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Right wing wins solid majority in French legislative election
Record abstention reflects popular disaffection
By David Walsh
11 June 2002
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The right-wing parties, principally the Gaullist-led Union
for a Presidential Majority (UMP) of Jacques Chirac, won a substantial
victory in the first round of the French legislative elections
June 9, a vote marked by a record abstention and a further collapse
of support for the Communist Party.
In Sundays voting the parliamentary right received some
43 percent of the total, including 33.3 percent for the UMP and
4.8 percent for the Union for French Democracy (UDF) of François
Bayrou. The UMP is expected to emerge from the second round next
Sunday with anywhere from 370-419 seats and the UDF with 12-27.
Chiracs UMP coalition of right-wing parties, therefore,
is expected to muster an absolute majority in the 577-seat National
Assembly.
Under the French electoral system, legislative candidates who
receive less than 50 percent of the vote and more than 12.5 percent
of the total number of registered voters in a given district (which,
in yesterdays voting, meant approximately 20 percent of
the actual vote) can enter the second, deciding round. This will
be held June 16.
The Socialist Party (SP), the majority party in the previous
Plural Left coalition government, maintained its percentage
of the first round vote, at 24.1 percent (compared with 23.8 percent
in the first round in 1997), but is expected to lose at least
a third of its 248 seats in the National Assembly because it will
have far fewer votes coming to it in the second round from voters
of its coalition partners and because the right-wing has consolidated
itself to a certain extent. Under interim party leader François
Hollande, the SP ran a dispirited, aimless campaign, which generated
little interest among the general public.
The French Communist Party (CP) continued its historic decline,
obtaining only 4.8 percent of the vote (1.2 million), compared
with 9.8 percent (2.5 million) in the 1997 first round. Party
leader Robert Hue faces a run-off with an UMP candidate in his
district in the suburbs north of Paris, and other incumbent CP
deputies (35 in the last National Assembly) face possible or likely
defeat. The French Stalinists are expected to win between 8 and
17 seats. At its height of support, the CP won 22.5 percent of
the vote in the first round of the 1967 legislative election,
or nearly five times its present share of the vote.
The newspaper Libération commented: After
the pitiable European [election results] in 1999, the municipal
catastrophe in 2002 and a presidential calamity seven weeks ago,
leaving the partys finances drained, the CP has not yet
reached bottom. Le Figaro wrote: The CP could
lose any foothold whatsoever in the majority of French cities
and regions. The collapse of French Stalinism, for decades
one of the chief instruments for subordinating the working class
to the French bourgeoisie, has far-reaching implications.
The extreme right National Front (NF) of Jean-Marie Le Pen
experienced a reversal of fortunes. After Le Pens breakthrough
in the first round of the presidential election in April, when
he received 16 percent of the vote, it was predicted that his
party would achieve a substantial result in the first round of
the parliamentary vote, with perhaps 200 of its candidates proceeding
to the second. In the event, the NF received only 11.3 percent
(as opposed to 15.3 percent in the first round in 1997) and is
expected to have only 37 of its candidates make it through to
the June 16 run-off, as opposed to 134 in 1997.
Two of the parties of the so-called far left, the Ligue Communiste
Révolutionnaire (LCR) and Lutte Ouvrière (LO), saw
their vote totals decline from their results in the first round
of the presidential election in April, despite running far more
candidates than ever before. The LCR received 320,000 votes for
its candidates (1.3 percent), while LO collected some 304,000
(1.2 percent). The Parti des Travailleurs (PT) of Pierre Lambert
obtained 81,600 votes.
The three self-styled Trotskyist parties collected 2.8 percent
of the vote, as opposed to 10.4 percent in the first round of
the presidential election. In the first round of the legislative
election in 1997, the far left won 2.6 percent of
the total.
