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France: the politics of presidential candidate Jean-Pierre
Chevènement
By Marianne Arens and Françoise Thull
15 February 2002
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The campaign for the forthcoming presidential election in France
has been under way since the end of January. The first round of
the election is to take place on April 21, followed by the second
round on May 5. Several weeks later, in June, the members of the
new parliament will be elected.
The two main contenders are incumbent President Jacques Chirac
(Gaullist, RPR) and Prime Minister Lionel Jospin (Socialist Party).
While Chirac only this week officially declared his candidature,
and Jospin apparently intends to wait until the last moment to
launch the active phase of his campaign, a third man
has been making a name for himself since SeptemberJean-Pierre
Chevènement, Jospins former minister for the interior.
At the moment, surveys indicate that Chevènement has a
popularity rating of 14 percent, putting him closely behind Jospin
and Chirac.
The media are according Chevènement an unusual amount
of attention, referring to him as Che (after Che Guevara)
and talking of his winter campaign. In his organisation,
the Republican Pole ( pôle républicain), Chevènement
is uniting supporters of the extreme right, including monarchists
and former followers of Le Pen and Pasqua, nationalists from the
Gaullist, socialist and Stalinist camps, and former pseudo-Trotskyists,
like Fançois Morvan, an erstwhile leading member of the
Communist Revolutionary League ( Ligue communiste révolutionnaire
LCR).
Like all the French candidates, Chevènement is courting
the favour of the anti-globalisation movement, Attac. Charles
Josselin, a long-serving Socialist Party (SP) politician and Jospins
minister for overseas development, commented cynically: Back
in the days of the SFIO [forerunner of the SP], it was said that
you could win Congress by pandering to the left. Id have
nothing against this presidential election being won with the
same tactics ( Le Figaro, January 1, 2002).
It is significant that the opening of this years French
election campaign took place not in Paris, but in Brazils
Porto Alegre. Apart from 40,000 opponents of globalisation, a
jet-setting group of French candidates made the pilgrimage to
Brazil for the opening of the World Social Summit, the alternative
event to the World Economic Forum in New York. Among them were
to be found not only six leading representatives of the Socialist
Party, the Greens presidential candidate Noël Mamère
and the Pabloite LCR candidate Olivier Besancenot, but also Serge
Lepeltier, the general secretary of Chiracs Gaullist movement.
Chevènement boasted that he was a leader of the anti-globalisation
movement because he had also been there last year.
Who is Jean-Pierre Chevènement?
Chevènement has played an important role in French politics
for over 30 years. At the Congress of Epinay in 1971 he helped
François Mitterrand secure leadership of the Socialist
Party in what amounted to a surprise coup. Chevènement
had already been responsible for drawing up the partys programme.
After Mitterrands election victory in 1981, he was several
times minister in a Socialist Party-led cabinet. He changed the
name of his own organisation, CERES, to Socialism and Republic.
Over the years, the socialism faded away, while the
republica euphemism for French nationalismcame
increasingly to the fore.
Chevènement has resigned from ministerial posts on three
occasions, and each time the resignation had to do with his championing
of French nationalism. His first resignation in 1983 was a protest
against the political change of course undertaken by Mitterrand,
who reversed the nationalisation programme implemented in 1981
and devoted himself increasingly to European integration. The
second occurred in January 1991 in protest against Frances
subordination to the US during the Gulf War. His third resignation,
in the summer of 2000, was occasioned by Jospins project
of limited autonomy for Corsica, which Chevènement opposed
as a violation of the sovereignty of France and a step towards
the regionalisation of Europea process he has loudly opposed.
A long-time adversary of the euro, he has recently been forced
to bite the bullet and accept the introduction of the common European
currency.
In the autumn of 1992, Chevènement left the Socialist
Party and founded the Movement of Citizens ( Mouvement des
Citoyens MDC). In 1993 he stated in its programme: The
MDC assumes that the social question cannot be separated from
the national question. The issue of the nation should not be left
to the right and even less so to the extreme right. The
founding of the MDC was Chevènements answer to the
French governments support of the Treaty of Maastricht and
European integration.
However, his anti-Americanism is even more pronounced than
his opposition to European integration. As France is incapable
of asserting itself against the US alone, he has been forced to
come to terms with the European project. Discussing his ideas
about relations with America in an interview with the newspaper
LExpress last year, he declared: I am for a
European Europe that is capable of managing its own affairs. The
United States has other things to do in this world! Today Europe
has a reasonable chance of gradually attaining a certain degree
of autonomy in relation to the US if we can, for example, organise
the Euro zone properly and if we allow ourselves a minimum of
defence options in order to guarantee security in our territories
and on our borders (November 23, 2000).
