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The French Aren’t Thrilled With Their Presidential Candidates Either

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Posted on Mar 6, 2012
Richard Newton (CC-BY)

By William Pfaff

PARIS—In France’s presidential election, which takes place on April 22 and May 6, the incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy is running far behind his challenger, Francois Hollande, in a contest that has more to do with personal character than issues. Sarkozy has always been a man of action rather than theory or ideology, and the French Socialist Party, which Hollande headed for more than a decade, has been intellectually moribund for years.

Hollande’s major challenges to Sarkozy in the campaign thus far include a promise (difficult to fulfill) to renegotiate the latest European growth and stability pact, signed last week. He also promises to hire 60,000 additional teachers (the teachers’ unions have always been faithful supporters of the Socialist Party).

He declares that his personal enemy is “finance.” He has just announced that he wishes to impose a 75 percent tax rate on everything a French citizen earns above a million euros a year.

France has far fewer millionaires than the United States or Britain, but the threat is an incentive to those it still has to leave for London or Geneva, no doubt to the cheers of the poor. Assuming, of course, that Hollande does not back off from this, as he already has done with the promise to hire new teachers, explaining that the total hires would actually be over the five years of his presidential term and will include teachers who would have to be hired anyway to replace those retiring or otherwise leaving.

The teacher promise could ricochet against him because of mounting middle class hostility toward the teacher unions among voters who complain of demoralization, absenteeism and declining standards in the state system, and who recently have made a sharp turn toward private schools. In the current scholastic year, these have been unable to accommodate all of the new applications for places, especially in Paris.

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In the past, private schools were either religious schools or high-pressure cramming institutions for students failing in what traditionally has been an intellectually demanding state system.

They promise coaching to get students through the crucial secondary-school final test, the baccalaureate, the key to higher education in France. These parents are not ready to vote for favors to state teacher unions.

The left in France blames Hollande for having allowed the Socialist Party to promote Dominique Strauss-Kahn as a potential presidential candidate despite his record (known but hushed-up by party leaders and press) as a sexual predator. Hollande has also failed to reform the party. The British, German and Italian Socialists have all faced and survived the ideological crisis of Marxism’s collapse, but among many French Socialists the class war is alive. In the last presidential race, the Socialist candidate, Segolene Royale, scandalized many Socialists who should have been her electoral supporters by her politically incorrect refusal of party shibboleths (notably her proposed boot camps for delinquents, and ending her rallies with a rousing “La Marseillaise”).

She, of course, lost to Sarkozy, but Sarkozy this time looks like he will lose to Hollande (Royale’s estranged longtime “companion” and father of her four children) for equally idiosyncratic reasons, in his case social and intellectual snobbery.

He is the son of a Hungarian immigrant, who abandoned his French wife, daughter of a surgeon. He was schooled as a lawyer rather than attending one of the meritocratic “grandes ecoles,” leading to a high civil-service appointment, from which ambitious middle-class young people transfer effortlessly into politics.

Sarkozy began professional life in the prosperous Paris suburb of Neuilly, eventually became mayor, was made a protege by Jacques Chirac, leader of the political right, and despite falling out with Chirac by supporting a challenger in the next presidential re-election, managed to win a high cabinet post in the final Chirac government. In 2007 he declared his own candidacy for the presidency.

He won, due to his manifest energy and personal magnetism, and quickly ruined his reputation by displaying the characteristics of a parvenue social climber (which he was) through his much-publicized (“bling-bling”) addiction to the company of the rich and famous, and by doubling his presidential salary, announcing his admiration for the United States, taking France back into the NATO military structure, and marrying (as his third wife) a glamorous (and intelligent) beauty, who also was Italian and rich. He thus did all (except the last) that in France was considered socially or politically unacceptable. He wholly lacked the gravity and good manners that the French expected from a president of the Republic.

In the present campaign, he now is playing the immigration card in the hope of picking up right-wing voters from Marine Le Pen of the revived National Front.

He also did a good job in office. He mended many of the social hostilities that had given France its reputation for labor unrest; he initiated a long-overdue reform of the school system as well as a university reform granting institutional autonomy to university presidents. He intervened to stop the absurd war that resulted from Georgia’s attempt to seize disputed territory from Russia. He joined Angela Merkel in pressing the European Union’s members into dealing with the great credit crisis, saving the euro from the speculators.

He launched the French Air Force into Libya to save Benghazi and the rebellion there from Col. Gadhafi, forcing Barack Obama into the war against Obama’s will.

But the French voter has never forgiven him for not being a proper president. They like Hollande better, but not really. By 66 to 68 percent, voters currently say that this presidential campaign offers little hope that France’s problems are going to be solved—whoever it is that wins. They have always been a pessimistic people.


Visit William Pfaff’s website for more on his latest book, “The Irony of Manifest Destiny: The Tragedy of America’s Foreign Policy” (Walker & Co., $25), at www.williampfaff.com.

