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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
Chirac wins French presidency with 82 percent of the vote
Gaullist president backed by Socialist Party, CP, Greens
By David Walsh in Paris
6 May 2002
En français | Use this
version to print | Send
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the author
The incumbent president of France, Gaullist leader Jacques
Chirac, has won reelection for a five-year term after defeating
the neo-fascist Jean-Marie Le Pen of the National Front in the
May 5 runoff election, by a margin of approximately 82 to 18 percent
of the vote.
Following the first round of the election April 21, in which
Chirac and Le Pen finished first and second ahead of Socialist
Party (SP) prime minister and presidential candidate Lionel Jospin,
the French political and media establishment, including its official
left wing, carried out a concerted campaign to assure a resounding
victory for Chirac. This campaign, spearheaded by the Socialist
Party, the Communist Party, the Greens and the trade unions, had
an obvious impact. The rate of abstention dropped from nearly
30 percent in the first round to approximately 20 percent in the
second.
Chirac and his supporters immediately attempted to reap political
rewards from their one-sided victory, with an eye to the legislative
elections that take place June 9 and 16. They played on the theme,
handed to them by the official left, that Chirac was now a figure
rising above parties and social classes.
In a statement made only moments after the polls closed and
media experts projected a resounding victory, Chirac adopted a
quasi-Bonapartist posture, declaring that he would apply the mandate
given him in a spirit of openness and harmony, and
promising to pursue the unity of the Republic, the cohesion
of the Nation, the respect for the authority of the State.
He committed himself to announcing the formation of a government
with a mission in a few days time, whose first duty
will be to reestablish the authority of the state in order to
respond to the needs of security [law and order].
Chiracs former prime minister and one of the leading
figures in his Rally for the Republic party (RPR), Alain Juppé
(chased out of office by a mass strike movement of the working
class in the mid-1990s), told the press that the once and future
president of the Republic is the president of all the French
people. His historic responsibility is to bring them together,
to listen to the message addressed to us and to act.
The official left chimed in almost universally with congratulations
for Chirac. François Hollande, the chairman of the Socialist
Party and its interim leader following Jospins retirement
from politics, hailed the vote of the French people who
had massively rejected extremism and intolerance, referring
to the neo-fascist Le Pen.
He continued: In the name of the Socialists, I thank
the French people and congratulate them for this unequivocal victory....
France has rediscovered its true colors and the world has rediscovered
France. Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former minister of finance
in the Jospin government, said that the left has done its
duty and that Le Pen has largely been defeated by
the left.
Robert Hue, head of the French Communist Party, who obtained
only 3.37 percent of the vote as a candidate in the presidential
election, rejoiced profoundly at the defeat of the
extreme right, which he called the only issue in the
second round of the election.
Chirac has been painted by the Socialist Party hierarchy as
a defender of the values of the Republic. In reality,
he is a right-wing career politician, who has resolutely defended
the interests of the French ruling elite for more than three decades.
He is also notoriously corrupt. Only presidential immunity has
prevented him from facing charges that he used hundreds of thousands
of dollars of public money to pay for personal vacations for himself,
his family and his entourage while he was mayor of Paris. Investigators
are also looking into accusations that his city administration
received millions in kickbacks in the 1980s and 1990s, funneling
the cash into his own personal political vehicle, the Rally for
the Republic.
The French left has now helped to create a political conjuncture
in which this thoroughly corrupt and discredited reactionary,
who received the smallest first-round share of the vote of any
incumbent president since the founding of the Fifth Republic in
1958 (19.88 percent), can be presented to masses of people as
their savior and shield against right-wing attacks. This is a
fraud and a lie. Many of those who voted for Chirac may despise
him, but the left has legitimized the reactionary French bourgeois
setup, which will quickly pass over to assaults on workers
jobs, social conditions and democratic rights.
Chirac has considerable powers under the constitution of the
Fifth Republic. The French president, elected for five years,
appoints the prime minister, the head of government, and can dissolve
parliament. He also conducts foreign policy and presides over
cabinet meetings.
