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Opinion polls find Macron losing his shine

The popularity of French President Emmanuel Macron, whose first months in power were marked by glowing media coverage of his appearances on the world stage, has tumbled by ten percent in latest opinion poll ratings in France as he prepares to enact sweeping national budget cuts and structural reforms.

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The popularity of President Emmanuel Macron has slumped by ten points just two months after the youthful centrist took power -  the biggest decline for a new president since 1995 - with voters unhappy about a range of his planned reforms, reports The Telegraph

The 39-year-old former banker got off to a flying start at the Elysée, winning praise and admiration at home and abroad, but the shine has started to come off his fledgling administration.

The number of French people satisfied with his performance has fallen to 54 percent, down 10 percentage points from June, said the Ifop poll for the Journal du Dimanche newspaper.

It added the last time a newly elected president had lost ground in that way was Jacques Chirac in 1995. The Ifop poll echoed a similar finding in a recent BVA poll.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe has also lost support, dropping eight points to hit 56 percent of French people happy with him, according to the poll of 1,947 adults carried out from July 17th-22nd.

That was the period when Mr Macron was involved in a bitter dispute over budget cuts with Pierre de Villiers, the head of the armed forces, which ended with the resignation on Wednesday of the much-respected five-star general.

Left-wing newspaper Libération said the president's "little authoritarian fit" could be a sign he was drunk on power and said it was time for him "to grow up a bit".

Those surveyed for the Ifop poll who had a poor opinion of the head of state also cited what they saw as authoritarianism and excessive attention to controlling his public image.

Mr Macron has drastically reduced interaction with the media and rarely gives interviews, and has scrapped the off-the-record chats which his Socialist predecessor François Hollande liked.

He also cancelled the television interview the president traditionally gives on the Bastille Day national holiday, with one of his aides saying his thoughts were “too complex” for such a format.

Read more of this report from The Telegraph.