© 2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


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By Chrisk, March 7, 2012 at 8:05 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

The trouble with pundits parachuting into an election in another country is that
frequently they are clueless as to what is going on and then pass their
ignorance onto their readers. Mr. Pfaff has ably demonstrated his cluelessness
in his remarks about the current French presidential contest. While he rips apart
Francois Hollande, he sort of pooh-poohs the many faux pas of Nicolas Sarkozy
and praises him as a man of action, one who has done a good job in office. And
as far as Mr. Pfaff is concerned, the French public only dislikes him for not
being a “proper” president.
It’s hard to know where to begin and I’ve only been closely following Mr.
Sarkozy’s antics for the past 15 months. Among other things, Mr. Pfaff totally
skipped over the fact that Sarkozy’s administration is one of the most scandal-
plagued in recent times and there are several current investigations that are
taking direct aim at Sarkozy himself, especially one or two concerning how he
has financed his various electoral campaigns, including the one that put him in
Elysee Palace.
Mr. Pfaff writes that Sarkozy has mended a number of the social hostilities that
have given France its reputation for labor unrest. Apparently, Mr. Pfaff paid no
attention to the nationwide rage that occurred in late 2010 when Sarkozy raised
the retirement age. If Mr. Pfaff thinks all is forgotten and forgiven, he better
think again.
Moreover, Sarkozy, who is desperately trying to appeal to the workers he has
dismissed for the last five years, was just caught in a huge lie about the
manufacturing/hiring plans of a company — he insists the company will do so
unconditionally; the company says kinda, maybe, sort of, but only if all the stars
are aligned, etc. He simply has no credibility and loses more every time he
opens his mouth.
As well, people everywhere are royally miffed that he just rammed through a
new tax on social benefits that will hit hard the middle class and poor in the
name of “responsibility.” At the same time, Sarkozy and the rest of the right are
screaming bloody blue murder over Mr. Hollande’s 75 percent tax, which will
impact no more than about 3,500 people nationwide. It’s little wonder why he’s
referred to as President Bling-Bling.
As far as his European Union policies are concerned, all he has done is march
lock-step with the other conservative leaders there (particularly Mrs. Merkel),
who believe, just like all good U.S. Republicans, that anybody who is not rich
should be paying more, while those who are rich should be paying less, if
anything at all. And they are all busily bailing out their banker and speculator
friends at the expense of everyone else — in the name of “responsibility.” Sound
familiar?
As Mr. Pfaff correctly notes, the French do tend to be pessimistic. However, if
they are pessimistic about the future, it’s mostly because they see the country
being boxed in by outside forces beyond their control — much like peoples and
countries everywhere. As for the election, though, the French electorate seems
quite ready to do something within their control — deliver a thorough thumping
to Mr. Sarkozy, based on merit.

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By HivanH, March 7, 2012 at 6:57 am Link to this comment

French politics appear to be as sidetracked and diverted from real social issues as Americans. Too much emotion, too much religion, too much paranoid jingoism and not enough humanity.  If it is so bad that even the French are bored with it? That’s pretty bad. Sounds very much like a contest between Gingrich and Santorum.

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By Rehmat, March 6, 2012 at 6:50 pm Link to this comment

I wonder why?

Two of them are Jewish - while third an anti-Muslim, anti-immigration and pro-Israel White supremacist.

French presidential election is due in April. According to an Ifop poll results released on Tuesday Socialist candidate Francois Hollande leading with 29% followed by current French president Nicolas Sarkozy (23%) and Front National’s Marine Le Pen (18%). Both Francois Hollande and Sarkozy are reportedly Jewish. Francois Hollande replaced the disgraced former Jewish head of IMF Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

Francois Hollande dumped his former common-law (live-in together) wife, Marie-Segolene Royal (born 1953) not long ago. She, as Socialist candidate was defeated by Nicolas Sarkozy in 2007 presidential election. Both have four children from their relationship. Currently, Francois Hollande has a new girlfriend, Valérie Trieweiler, a political journalist.

The Front National (FN) is an anti-Muslim, anti-immigration White Supremacist party. It was founded by Jean-Marie Le Pen in 1972 and was leader of the party until 2011 when he passed-on the leadership to his daughter Marine Le Pen. Jean-Marie Le Pen is considered a Holocaust-denier by Jewish groups based on 1987 TV interview in which he questioned Holocaust by calling the gas chambers being a “detail” or a “minor point” of WW II.

Marine Le Pen has brought several changes to FN and even has leaned toward Islamophobia to attract Jewish votes. She recently sent her deputy Louis Aliot to Israel in order to drum up support among more than 70,000 French Jewish voters (dual citizen) living in Israel.

Though the daughter has distanced herself from her father’s remarks – the CRIF, the umbrella Jewish organization of France has not forgiven her. The Jewish leaders fear that Marine Le Pen might change her stand after winning the election and distance France from Israel.

Jews are less than 500,000 (on decrease since 1970 when they’re 530,000) among 65 million total French population. French Muslim religious community is the largest in Europe (over 7 million).

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2012/01/27/france-old-zionist-hatred-never-dies/

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By Johnny Canuck, March 6, 2012 at 5:25 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Say what you will about the French, patience is a virtue. Au revoir.

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