The Jospin government will officially resign May 6 and be replaced
by a right-wing interim administration, probably headed by either
Jean-Pierre Raffarin of the Liberal Democratic party or Gaullist
Nicolas Sarkozy, which will serve until the legislative elections
June 9 and 16. If the Chirac camp, running under the rubric of
the Union for a Presidential Majority (UMP), wins a majority in
the 577-seat National Assembly, the right will continue to form
the government. If the Socialist Party or the left parties as
a whole obtain a majority, France could once again undergo a period
of cohabitation, i.e., a president and prime minister
representing different parties.
In the first round of the presidential election, Chirac ran
a right-wing, law-and-order campaign, to which Jospin attempted
to adapt his own campaign. Both largely ignored the enormous social
problems affecting broad sections of the working population, including
chronically high unemployment, stagnating living standards, deteriorating
housing, health care and education, and pervasive economic insecurity.
Le Pen attempted, with considerable success, to take advantage
of the political vacuum left by the rightward shift of the old
workers organizations, exploiting the social grievances,
disillusionment and political disorientation of broad social layers
by making a demagogic, populist-style appeal. He sought to channel
this discontent along nationalist lines, attacking the capitalist
integration of Europe from the right-wing standpoint of French
chauvinism and anti-immigrant racism.
The only response of the establishment parties to the social
crisis was to propose more police and harsher security
measures. During the election campaign Chirac promised to get
tough on crime by setting up a special law-and-order
council, reorganizing and extensively increasing the size of the
police and cracking down on criminal groups. He has
made youthful offenders a particular target, calling for zero
tolerance for crime and eliminating what he calls the impunity
with which offenders supposedly carry out their offences.
In addition to large tax cuts, Chirac is committed to returning
to the attack on the countrys pension and social security
systemalthough he has not spelled out any specific proposalswhich
provoked the mass strikes in 1995.
It is not for nothing that the Mouvement des Entreprises de
France (MEDEF), the big business lobby, came out strongly for
Chirac on April 29, along with some of the biggest capitalists
in the country. Maurice Levy, chief executive officer of Publicis
Groupe, one of the worlds top five advertising and communications
companies, explained that employers should take a very clear
position calling for a vote for Chirac. Michel Pébereau,
chief executive officer of the giant bank, BNP Parisbas, told
Le Monde, Jacques Chirac is the only candidate represented
in the second round who represents the values of freedom, respect
and democracy which are the basis of our society. I will vote
for him. Notwithstanding the democratic phrases, MEDEF made
it clear that Le Pen had to be repudiated above all because of
his opposition to the euro currency and the further economic integration
of Europe under the domination of the transnational banks and
corporations.
The official left has boastfully claimed that its assistance
in reelecting Chirac will moderate the presidents policies
and oblige him to take into consideration wider demands and interests.
If they are speaking of their own positions and privileges, and
in essence, they are, Chirac represents no danger. As far as the
broad masses of the population are concerned, that is another
matter.
Nicolas Sarkozy, one of the prime ministerial hopefuls and
a former secretary general of the RPR, made quite clear that the
Chirac forces intend to go ahead with their reactionary policies
without hesitation. He told Le Figaro in an interview published
April 30: The result of the first round was not really an
appeal to bring back the proposals of Lionel Jospin and Robert
Hue ... To reject the Republican front [unity of the
right and the Socialists] is to reject a fusion of programs. Elected
president of the Republic, Jacques Chirac will scrupulously put
into place his program outlined in the first round. There
could not be a clearer retort to the charlatans and opportunists
of the SP and CP.
Chirac adopted an Olympian attitude toward Le Pen between the
two rounds of the presidential election, dismissing him as a political
figure unworthy of France. Justifying his refusal to debate Le
Pen, he claimed, Confronted with hatred and intolerance,
no deals, no compromises, no debates are possible.
However, Chiracs rejection of a debate had different
sides to it. On the one hand, the incumbent president had no desire
to place himself in a position to come under questioning about
his corruption scandals. Le Pen in the last days of the election
campaign called Chirac the godfather of the clans who are
bleeding the country dry. He stinks of corruption. He is dripping
with dirty money. The National Front leader was obviously
itching to get into a position to have a go at the incumbent.
Chirac had another motive in keeping his distance from Le Pen.
