A source in the Elysee Palace told the French newspaper Le Monde that Macron does not "baulk" at talking to journalists.
However, "his 'complex thought process' lends itself badly to the game of question-and-answer with journalists," the newspaper was told.
"We thought about what form the speech should take, and the President chose a more stately form," the source explained.
Since the 1970s, French leaders have usually held a news conference on Bastille Day, which commemorates the storming of the Bastille by thousands of Parisians in 1789, who freed political dissidents imprisoned there.
The explanation for the snub was greeted with disbelief by journalists in France.
"I don't understand," Le Monde journalist Olivier Faye tweeted ironically, while Le Journal du dimanche editor Vivien Vergnaud called it "the best excuse of the year."
"This only reinforces the general impression that has been highlighted by all observers: the new President of the Republic, Emmanuel Macron, is so absorbed in presidential duties that he has in some way forgotten that he is a person."
"I think that journalists, especially those of Le Monde, Le Figaro and others — and with them the citizens of France — are able to understand the complexity of the international situation and the world problems that President would like to talk about," Taube said.
"In 2017, a political leader is obliged to speak – simply, precisely, strongly – about the problems he has to face in the name of the French people."
"I think that the French President's strategy is to distance himself from the media and build communication through a picture. I think that he prefers a picture to words, but a picture does not allow you to lead. Words are necessary to lead, and citizens – not the media, but citizens – have the right to expect words from the head of state. Words, not just pictures," Taube said.