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MEHRI
MADARSHAHI is the MaximsNews
Paris Correspondent.
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THE
SARKOZY PRESIDENCY UNDER SIEGE: IS ENOUGH REALLY ENOUGH? by MEHRI MADARSHAHI
(MaximsNews Network)
UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com@
U.N./ - 16
March 2008 --
Last
Sunday, in a major electoral test, President Nicolas Sarkozy’s ruling party,
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) scored poorly in the first round of
municipal elections that were held in some 36,000 city, town and village
councils and half of the 96 “départements” in
France.
The
relatively poor results for UMP – despite a high rate of voter participation -
has been interpreted as a “sanctioning” of Sarokozy’s reign, a sign of
disapproval by the French of the slow pace of economic reforms - the highlight
of Mr Sarkozy’s pre-election focus and promises.
These
municipal elections – though local in nature- injected renewed hope to the
Socialist Party as it is poised to take control of major cities after next
Sunday’s run-off elections. Segolene Royal, who was defeated by Sarkozy for
the Presidency in 2007 elections, said that “France
was punishing him for the rising cost of living and all other unfulfilled
promises”.
Following
the Presidential election, scattered protests against Sarkozy continued for a
while in the suburbs of
Paris
(les banlieus), but they did not lead to an outright confrontation with the
authorities. Hundreds of cars were burnt throughout
France and reports of clashes between anti-Sarkozy protesters and police in cities
across France
were wide-spread, but having been an effective Minister of the Interior, Mr Sarkozy managed to instill calm by deploying
massive police forces.
Having
appointed a new Government, led by Francois Fillon and several “ruptured”
Socialist Ministers, e.g. the Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner or Jean-Marie
Bockel, he called parliamentary election and won a clear majority in June/July
2007. This emboldened him to tackle
the most sensitive and politically contentious issue of the 35 hours work week
legislation, to propose tax relief to the rich and to curb union rights. A
symphony of change for some - and pain, if not provocation for others…
The
real confrontation came into the open when he proposed that transport workers
must provide a minimum service during work stoppages that may exceed 8 days. He
also sought to curtail generous early retirement arrangements which granted full
pension rights to the strongly unionized transport and railroad workers retiring
in their mid-50s.
Soon
after, massive and protracted strikes were called by the railroad workers unions
which brought cities and businesses to a standstill. Yet, the President
stayed his course and decided not to engage in any negotiations and the
population had to learn coping with the inconvenience of the situation.
Sarkozy's
inflexibility – or steadfastness – caused him a loss of popularity; his
opponents accused him of bullying or even anti-democratic tactics. The transport
worker strike extended to more than a few weeks and tentative arrangements had
to be secured with union leaders just before the Holiday Season.
President
Sarkozy also took up a potentially damaging battle with the Constitutional
Council (Conseil Constitutionel). This was related to a new law allowing
dangerous criminals to be kept in custody indefinitely. The Council struck from
the new law the inclusion of cases prior to the approval of the law. The
President disagreed and asked for ways to circumvent the ruling. This was
considered an unprecedented challenge and trace-passing by a political figure
into the authority of an important
legal body.
In
a series of sweeping "visionary" statements, the President focused on
France’s relations and defense agreements with
Africa; on religion and social values; and on the need for a new "politics
of civilization". Many quarters considered these initiatives disturbing,
confusing and felt that they represented activism to mask a lack of
progress in improving the French economy and generating new jobs.
French-German
relations also suffered and relations between French and German leaders recently
have hit a low. A Franco-German summit in
Bavaria was at the last moment postponed for three months because of Sarkozy's
"crowded schedule". German Chancellor Merkel was irked by the
President’s style and headlong attempts without consultations to create a
Mediterranean union, which
Berlin
feared would divide and weaken the EU, duplicate the
Barcelona
process and sideline
Israel.
The
so called “Soap Opera-Sarko style of Presidency” has so far been
unprecedented in the French history. Some feel he is often mirroring President
Bush’s style and orientation, particularly in his
"moral thinking, inspired by religious convictions". For that
he won praise of American right-wing press, but at the same time, this has
caused reservations, if not resistance among French intellectuals and the
educated class.
Some
accuse the President of trying to nurture a celebrity image or to become a
look-alike of Hollywood stars by wearing dark eyeglasses and leather jackets,
enjoying yachts or private planes of French business tycoons, making vacations
in retreat homes of super-rich friends, and of course of dating Carla in
Disneyland and then openly exhibiting his love affair in plain view for all to
see.
The
climax was reached when he presented a new First Lady to French public, in an
uncharacteristically low-key ceremony – just a few weeks after his divorce
from his second wife Cecilia. Sarkozy is the first French Head of State to
divorce in office since Emperor Napoleon and only the second to marry in the
Elysee while occupying the highest Office.
And
then, the new First Lady of France has already been married before and has been
romantically linked to, among others, Mick Jagger, Eric Clapton, Donald Trump
and the former (Socialist) French Prime Minister Laurent Fabius. A year ago, in
an interview with Le Figaro magazine, she had opined: "I'm monogamous from
time to time, but I prefer polygamy and polyandry. Love lasts a long time, but
burning desire – two or three weeks."
President
Sarkozy was elected on a promise to restore the moral bearings of
France. Does he possess or has he
demonstrated a model moral authority? In all, Mr Sarkozi acts like a non-self
practicing preacher particularly when he tries to preach to the disenfranchised
and suffering French in the suburbs that “happiness cannot be achieved through
material possessions”.
John
Lichfield wrote in the Independent of 12 February 2008: “Mr. Sarkozy has
become a kind of President "moi", governing with a mirror in one hand,
seeking permanent, public attention and approval. Genres have been confused,
values muddled, conventions trampled, traditions over turned.”
In
the last few weeks, however, events seem to have spun out of the control of a
man who is desperate to appear always in control. Many of the President's
supporters and allies now fear that “the Sarko-style may not be a style but
rather an absence of style; a nouveau-riche vulgarité; a contempt for the
importance of traditions; a belief that the office-holder is more important than
the office”. After a widely publicized incident at the Agricultural Fair,
where the President was caught on camera engaged in an unsavory exchange with a
farmer the camp of the President tries to calm the atmosphere.
Yet,
the sobering results of the recent elections and opinion polls proved that
President Sarkozy and his antics have become a center of controversy. Now,
the real battle will be how best to safeguard French "traditional
values and culture” and to avoid succumbing to the modern world’s rapidly
shifting ethical and moral standards and beliefs.
MehriMadarshahi@MaximsNews.com
Labels:
Mehri Madarshahi,
France, President
Nicolas
Sarkozy,
French Elections,
MaximsNews, MaximsNews
Paris Correspondent
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