In terms of actual votes, the governmental right gained some
two million votes more than 1997, its gains coming at the expense
of the far right and the official left. Sections of middle-class
voters, who five years ago turned to Lionel Jospin and his coalition
partners in the hope that the Plural Left would improve social
conditions, in this election expressed their disappointment by
voting for the Chirac camp, which promised political stability
and law-and-order.
A record abstention
Some 35 percent of the population abstainedmaking those
who failed to cast a ballot the largest single political bloc.
This massive abstention rate is one of the most politically telling
aspects of the June 9 vote.
Despite a record number of candidates, supposedly offering
every variety of political alternative, nearly 14 out of 39 million
French voters stayed away from the polls. Chiracs grouping,
which will possess an overwhelming majority in the National Assembly,
was chosen by less than one-quarter of the eligible voters.
The abstention has a definite class character according to
the pollsters. Fifty-eight percent of those 18-24 and 54 percent
of those 25-34 abstained, along with 53 percent of university
students, 51 percent of the unemployed, 45 percent of workers
and 43 percent in intermediary professions. On the
other hand, only 21 percent of artisans and shopkeepers, 25 percent
of the self-employed, 20 percent of retired people, 26 percent
of farmers and 33 percent of those in the liberal professions
and management stayed away from the polls.
The abstention rate reflects the deep level of political disaffection
and alienation felt by wide layers of the population.
It is a remarkable fact that two records were established in
this election: the greatest number of candidates and the highest
rate of abstention. Le Figaro commented: The confrontation
of these two figures ... almost mathematically provides the physiognomy
of the first round.
But what is this physiognomy? The French population had for
ten days been inundated with the campaign materialsleaflets,
posters, advertisementsof more than 8,400 candidates, an
average of 15 candidates per voting district. Yet the level of
political interest sagged in inverse relation to the proliferation
of candidates. Campaign meetings, of right, left and far
left candidates, were poorly attended; the election barely
made itself felt in the daily activities of the masses, or in
everyday conversations.
Not one of the political formations or candidates offering
themselves in the French election, including the so-called far
left, presented a program that corresponded to the elementary
social needs and interests of the mass of the populationfor
decent jobs, better living standards and improved working conditions.
The various parties, representing exclusively the ruling elite
or sections of the middle class, showed themselves to be indifferent
to the growing social inequality in France; to the growth of temporary
and part-time labor, to the rising number of families barely able
to make ends meet, to chronic unemployment, particularly among
the youth, to the growing misery in working class neighbourhoods.
A commentator in Le Monde wrote that the most
disturbing aspect of the presidential and legislative double-vote
this spring is that a full third of French people
feel excluded from both the present system of political
representation and the programs offered to them.
The newspaper continued: They expressed this during the
presidential election by voting, more than a third of them, for
candidates denouncing in one way or another the governmental candidates,
they repeated this June 9 by staying way from the polls in massive
numbers.
The profound and widespread alienation of broad sections of
the population and the sweeping electoral victory of the right
wing constitute an indictment of the governmental leftabove
all, the Socialist Party and the Communist Party. The upsurge
of working class struggle against the government of Prime Minister
Alain Juppé in the mid-1990s brought down his right-wing
regime and eventually brought to power the Socialist led coalition
of Lionel Jospin. Whatever hopes may have existed that Jospin
would address the most pressing ills of French society were long
ago dashed.
The SP coalition government proved itself to be no more than
the administrator of the interests of big business. It saw its
main task as the subordination of the working class to the plans
of French capital to find new markets, resources and avenues for
profit through the integration of France into the European Union.
The Stalinist CP, which supplied cabinet ministers to the Plural
Left coalition government and trailed behind Jospin, has deservedly
been abandoned by many of those who still had illusions that there
was a difference between the two left partners.
The April-May days
A variety of commentators have expressed astonishment that
the mobilization of late April and May 1, when several
million people filled the streets of Paris and other French cities
to protest against the extreme right, has been translated into
large-scale abstention and the electoral victory of Chirac. An
article in Le Monde observed: Strange election. Strange
Sunday. As though the France of June was not that of May.... Seven
weeks only, and here is France; more abstentionist than ever,
gripped by doubt: what remains of the April-May days?
