Pacific / New Caledonia

Former New Caledonia-based High Commissioner appointed French President’s Chief of Staff

13:24 pm on 7 January 2024

Patrice Faure, pictured in Kone, New Caledonia in December 2022 with French overseas minister Gérald Darmanin. Photo: Supplied

A former New Caledonia-based High Commissioner, Patrice Faure, has been appointed Chief of Staff of French President Emmanuel Macron.

Faure is described as an expert of French Overseas territories and particularly New Caledonia.

The 56-year-old prefect was France's representative (High Commissioner) in New Caledonia between 2021 and 2023, a period marked by the Covid pandemic management, but also the last two of the three referendums held on the French Pacific collectivity's possible independence.

He was also tasked to organise the first attempts to bring together pro-France and pro-independence political parties to talk and make suggestions on New Caledonia's political and institutional future.

He was replaced in Nouméa by Louis Le Franc in early 2023.

French daily Le Monde suggests that Faure's appointment would enable French President Macron to have a close adviser on New Caledonia's developments in the coming months.

While French Home Affairs and Overseas minister Gérald Darmanin has travelled half a dozen times to New Caledonia throughout 2023, France's efforts to foster bipartisan and simultaneous talks have not yet come to fruition.

Patrice Faure Photo: The Pacific Journal

One political party forming the pro-independence umbrella (FLNKS), the Union Calédonienne, is still refusing to join those talks.

French PM Elisabeth Borne gave New Caledonia's political parties until July 1, 2024 to come up with collective suggestions on the sensitive subject.

Borne also announced over Christmas that her government will table a Constitutional amendment to "unfreeze" New Caledonia's electoral roll and enable French citizen residing there for over ten years to vote at local elections.

While Darmanin is scheduled to come back to New Caledonia early in the year, Finance minister Bruno Lemaire will also visit again to supervise a far-reaching reform plan to solve New Caledonia's "critical" situation in the nickel mining industry.

And in February 2024, Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti will also travel there to provide more details about the construction of a new French-funded jail at an estimated cost of some €498 million (Euro).