential election".

On the far right, Eric Zemmour asks Emmanuel Macron "to impose the principle of non-admission of migrants into the European Union".

The Head of State's European agenda will be busy until Christmas with the reception of the new German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who will make his first international trip to Paris on Friday.

On Monday, he will travel to Hungary to meet sovereignist Prime Minister Viktor Orban, before the European summit on December 16 and 17.

In the meantime, Emmanuel Macron has prepared his press conference by exchanging with the two heads of the EU: the President of the European Commission Ursula Von der Leyen on Monday, before a lunch Thursday at the Elysee Palace with the President of the European Council Charles Michel .

© 2021 AFP