He had no desire to alienate either National Front voters or its
apparatus, upon whom he may be dependent for a majority in the
legislative elections. Because of the runoff system, parties regularly
make deals either not to stand in a particular constituency against
one another or to withdraw in the second round. Three regional
presidents allied to Chirac won office thanks to National Front
votes in 1998, and they were present throughout his campaign.
One of them, Jean-Pierre Soisson, president of the Burgundy region,
told a reporter that he thought the president goes a little
too far in his attacks on Le Pen. All sorts of dirty deals
and arrangements are no doubt already under negotiation between
the Chirac forces and elements on the far right.
As for the socialist left, the three parties which received
some three million votes in the first roundLutte Ouvrière
(LO), Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire (LCR) and the Parti
des Travailleurs (PT), all of which claim to be Trotskyist while
having long ago abandoned the principles and program for which
Trotsky foughtutterly failed the political test presented
to them. Faced with the responsibility of publicly rejecting the
reactionary and undemocratic electoral charade (the 44 percent
of the population which voted for left-wing parties had no choice
in the second round), each of these three tendencies in its own
way adapted to the pro-Chirac campaign.
The PT simply refused to take a position, essentially telling
their supporters and the working class to find their own way out
of the crisis. The LCR most openly accommodated itself to the
pressure of official public opinion, telling their supporters
to vote against Le Pen, another way of saying, vote
Chirac. LO evaded its responsibilities by defensively telling
workers that it preferred that they cast a blank or spoiled ballot,
but refusing to lead a public campaign for a boycott of the election.
The consequences, as reflected in the post-election reports
of polling organizations, are an indictment of these organizations.
Among LCR voters in the first round, 79 percent voted for Chirac
in the second; for LO voters, the rate was 72 percent.
Naturally, neither organization could dictate the voting habits
of its first-round voters, but it is inconceivable that had they
undertaken an aggressive campaign for a boycott of the election,
explaining the political necessity of such an action, so many
of their voters would have cast ballots for the chosen representative
of the bourgeoisie. They thus contributed to the further political
disorientation of the working population.
Despite the politically deplorable role of these parties, the
specter of Trotsky and Trotskyism conjured up in the ruling circles
by the first-round votes for the LO, LCR and PT has not dissipated.
Between the two rounds, bourgeois commentators could not stop
discussing or bemoaning a state of affairs in which such tendencies
exist and grow in influence.
The spokesman for the right-wing Liberal Democratic Party of
Alain Madelin, Claude Goasguen, told a pro-Chirac meeting in Paris
April 30, It is necessary to avoid a situation where the
youth have to choose between Le Pen ... and Trotsky, who inspired
so many of the candidates. Writing in Le Figaro on
May 3, Jean dOrmesson of the Académie française
lamented the existence of Three Trotskyist parties in France
at the beginning of the twenty-first century! and deplored
the growth of a Bolshevik and Trotskyist far left.
On the part of the Socialist Party and Stalinists there will
now be a concerted effort to marginalize these parties and blame
the Jospin defeat on a divided left. Having used the
services of the Trotskyist left (particularly the
LCR) between the two rounds to channel popular support behind
Chirac and in defense of the existing political setup, the SP
and CP are already speaking of a single left candidate
in every constituency to prevent a victory of the right-wing parties.
The three nongovernmental left parties, having already accepted,
openly or tacitly, the argument that it was necessary to unite
behind the Chirac bandwagon, or having proved incapable of resisting
its pressure, will be in a far weaker position to call for votes
once again from their supporters.
Scenes of crowds joyously greeting the Chirac victory were
transmitted on election night by the television networks. How
large and how joyous they were remains a question. In any event,
the French working class has nothing to celebrate. A presidential
election in which 25 million people voted for the corrupt and
discredited representative of the French ruling elite and another
6 million cast ballots for a neo-fascist demagogue is at once
an undemocratic charade and a sign of a deep crisis of perspective
and leadership in the working class. In the coming struggles,
it will be necessary to clarify critical political and historical
questions and lay the basis for an internationalist socialist
party in France as part of the world revolutionary movement, the
International Committee of the Fourth International.
See Also:
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]
French Socialist Party attempts to pick
up the pieces
[3 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]
The French presidential election:
What the figures reveal
[27 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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