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French President Chirac appoints new government with right-wing
agenda
By Peter Schwarz
17 May 2002
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The French constitution imparts powers to the president that
are unique in Europe. On May 5, the Gaullist candidate Jacques
Chirac was confirmed as president with a large majority thanks
to the support of Frances Plural Left partiesthe
Socialist Party, the Communist Party and the Greens. Now he is
systematically using the powers accorded to him by the constitution
to strengthen his position.
In the final and decisive round of voting between Chirac and
the neo-fascist Jean-Marie Le Pen, the Plural Left parties, which
had formed the outgoing government under Prime Minister Lionel
Jospin, called for a vote for the incumbent president, arguing
that this was the only way to defend the Fifth Republic and democracy.
Now, Chirac, is using his re-election to erect a regime that has
more in common with a Bonapartist dictatorship than a democracy.
He is seeking powers previously possessed only by his role model,
Charles de Gaulle. In this way he hopes to carry out the type
of attacks against the working class that led to the fall of previous
French governments.
Immediately after his re-election, Chirac exercised his legal
right as president to name at his own discretion a new head of
government and new cabinet. He appointed a conservative prime
minister and chose a collection of right-wing ministers who can
govern the country on an interim basis without the agreement of
parliament (still legally controlled by the coalition of left
parties) until new legislative elections are held on June 9 and
June 16. According to the constitution, the president has the
right to simply name the head of government, who then appoints
his ministers, who in turn are ratified by the president. In a
break with common practice, however, Chirac has himself taken
charge of selecting the cabinet ministers.
All the key posts in the governmentthe Interior, Foreign,
Defence, Social and Justice ministrieshave been filled by
close associates of Chirac. The Economics Ministry, which is responsible
for finance and industry, is to be led by the manager of a steel
company and representative of the employers federation,
Medef.
The prime minister, Jean-Pierre Raffarin, is a member of the
Liberal Democrats. He has been appointed as a symbol of moderation
to lure supporters of the former governing majority. Of the 28
ministers and state secretaries, 12 belong to the Gaullist RPR,
6 to the centrist UDF, and 5 to the Liberal Democrats (DL). Five
are independents.
The composition of the new government serves a number of purposes.
The first and most important is to ensure a majority for the right
wing in the run-up to the legislative elections. A number of ministers
have been appointed exclusively with the aim of attracting voters
from the former governing majority as well as from the camp of
Len Pens National Front.
As president, Chirac is responsible for French foreign policy.
If he succeeds in obtaining his own governing majority in the
legislative elections, he will also be in a position to determine
domestic policies. Unlike the US, where the constitution gives
the Congress broad powers to serve as a counterweight to the president,
the French National Assembly has far more limited authority.
Chirac has also used the formation of the new government to
sort out his own camp. His supporters have been rewarded, and
his rivals ditched. From the parties on the right that traditionally
vie for power with the Gaullists, i.e., the UDF and DL, he has
mainly chosen politicians who supported him in the recent election
campaign.
For example, the new head of government, Raffarin, called for
a vote for Chirac in the first round of the presidential election
instead of backing the Liberal Democratic candidate, Alain Madelin,
even though Raffarin is himself vice-chairman of the DL. Raffarin
also supported the new grouping called into being by Chirac to
support his candidacyUMP (Union for a Presidential Majority
)which brought together all of the right-wing bourgeois
parties to seek a parliamentary majority for Chirac in the upcoming
legislative vote.
Chirac has sought to achieve a fait accompli in the short period
between the presidential and parliamentary elections, when he
is not subject to parliamentary control. He wants to impress the
electorate while implementing measures that cannot be subsequently
reversed.
The new head of government, Raffarin, is regarded as a moderate
and a man of the political centre. His reputation is based on
his support for a corporatist course in the realm of economic
policy. In his first official speech after taking office, he declared
that, together with re-establishing the authority of the state,
his most important working priority was to establish a social
dialogue. He accused the previous government of Jospin of allowing
such a dialogue to collapse.
Raffarin`s notion of social dialogue is close collaboration
between the government, the employers organisations and
the trade unions. Following the catastrophic results for the Socialist
and Communist parties in the presidential elections, the trade
union bureaucracy is more than willing to listen to encouraging
noises from the new government. Facing a dramatic loss of membersless
than 8 percent of all French employees are organised in trade
unionsthe union hierarchy fears for its very existence,
should the government prove unwilling to accept it as a partner.
Marc Blondel, the general secretary of the Force Ouvrière
union, responded immediately to Raffarins offer and made
his own demand for a social dialogue with the government.
All of the other main trade union organisations have indicated
their willingness to engage in government talks with their social
partners.
