ECB chief tipped to quit to block Marine Le Pen from picking successor


Christine Lagarde has been tipped to step down from her position as European Central Bank president ahead of schedule in a bid to shield the institution from National Rally’s influence over the appointment of her successor.

The 70-year-old former French finance minister intends to depart before the country heads to the polls in April 2027, ensuring that Emmanuel Macron retains authority over his nation’s role in selecting the next ECB chief.


Andrzej Szczepaniak, an analyst at Japanese investment bank Nomura, told The Financial Times: “The intent would be to future-proof the ECB from the far-right, under the assumption National Rally win the French presidential election.”

The central bank declined to refute the reports, stating only that Ms Lagarde remains focused on her duties and has made no formal decision regarding her departure.

Christine Lagarde and Marine Le Pen

The central bank declined to refute the reports

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Ms Lagarde’s eight-year tenure at the helm of the eurozone’s monetary authority is scheduled to conclude in October 2027, some six months after French voters choose their next president.

Current polling places Marine Le Pen’s National Rally ten percentage points ahead of its rival parties, positioning either her or her deputy Jordan Bardella as the likely victor.

Ms Le Pen herself faces uncertainty over her candidacy following a criminal conviction for misappropriating European Parliament funds, which currently bars her from standing.

Should her court appeal fail, Mr Bardella will likely take her place on the ballot.

The prospect of a National Rally presidency has sparked concerns from Frankfurt that the populist party might exploit the ECB succession process to compromise the institution’s independence from political interference.

While Ms Le Pen has abandoned her previous calls for France to exit the single currency, Mr Bardella has advocated for the ECB to provide greater support to the heavily indebted French state through expanded bond purchases.

“To bring down interest rates … I propose that we open talks with the European Central Bank, which in the past has been able to buy all or part of European debts,” Mr Bardella told Le Monde in December.

However, Andrew Kenningham of Capital Economics suggested such anxieties may be overblown.

The ECB currently holds €660billion worth of French government debt, though institutional rules would prohibit any targeted rescue programme for a single member state.

He described the reported worries as “overdone, not to say slightly paranoid”.

Macron

The French finance minister intends to depart, ensuring that Emmanuel Macron retains authority over his nation’s role

| Reuters

Mr Kenningham also cautioned that engineering an early departure was “not a good look for politicians” and risked inflaming tensions surrounding the eventual succession battle.

The ECB presidency is determined by majority vote among eurozone leaders, who put forward their own candidates for consideration.

Ms Lagarde became the fourth person to hold the position since the bank’s establishment in 1998.

France securing the top job twice consecutively appears improbable, particularly given that Germany already claims Ursula von der Leyen as European Commission president.

This dynamic places Spain, Italy and possibly the Netherlands in contention, potentially creating a more fiercely contested selection than usual.

Such circumstances could paradoxically afford a National Rally president greater opportunity to shape the outcome.

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