This stance did not hinder him from supporting the US in its
war on terrorism after September 11. In that matter,
Chevènement was less concerned with solidarity with the
American government than with pursuing Frances interests
in the strategic battle for the worlds raw materials.
Chevènement welcomes support from all quarters. He has
declared: I call on all Frenchmen and French women, those
who understand the principles of republicanism ... to gather round
me. And I wont be asking anyone where he comes from.
This also applies to the 81-year-old Pierre Poujade, who decided
to support Chevènement in November. In 1953, Poujade founded
an extreme right-wing movement of shopkeepers, craftsmen and farmers,
the UDCA, which organised a tax boycott. In 1956, he helped Jean-Marie
Le Pen, the current fascist leader of the National Front, to gain
a seat in parliament.
Polarisation of society
Chevènements candidature is a sign of the profound
tensions within French society. His Republican Pole constitutes
an attempt to gather together the traditional middle classes that
have always played a major role in French politics and are now
being crushed by globalisation, European integration and social
polarisation. This is the only way to explain the motley range
of support he receives, from the ultra-right to former left-wingers.
He is receiving support from all sides, wrote the
newspaper Le monde, particularly from the right47
percent of his potential voters consider themselves not to be
left-wing (December 25, 2001).
Medef, the employers association, is traditionally on
the side of the Gaullists. It supports European integration and
the introduction of the euro, and is forcefully intervening in
election issues with the aim of dismantling the welfare state
and reducing the living standards of French workers.
In Lyon on January 15, Medef Chairman Baron Ernest-Antoine
Seillière, fuming about the many problems obstructing
growth and prosperity, incited representatives of the business
community as follows: How infuriating it is for us to see
our society being so held back, right at the moment when all our
European partners have chosen the path of adapting to the modern
world and are really getting under way!
Seillière is demanding the abolition of the 35-hour
week, the introduction of a modern taxation policy ... that
allows every businessman to work with the same economic weapons
as his foreign competitors, social renewal (
refondation sociale, i.e., the smashing of the welfare
state), and the right of firms to reach wage agreements without
the participation of trade unions.
During its frontal attack on the Jospin government in mid-January,
Medef received backing from the Constitutional Council, the highest
state body and the one whose decisions are incontestable. It ruled
that several important decisions of the Jospin government were
unconstitutional and thus invalid.
First it declared an article in the new Law for Social
Modernisation, prohibiting dismissals from employment under
certain conditions, to be inconsistent with entrepreneurial
freedom. Then the court refused to give its consent to Jospins
Corsican policy, declaring independent legislative competence
for the Corsican parliamentthe core requirement for limited
Corsican autonomyto be incompatible with the French constitution.
Jospin, currently governmental head of a coalition of five
parties considered to be left of centre (the Socialist Party,
the Greens, the Communist Party, the MDC citizens movement and
the Party of the Radical Left), has largely exhausted the trust
that helped him so surprisingly assume power in 1997, following
the mass strikes of 1995. He has betrayed his election promises
and political projects one after the other in order to accommodate
his policies to the interests of the business world. Increasing,
poverty and social polarisation have angered sections of the population
that had initially supported him, and turned them against his
policies of privatisation, social service cuts and rearmament.
However, Jospins main rival candidatethe Gaullist
Jacque Chiracis finding it difficult to take advantage of
this situation because he is embroiled in numerous corruption
scandals. Surveys currently show his popularity to be sinking,
and many of those questioned rate his credibility at near zero.
Chirac did manage to shake off the bothersome examining magistrate,
Eric Halphen, who led investigations into his affairs and those
Jean Tiberi, Chiracs successor as mayor of Paris. Last month
Halphen resigned his position, claiming he and his family felt
threatened. But with the recent return to France of Didier Schuller,
a key figure in the Gaullists corruption affairs, the scandals
appear to be catching up with Chirac again.
Many former leading Gaullist politicians, such as former premiers
Edouard Balladur and Alain Juppé, have rushed to Chiracs
aid. One section of the rival conservative party, UDF, even decided
to support Chirac in the first ballot instead of their partys
own candidate. Philippe Séguin, who distanced himself from
Chirac two years ago, has returned to the party. But he warned
that the RPR could wither into a purely presidential party, that
it was surrendering the issue of the Republic far
too much to other groups and parties, and was running the danger
of neglecting the interests of the business community.
Coming onto the scene as the man of the nation,
Chevènement likes to define himself as neither right-wing
nor left-wing. He represents those sections of the French
bourgeoisie and middle class who regard both European integration
and the US alliance with scepticism.
In line with the tradition of the French bourgeoisie, Chevènement
now invokes the Republic. At the same time he is exploiting
all the opportunities thrown his way and trying to give a progressive
gloss to his chauvinism by adapting himself to the anti-globalisation
movement.
See Also:
France
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