It is also Raffarins job to counter the broad dissatisfaction
with the remote and corrupt political establishment in Frances
capital city. The 54-year-old president of the region of Poitou-Charentes
is generally credited with being affable and down to earth. In
recent years he has kept his distance from the discredited centre
of national politics and struck up close relations with middle-class
layers in the French countryside. He first held national office
between 1995 and 1997 as minister for small and middle-sized industry,
a post to which he was appointed by Chirac as a reward for supporting
Chirac against Chiracs major rival at the time, Édouard
Balladur.
Alongside Raffarin, two other state secretaries have been appointed
to appeal to moderate voters. The appointment of Tokia Saïfi
to the Environment Ministry marks the first time that the offspring
of a so-called Beur, or Algerian immigrant, has been
included in the national government. In charge of the struggle
against poverty and discrimination is the former head of
the social emergency service in Paris, Dominique Versini.
While Raffarin has been given the task of presenting a liberal
image, the real strongman in the new government is a confirmed
right-winger. The former general secretary of the Gaullists and
close confidante of Chirac, Nikolas Sarkozy, has been appointed
head of an expanded Interior Ministry, with powers far exceeding
those of previous interior ministers.
Originally Sarkozy sought the post of prime minister. He is
so far to the right, however, that his appointment was regarded
as unacceptable to a broad spectrum of the electorate. In 1998,
for example, he agitated in favour of prioritising the allocation
of jobs, social benefits and accommodation to French citizens
at the expense of immigrantsa basic demand of the National
Front.
Sarkozys appointment, together with that of his deputy,
Patrick Devedjian, underscores the narrowness of the differences
between the interim government and the neo-fascists. Devedjian,
a legal advisor to Chirac, was in his youth a member of the fascist
organisation Occident. On January 12, 1967 he took
part in an assault at the University of Rouen on an information
table of the Vietnam Liberation Front. A number of students ended
up in the hospital as a result of beatings administered with the
aid of iron bars. Devedjian was merely fined, while other participants
in the attack ended up in jail. In 1976 Devedjian helped draw
up the legal statutes for the newly founded Gaullist party.
The Foreign Ministry is also in the hands of a confidante of
Chirac. Officially registered as an independent, Dominique Galouzeau
de Villepin formerly served the president as general secretary
in the Elysée palace, and has been one of Chiracs
closest associates for the past 10 years.
The Defence Ministry is to be headed by the former chairman
of the RPR, Michèle Alliot-Marie, who is regarded as Chiracs
right-hand man in the Gaullist party.
The Justice Ministry is to be led by one of the few ministers
with a long record of government office. In the 1990s Dominique
Perben was an official in the governments of Balladur and Alain
Juppé. At that time he was responsible for a number of
laws curtailing trade union rights in the factories and attacking
the conditions of workers in marginal jobs.
The only close associate of Chirac not included in the new
government is Juppé, the luckless prime minister during
the first two years of Chiracs initial presidential term.
Nevertheless, Juppé remains a key figure, feverishly pulling
strings in the background. Should the Gaullists strengthen their
position in the upcoming parliamentary elections, Juppé
is regarded as a possible replacement for Raffarin.
The nomination of Francis Mer as super-minister for economy,
finance and industry is a clear signal to big business. Mer is
a leading representative of the employers federation, Medef,
and was formerly general director of the European steel concern
Arcelor.
As a steel executive, Mer was for 15 years responsible for
the renovation of the steel industry in the region
of Lothring, a process that involved the destruction of 70,000
jobs. He is a close friend of François Bayrou (the candidate
of the UDF, which favours a free-market economic policy),
and the Socialist Party politician Jacques Delors, long-time president
of the European Union Commission, as well as Jean Peyrelevade,
the executive chairman of the Bank Crédit Lyonnais. Mer
is reputed to have a high estimation of Nicole Notat, the general
secretary of the Socialist Party-linked CFDT trade union.
Last year, as the representative of Medef, Mer negotiated a
job training program with the unions that contributed substantially
to the transformation of the unemployed savings scheme Unedic.
This reform was aimed at doing away with the right
of the unemployed to receive financial support from the state.
It was the first step toward the so-called Refondation sociale
introduced by the Jospin government. The continuation of such
reforms, in particular, the aligning of pension and
health schemes to the requirements of the market, is a central
aim of the new government.
An additional priority for the economics minister is to open
up the state-owned energy concern EDF-GDF to private capitala
measure that was already agreed at the recent European Union summit
in Barcelona. In line with the plans of the new economics minister
is the appointment of Roselyne Bachelot as minister for environment
and development. She is a declared advocate of nuclear energy.
