France's president pounds a punching bag on camera, and Europe notices
French President Emmanuel Macron is raising eyebrows after photos of him hammering a punching bag were posted to his official photographer's social media
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.The teeth clench. The brow furrows. The bicep bulges.
In moody black and white, photos of French President Emmanuel Macron pounding a punching bag arched eyebrows across Europe on Thursday after his official photographer posted them to social media in what was widely received as the latest round in his drive to toughen up the region's response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
But reviews were mixed along political lines. Some in France said Macron, who is 46, looked like a āwarrior" and likened him to movie heroes like Rocky Balboa and Robert DeNiro's character in āRaging Bull.ā
Across the English Channel, reviews of āmacho Macronā were less flattering. āMacron: Le grand narcissist,ā groused the Daily Mail. And Daniel Johnson in the Telegraph called him āa prancing poseurā: "Past presidents like Resistance hero General de Gaulle felt no need to show off."
Macronās office said it would not comment on the photos. But the images were interpreted by many on social media as reflecting his pressure on other Western countries to more strongly defend Ukraine as the war enters its third year. Last month, he said the possibility of Western troops being sent to Ukraine could not be ruled out, a comment that prompted an outcry from other leaders.
TOUGHNESS AS A POLITICAL TOOL
Political history is filled with leaders using visuals to display toughness, virility and strength.
Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, famously posed shirtless on a horse and was recorded apparently showing off his judo skills. The United States had cowboys Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, ranch owners in California and Texas respectively, who were widely photographed wearing cowboy hats and boots and sometimes riding horses.
Public flexing doesn't always go as planned. The same week British prime minister Boris Johnson lost control of Parliament in 2019, he struggled to lead a live bull on camera during an event in Scotland. The animal ended up knocking into a police officer. Another time during a game of street rugby with children in Japan, Johnson knocked down a 10-year-old.
Macron, for his part, was one half of a handshake showdown with former President Donald Trump in Brussels in 2017. In front of photographers, the two locked eyes, gripped hands ā and didn't let go even as their knuckles turned white. The handshake-averse Trump at one point seemed ready to pull away. But Macron wasn't. He held on a few seconds more. The men's jaws seemed to clench.
āMy handshake with him, it wasn't innocent,ā Macron later told Le Journal du Dimanche. It was āa moment of truth,ā he said, adding: āOne must show that you wonāt make small concessions, even symbolic ones, but also not overpublicize things, either.ā
MACRON IS A MEDIA-SAVVY LEADER
Macron is well aware of the power of visual content to convey messages. He is also the first French president to extensively use social media.
His official photographer, Soizig de la MoissonniĆØre, documents his public and private daily life through photos posted on her Instagram account, with about 216,000 followers, including the ones of Macron boxing, muscles bulging through a black shirt. Macron once said he was personally approving the photos to be posted there.
Valerie Doustaly, a Paris-based image consultant, said Thursday's photos appeared aimed at communicating a feeling about Macronās ālifestyle and personal life, which is increasingly important for any profession, even for the role of a president.ā
āThere is a clear strategy to show the health, youth and strength of someone who chooses boxing as a sport,ā Doustaly said. āPresident Macron takes care of his image with perseverance, he always takes care of his look, his evolving hairstyle, and now surprises us with a T-shirt that shows his flexed biceps.ā
Since Macron was elected in 2017, he has seized many occasions to show his athletic skills. He has held multiple events meant to promote the Paris Olympics and last year described sports as conveying āvalues of respect, effort, equality, healthy living, surpassing oneself.ā Last month, Macron promised to swim in the River Seine, which is being cleaned up for the Paris Olympics laster this year.
In January, he launched the 200-day countdown for the Olympics with a video posted on his social media, appearing in a sport T-shirt next to a punching bag with boxing gloves on his shoulder and sweat on his face.
Brigitte Macron said in a November interview with Paris Match that the French president does boxing training twice a week. It's a sport he is said to practice with some of the officers in charge of his security. Macron was also seen boxing during a campaign event in the northern suburbs of Paris in April 2022, just before being reelected for a second term.
___
Corbet reported from Brussels. Thomas Adamson in Paris contributed to this report.