17.1 C
London
Thursday, May 21, 2026

Macron is stopped by New York cops as street closed for Trump

Emmanuel Macron was humbled this week after New York City cops stopped his vehicle and forced him to wait on the street to make way for Donald Trump’s motorcade. 

Footage shows the perplexed French president stranded on a road moments after he left the UN headquarters in the Big Apple on Monday.  

‘I’m really sorry, Mr President, everything is frozen’, a police officer can be heard telling Macron. 

The French leader then proceeded to take matters into his own hands, and was shown in a separate video calling his American counterpart on the phone. 

‘Guess what, I’m waiting in the street right now because everything is frozen for you,’  he appears to tell Trump. 

But after several minutes of waiting around, the French president was then forced to walk down the street with his body guards after the roads opened, but only for pedestrians.

Footage of the awkward moment involving Macron, who is in New York for the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, has gone viral on social media. Several internet users have commented on the US president’s apparent power play.

‘That’s not just a mix-up — that’s a power signal. When world leaders get parked so Trump can pass, it tells you everything about who commands respect in the room’, one X user wrote. 

Emmanuel Macron was forced to get out of his vehicle and wait on the streets of New York to make way for Donald Trump's motorcade

Footage shows the perplexed French president stranded on a road moments after he left the UN headquarters in the Big Apple on Monday

Another said: ‘Macron learns who runs thing in America, even off duty’. 

‘Humiliating. The French president stuck on the curb while Trump’s motorcade rolls like a king’s parade’, a third commented, while a fourth said: ‘This is not an “awkward moment”. This is a protocol breach and a serious insult.’

The mishap involving Macron comes after new polling data revealed yesterday that his popularity in France has plunged to an all-time low. 

The embattled president’s approval rating has fallen to 17%, the lowest it has been since taking office in 2017.

The results of the Ifop survey conducted for French weekly Le Journal du Dimanche came after nearly one million workers and anti-austerity marchers took to the streets to protest Macron’s handling of France’s economy.

As the country endured outbursts of carnage and violence, images from the streets of the capital last Thursday showed major clashes breaking out between cops and rioters.

Protesters set fire to wooden pallets outside the city’s main train station, the Gare du Nord, while officers battled crowds of demonstrators in billowing clouds of tear gas smoke.

Macron resorted to calling his American counterpart

The French president was then seen walking down the street with his bodyguards after roads reopened, but only for pedestrians

Masked students carrying banners and placards calling to ‘tax the rich’ also waved red flares in front of armoured police as they blocked the entrance of the Lycee Maurice Ravel high school as part of the nationwide protests against the government’s budget cut plans.

The strikes, among the latest humiliation for Macron, came barely a week after Sébastien Lecornu was appointed prime minister following the toppling of Francois Bayrou’s government.

Unions have called for more spending on public services, higher taxes on the wealthy and for the budget cuts outlined by the short-lived Bayrou government to be axed.

Macron has been battered by several major uprisings, including the Yellow Vest protest in 2018 and the pension reforms revolt in 2023.

His current predicament is seen as one he created. Last year, in an attempt to delivery a healthy majority ahead of Paris Olympics, he called a snap election.

But this move backfired, resulting in a hung parliament that has made legislation even more difficult to pass.

This difficulty has left France with a swelling public debt crisis, aggravated by the pandemic, a major European energy crisis and high global interest rates.

France’s deficit rose to 5.8% of its GDP last year, far surpassing the 3% limit set by the EU.

It is the largest deficit France has had since the end of the Second World War.

Advertisement

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

The best places to live in Britain’s idyllic national parks

Many of us toy with the idea of moving somewhere close to nature, with a friendly community, where the pace of life is more civilised. But where to find such a place? A national park could be the answer.

EastEnders’ Sid Owen is ‘blaming the previous owners of his £30k boat’

EastEnders legend Sid Owen is said to be 'so angry' and blaming the previous owners of his £30k boat for the vessel's 'write-off' in a 'drunken mishap'. 

Husband of woman who died saving her children sues glamping company

Ruth Pingree, 42, was staying at the Suffolk glampsite with her family in July 2022 when the vintage Airstream vehicle became engulfed in flames.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX reveals blockbuster IPO plans

Elon Musk has revealed plans to float SpaceX in the US, paving the way for the world's largest stock market float in history that could make him a trillionaire.

October 7 survivor reveals how childhood scar saved her from Hamas

May Hayat, 33, from Tel Aviv, is one of several survivors who have arrived in London ahead of a new immersive exhibition about the atrocities at the Nova Festival in southern Israel, on October 7, 2023.

Netanyahu ‘beside himself with rage’ after phone call with Trump

Netanyahu increasingly doubts further negotiations with Tehran will yield a peace deal and wants to resume military strikes, according to Israel's Channel 12.

Labour lurches Left as Wes Streeting demands a ‘wealth’ tax

Wes Streeting - once seen as the Blairite candidate - called for a levy on the 'rich' that he claimed could bring in £12billion a year.

Why William is an Aston Villa fan and hopes George will follow suit

The Prince of Wales - patron of the Football Association- was spotted at Besiktas Park punching the air in delight as Unai Emery's side lifted their first major trophy in 30 years.

Husband of woman who died saving her children sues glamping company

Ruth Pingree, 42, was staying at the Suffolk glampsite with her family in July 2022 when the vintage Airstream vehicle became engulfed in flames.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img