Besides appearing on a French radio station, Sébastien Laye ruffled feathers at LinkedIn as he tried to solve a central riddle (merci pour l'InstaLien, Sarah):
Why does Trump bother the elites in France and in Europe so much?
As an American citizen myself, and considering that these largely outdated and bankrupt élites in France had nothing legitimate to say on the subject, I asked myself this question.
To take France as an example, French graduates of the
École Nationale d'Administration (l'ENA) have feared Trump since his re-election:1. Trump is the antithesis of their mental software
ENA graduates are trained in
technocracy, norms, collective thinking, and risk avoidance.Trump embodies:
• Absolute individual will,
• Action without safety nets,
• Personal judgment above consensus,
• A logic of brutal disruption.Whether you like that or not, they fear him because they can
neither anticipate nor decode his policies. It eludes their map of power.2. Trump reveals their strategic impotence
The French state, over-administered, is slow, procedural, and inflexible.
Trump, for his part, acts like a pure capitalist actor:
• He redefines the framework (NATO, WTO, various trade agreements, etc…),
• He disregards institutions when they don't suit him,
• He confronts France with its strategic marginalization:
"What weight does Paris have in the face of a Trumpian Washington?"
His re-election underscores their dependence on an equilibrium they no longer control.
3. Trump shatters their illusion of a multilateral worldThe ENA graduates live in the De Gaulle-Mitterrand legacy of
"enlightened multilateralism," where France plays a moral role above its real power.Trump, by demolishing this game (UN, COP, UNESCO, Paris Agreements, etc), exposes the fragility of their diplomatic storytelling. He desecrates French soft power—in action, without asking permission.
4. He speaks to the people – not the elites
The ENA graduates have rarely boots on the ground,
are often out of touch with the real people.Trump, despite his billionaire status, understands popular anger and speaks directly to the crowds, without filter or perspective. This profoundly destabilizes a French elite who still believe that legitimacy comes from education and abstract reasoning.
5. Trump could impose a new grammar for transatlantic relations
A France accustomed to a certain status quo (tacit American protection,
hushed diplomacy, symbolic place at the UN) is seeing the arrival of a Trump:
• Who haggles over everything,
• Who values might over law,
• Who demands proof of strategic loyalty (as with Israel or Taiwan).This forces the French elite to choose: fall in line or step aside.
In addition, ROF's Sébastien Laye was on La Matinale de Radio Courtoisie telling its listeners, as well as Liselotte Dutreuil and Alexandre de Galzain, not to mention Richard de Seze, that, regarding Donald Trump's tariffs, "The American economy will continue to grow and create jobs. It's better to take the hard decisions now to get results before the 2026 midterm elections."
"L'économie américaine va continuer à croître et créer des emplois. Il vaut mieux faire les choses difficiles maintenant pour avoir des résultats en vue des élections de mi-mandat de 2026"💥 "L'économie américaine va continuer à croître et créer des emplois. Il vaut mieux faire les choses difficiles maintenant pour avoir des résultats en vue des élections de mi-mandat de 2026" #DonaldTrump
— Ligne Droite • La matinale de RC (@Ligne__Droite) April 3, 2025
🗣️ @SebastienLaye, conseiller économique du parti Républicain en France… pic.twitter.com/JykgB6CIQG
En français dans le texte — Sébastien Laye :
Pourquoi Trump dérange t il autant les élites francaises ???? Américain moi-même, et considérant que ces élites largement dépassées et en faillite en France, n'avaient rien à dire de légitime sur le sujet, je me suis posé la question.Also by Sébastien Laye: Trumponomics — What Does It Entail, How Is It Misunderstood, and What Is Trump's Endgame?
Les énarques français craignent Trump depuis sa réélection :
1. Trump est l’antithèse de leur logiciel mental
Les énarques sont formés à la technocratie, à la norme, à la réflexion collective, à l’évitement du risque. Trump, lui, incarne :
• La volonté individuelle absolue,
• L’action sans filets,
• Le jugement personnel au-dessus du consensus,
• Une logique de disruption brutale.
Qu'on aime ou qu'on aime pas.
Ils le craignent parce qu’ils ne peuvent ni l’anticiper ni le décoder. Il échappe à leur cartographie du pouvoir.
2. Trump révèle leur impuissance stratégique
L’État français, suradministré, est lent, procédurier, peu agile.
Trump, lui, agit comme un acteur capitaliste pur :
• Il redéfinit le cadre (OTAN, OMC, accords commerciaux),
• Il méprise les institutions quand elles ne lui conviennent pas,
• Il met la France face à sa marginalité stratégique :
« Que pèse Paris face à un Washington trumpien ? »
Sa réélection souligne leur dépendance à des équilibres qu’ils ne contrôlent plus.
3. Trump fracture leur illusion d’un monde multilatéral
Les énarques vivent dans l’héritage gaullo-mitterrandien du « multilatéralisme éclairé », où la France joue un rôle moral au-dessus de sa puissance réelle.
Trump, en démolissant ce jeu (ONU, COP, Unesco, accords de Paris), expose la fragilité de leur storytelling diplomatique.
Il désacralise le soft power français – en actes, sans demander la permission.
4. Il parle au peuple – pas aux élites
Les énarques sont souvent coupés du terrain, du peuple réel.
Trump, malgré son statut de milliardaire, a compris la colère populaire et s’adresse directement aux foules, sans filtre, sans surplomb.
Cela déstabilise profondément une élite française qui pense encore que la légitimité vient du diplôme et du raisonnement abstrait.
5. Trump pourrait imposer une nouvelle grammaire des rapports transatlantiques
Une France habituée à un certain statu quo (protection américaine tacite, diplomatie feutrée, place symbolique à l’ONU) voit arriver un Trump :
• Qui marchande tout,
• Qui valorise la force sur le droit,
• Qui exige des preuves de loyauté stratégique (comme envers Israël ou Taïwan).
Cela force l’élite française à choisir : s’aligner ou s’effacer.
Sébastien Laye, entrepreneur et conseiller économique du parti américain Républicains en France. Auteur pour Contribuables Associés d’un rapport intitulé La Simplification Administrative : sortir de l'enfer bureaucratique français et Richard de Seze, directeur de la rédaction de Radio Courtoisie.
6 comments:
France has a moral authority? LOL. The post WWII deal is over. Yeah, The US let everyone screw us because you were so poor and we were wealthy. It is over.
The beginnings of cries centuries are the time when people upend the old order. 19th: Napoleon. 20th; The monarchies. 21st: the Deep States. This time the populists are making the State uncomfortable and they are fighting for their
survival.
The Vichy still rule France.
I believe that much of their distress is because, somehow, Trump's 'erratic' behaviors so often bear fruit. If he would just fail, they would feel secure in ignoring him.
Jimbo, please read the entire article. Sébastien is trying explain that the French elites (identically to ours in the US) believe that they, not France, have some sort of moral authority (superiority) endowed by their education and pedigree.
Like our own nearly hereditary US elites, in relation to us (the working stiffs), they are completely out of touch with real French.
France's delusion of grandeur should have ended in WW2! The simple act of allowing DeGaul to "triumphantly liberate" Paris should never have happened! We KNOW who did the liberating!! AND, thanks to the French Failure at Pueblo, college students in the USA have a DRINKING DAY to celebrate the defeat by the Mexicans! Other nations didn't bother trying to collect from MX but the PROUD French went to WAR! Got their butts kicked - AGAIN and viola - Cinco de Mayo!! Oh, and French Fries are not French! Canadian "bacon" is NOT BACON!
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