Another representative of industry is François Loos,
a counsellor in the Ministry for Youth, Education and Research.
Loos has a background in the chemical industry and was director
of the Rhône-Poulenc factory in Thann-Mulhouse. He will
head the department for research and universities.
Another minister, François Fillon, also has a background
with business ties. His specialtymilitary affairswould
not appear to have prepared him to take up his new responsibilities
in the Ministry for Social Affairs, Labour and Solidarity. However,
as a minister in the government of Juppé in 1996, he oversaw
the privatisation of France Télécom, securing the
agreement of the unions for early retirements.
Little wonder that Medef has expressed enthusiasm for the new
government. According to the organisations leader, de Seillière,
Prime Minister Raffarin is a down-to-earth man with entrepreneurial
experience, and someone prepared to listen. Francis Mer
is splendidly informed on the situation of the French economy
and the necessity to make it competitive. He is aware of the burden
of taxes and deductions that employers are forced to bear.
At its first meeting, on the initiative of Chirac, the new
cabinet agreed an extensive catalogue of measures to be implemented
before the coming parliamentary elections. After the meeting,
Raffarin declared that he and his colleagues were progressing
at a breakneck pace.
At the heart of the agreed measures are issues affecting domestic
security. Immediately after his appointment, Interior Minister
Sarkozy accompanied Parisian police on a night-time patrol of
suburban areas in a show of solidarity with the forces of law
and order. After the cabinet sitting, he announced plans for extensive
legal changes in the spheres of security and justice, due to be
completed by the summer and agreed on by the incoming National
Assembly.
Measures to be implemented immediately include the close collaboration
of police, gendarmes, customs officials, investigative judges
and tax evasion inspectors in the prosecution of organised crime
in suburban areas, and the increased use of the paramilitary CRS,
which up to now had only been used for special operations. The
CRS is to work more closely with the police.
On May 15 the cabinet agreed by decree to subordinate the Council
for Domestic Security (CSI) directly to the president. The CSI,
which includes the interior, defence, justice, economics and finance
ministers, was founded in 1988 by Socialist Party Prime Minister
Michel Rocard, and its mandate was renewed by Jospin in 1997.
It was previously under the control of the prime minister and
constituted a major centre of government power.
Now, under the control of the president, the councils
powers will be considerably expanded. In practical terms the council
now assumes oversight of key areas of domestic policy. According
to the speaker of the new government, the council has the job
of determining key aspects of domestic security policy, coordinating
the work of diverse ministries and overseeing the implementation
of the new security policy. Its status will correspond to the
defence council, which has traditionally been subordinate to the
president and responsible for foreign security issues.
In a further decision, the cabinet agreed to elaborate a draft
law for a 5 percent cut in income tax. It is to be completed in
the next 10 days and passed immediately after the new elections.
Another measure demonstrates how ably the new government is
working to exploit popular opposition to actions taken by the
previous government. Transport and Construction Minister Gilles
de Robien announced a fundamental review of plans for a third
major airport in the vicinity of the capital. These plans had
been pushed through by his predecessor, Jean-Claude Gaissot of
the Communist Party, in the face of considerable opposition from
the population at large, which feared the resulting increase in
noise and pollution.
The new government has succeeded in winning support from circles
usually associated with the left. The newspaper Le Monde,
which, since the period of François Mitterrand, has tended
to support the Socialists, has expressed high praise for the government.
Raffarins government cuts a fine figure, the newspaper commented,
and declared that the nomination of the independent ministers
Mer (Economy and Finance) and Ferry (Education) were particular
coups for Chirac. The paper went on to declare that Chirac had
struck a blow against Le Pen with his appointment of a state secretary,
Saïfi, of Algerian origin.
The broad chorus of approval for Chiracs new government
represents a consolidation of all those bourgeois forces that
supported Chirac in the second round of the presidential election.
The new-found unity behind Chirac has less to do, however, with
a rejection of Le Penin many respects the new government,
by beefing up the state, is adapting itself to Le Pens demandsthan
with a fear of the popular anger and discontent reflected in the
massive abstention and the three million votes cast for candidates
claiming to be revolutionary socialists in the first round of
the presidential election.
See Also:
France: Chirac appoints free market
conservative as interim prime minister
[7 May 2002]
Chirac wins French presidency with 82
percent of the vote
Gaullist president backed by Socialist Party, CP, Greens
[6 May 2002]
May Day in France: 1.5 million march
against neo-fascist Le Pen
Socialist Party, unions campaign for Chirac
[2 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]
For a boycott of the French
election
Statement of the International Committee of the Fourth International
[26 April 2002]
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