Europe | Charlemagne

Thank the elderly for keeping Europe’s extremists out of power

Emmanuel Macron depends on grey-haired voters for support

IF EMMANUEL MACRON, the youngest-ever president of France’s Fifth Republic, gets to keep his job he will have its oldest voters to thank. Had only the ballots of those under 60 been counted in the first round on April 10th, Mr Macron would have come third—leaving France to pick between extremists of the left and right in the run-off a fortnight later. Across Europe, many mainstream leaders owe their jobs to a grey-haired (and no-haired-at-all) electoral bulwark loyally trudging to the polls. They will not be around for ever. Either today’s youngsters will have to mellow into the middle ground as they age, or Europe will drift away from the predictable centrism it has comfortably espoused for decades.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The boomer bulwark”

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