This is petty-bourgeois political blindness. The process is
not so mysterious. The April 21 presidential vote contained a
large element of protest against the political establishmentboth
left and right. Some 16 percent voted for Le Pen, 10 percent for
the far left, and 30 percent abstained. Thus, half of the registered
voters rejected the government parties of left and right.
In the immediate aftermath of the April 21 vote, which unexpectedly
resulted in the exclusion of Jospin and a presidential runoff
between the candidate of the official right, Chirac, and the candidate
of the neo-fascist far right, Le Pen, protests erupted amongst
the youth over the presence of the racist, anti-immigrant NF leader
in the second round.
Fearful that this mobilization might get out of hand and threaten
the existing political framework, the political and media establishment,
operating primarily through the left and far left
parties, worked to channel the anti-Le Pen movement into a vote
for Chirac. The incumbent presidentmired in corruption scandals
and facing criminal indictment if voted out of officewas
portrayed as the embodiment and defender of Republican values.
The Le Monde columnists seem to forget that the predominant
slogan of the massive May 1 demonstrations was Vote Chirac.
Having exerted themselves ardently in the second round of the
presidential campaign for two weeks on behalf of Chirac, a reactionary
career politician who had run a right-wing, law-and-order campaign,
the SP and CP turned to the voters in the legislative elections
and asked for their support against the Gaullist leader. But their
campaign for Chirac had produced definite consequences.
On the one hand, it rehabilitated or partially rehabilitated
the incumbent presidentwho had only received 19 percent
of the vote in the first round of the presidential electionin
the eyes of certain members of the public, who accordingly voted
for his party. On the other hand, the coming together of the entire
spectrum of French political figures and parties behind Chirac
deepened the hostility and cynicism of many. They felt, rightly,
that the establishment was ganging up on them once again and forcing
Chirac down their throats. Their response was to stay home June
9.
The far left
The parties of the so-called far left share major
responsibility for the present political impasse. The LCR joined
the pro-Chirac camp, casuistically arguing that it was not campaigning
for Chirac, but only against Le Pen. Its presidential
candidate, Olivier Besancenot, publicly declared prior to the
second round of the presidential election that he was voting for
Chirac.
Lutte Ouvrière took an equivocal position, first rejecting
abstention, then calling for individual abstention, finally calling
for a blank or spoiled ballot. Their response was passive, apologetic
and defensive. Insofar as LO failed to appeal openly for a Chirac
vote, the organization came under fire from the media, the CP
and other elements within the Plural Left. Intimidated
by this hostility, Lutte Ouvrière retreated. On May Day,
given the opportunity to address hundreds of thousands, LO made
no serious attempt to distribute leaflets or otherwise advance
an alternative strategy to supporting Chirac.
What is not done is sometimes more important than what is done.
The so-called Trotskyists of the LCR, LO and PT were
called upon to tell the working class the truth: that a choice
between Chirac and Le Pen was no choice at all, but rather the
effective disenfranchisement of the working people. An active,
aggressive campaign for a boycott of the second round of the presidential
election was on the order of the day.
The World Socialist Web Site and the International Committee
of the Fourth International, in an open letter to the three organizations
(See, No to Chirac and
Le Pen! For a working class boycott of the French election: An
open letter to Lutte Ouvrière, Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire,
and Parti des Travailleurs) proposed a specific course
of action. The WSWS argued that an active campaign for a working
class boycott would contribute powerfully to the political reorientation
and education of workers, youth and students looking for an alternative
to the establishment parties.
A boycott would have demonstrated that it was possible and
necessary for the working class to adopt a position independent
of the bourgeois establishment, its media and its politicians.
It would have strengthened the working class for the intensified
attacks it was bound to face, whichever bourgeois factionleft
or righteventually formed the next government. It would
have pointed the way toward the development of a genuinely independent
party of the working class. And it would have helped clarify workers
and youth on the historical and political roots of Stalinism and
social democracy, and fuelled interest in a genuinely socialist
and internationalist program of struggle.
