French President Francois Hollande chose centrist Interior Minister Manuel Valls as his new prime minister yesterday, a coalition source said, replacing Jean-Marc Ayrault who quit after the ruling Socialists were trounced in local elections.

The 51-year-old Valls has been compared with “New Labour” former British premier Tony Blair both for his pro-business ideas and his dashing style. He is a bogeyman to the Socialist left, having proposed changing the party’s name and criticised the flagship 35-hour work week it pioneered over a decade ago.

The choice of Valls, the Barcelona-born son of Spanish immigrant parents, suggested Hollande is set to amplify an EU-mandated shift towards pro-market economic reforms and public spending cuts rather than turn back as left-wingers demanded.

Political commentators have compared Valls, who has taken a tough line on crime and Roma migrants, with former conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy, who earned his spurs as a security hardliner in the same ministerial position. Speculation of a Cabinet reshuffle mounted after Ayrault acknowledged he and his ministers bore part of the blame for Sunday’s defeat, which saw 155 towns swing to the centre-right UMP and the far-right National Front claim 11.

The coalition source confirmed local media reports of Valls’ nomination in a brief text message. Minutes earlier, Ayrault’s office announced the prime minister had tendered his resignation to Hollande.

“I don’t see how there won’t be a major reshuffle,” Francois Rebsamen, a Socialist senator and long-time Hollande ally, told Reuters, noting that polls show the French did not trust the government to turn around unemployment of more than 10 per cent.

Facing the lowest popularity levels of any president in the 56-year-old Fifth Republic, Hollande changed tack earlier this year towards a more pro-business stance aimed at spurring investment and jobs through cuts in corporate social charges.

The President has said a mid-April vote in Parliament on his “responsibility pact” package of 30 billion euros in tax cuts for companies will also be a vote of confidence in his government.

I don’t see how there won’t be a major reshuffle

Questions were raised over whether he would stick with the reforms as left-wingers said the record abstention rate in the town hall vote showed that working-class voters wanted Hollande to return to abandon the pact.

“Don’t be afraid to abandon this path,” said an open letter to Hollande posted on the website of Paris Socialist senator Marie-Noelle Lienemann.

“Job creation comes from a re-launch of public investment and consumption,” it said, urging Hollande to end a freeze on public sector salaries, raise the minimum salary and pensions.

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