To mount such a campaign was in the power of the LO, the LCR
and PT. They had received a combined mandate of nearly three million
votes, expressing opposition to both the official left and right-wing
camps. The unprecedented vote for parties calling themselves Trotskyist,
combined with the massive abstention, indicated a powerful reservoir
of support for a working class boycott. How large a response such
a campaign won could be determined only in the course of a struggle
for it. But whatever the immediate response, it would have been
a positive step that strengthened the political position of the
working class as a whole.
All three organizations ignored or rejected this appeal. Insofar
as their representatives addressed the question of a boycott directly,
they rejected it on the grounds that the relationship of
forces was not favourable to such a course of action. They
forgot, as centrist tendencies always do, that a socialist political
partys own activity is part of this relationship,
and if consciously and systematically directed, can change it.
Above all, LO, the LCR and PT rejected the call for a boycott
because to fight for such a course of action would have brought
them into conflict with the bureaucracies of the Communist Party
and Socialist Party, as well as the leaderships of various middle
class protest movements, with whom they have over decades developed
the closest relations. This they were unwilling and unable to
do.
The vacuum of leadership
The failure of all the organizations that once claimed or still
claim to represent the interests of the working class has produced
a large majority for the right-wing Gaullist forces. This vacuum
of leadership also creates the conditions in which the pseudo-populist
demagogues of the ultra-right National Front will continue to
find a hearing among the most disaffected and oppressed.
The government of Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, Interior
Minister Nicolas Sarkozy and Finance Minister Francis Mer, presided
over by Chirac, will now set to work. The position of French capitalism
demands it. To mount serious opposition to their rivals within
Europe and to seriously contest the insatiable appetite of American
imperialism, the French ruling elite must exact enormous sacrifices
from its own working population.
The French bourgeoisie has been somewhat coy, for political
reasons, in spelling out the program it would like to see imposed.
An article June 6 in Britains Financial Times was
not so circumspect. It suggested that the incoming UMP government
would have a historic opportunity over the next five years
to carry out the kind of economic reforms successive French governments
of the right have failed to implement.... [Finance Minister Mer]
hopes to regenerate investment confidence by easing employment
overheads, loosening the rules on youth employment and allowing
greater flexibility for overtime to offset the effects of the
35-hour week, notably for smaller businesses.
Privatisationan emotive wordhas not been
mentioned during the general election campaign. But plans to sell
state assets will become an important signal of intent over the
coming months.... The pay-as-you-go state-run pensions system
is unsustainable without both extending the contribution period
and raising the retirement age beyond 60. Yet before any change
is made, the government first has to address the generous pension
provision made for public sector employees. The unions have promised
a battle.
The French ruling elite views the election result with some
degree of smugness and satisfaction. It was easily able to out-maneuver
the reformists and Stalinists, as well as their left
appendages, and organize a majority for itself in the National
Assembly. A major social confrontation is inevitable. For the
working class, the decisive question in the next round of struggles
will be ridding itself of the worthless old leaderships and reorganizing
itself on the basis of an international socialist perspective.
See Also:
The French Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
defends its opportunism
[10 June 2002]
An interview with Olivier Besancenot,
candidate of the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
[10 June 2002]
Interview with a member of
the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire of France, and comment
by David Walsh
[14 May 2002]
An interview with Lutte Ouvrière
leader Arlette Laguiller, and comment by Peter Schwarz
[10 May 2002]
Opportunism in practice: the
response of French left groups to the presidential election
[6 May 2002]
The left and the French presidential
election:
An exchange of letters on the politics of Lutte Ouvrière
[4 May 2002]
No to Chirac and Le Pen! For
a working class boycott of the French election: An open letter
to Lutte Ouvrière, Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire,
and Parti des Travailleurs
[29 April 2002]
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