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France: Chirac TV appeal for yes vote fails to
shift growing sentiment against European constitution
By Pierre Mabut
19 April 2005
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French President Jacques Chirac went on television last Thursday
night in an attempt to reverse the flagging fortunes of his campaign
for a yes vote in the referendum on the European constitution
set for May 29. Chirac, who heads the conservative ruling coalition,
and his allies in the Socialist Party are desperate to counteract
the growing opposition to the constitution. The last fourteen
opinion polls all give the campaign for a no vote
a lead of 7 to 9 points.
However, it appears that Chiracs performance was unconvincing.
New polls, published on Saturday, saw an increase in the no
vote after Chiracs intervention. The two leading polling
institutes, CSA and IFOP, both rated the no vote at
56 percent, an increase of 1 percent in the case of CSA and 3
percent in IFOP polls. Only 44 percent of those questioned said
that they would vote for the constitution.
The chat show format of the TV event, which was planned by
Chiracs daughter, Claude, in concert with the heads of the
private channel TF1, had already led to controversy, because the
83 invited young people had been closely vetted. Nevertheless,
the show turned into a debacle, even in the eyes of some of Chiracs
closest supporters.
The president seemed unable to answer or even understand the
social and political concerns voiced by the young people present.
Although intended as a dialogue, Chiracs explanations
in favor of a yes vote became a browbeating monologue
about the serious consequences if the no camp prevailed.
While most of the questions centered on the impact of the European
constitution on social and democratic rights, Chirac pontificated
about the might of France in the world.
If the constitution were rejected, France would be considerably
weakened, he said. It would be the black sheep
of Europe, which has blocked everything. Chirac went
on to declare that in voting down the European constitution, You
wont settle any problems, but you will considerably weaken
Frances voice and the capacity of France to defend its interests.
In response to several questions about the liberal (in the
sense of free market) nature of the treaty, the president
repeatedly invoked the deceased popes slogan: Do not
fear. While acknowledging that globalization, sustained
by an ultra-liberal current, worries French people, he argued,
Europe must be strong and organized to oppose such an evolution...
Only our political power at the heart of Europe allows us to defend
our interests.
His defense of a strong Europe was clearly directed against
other nations. Concerning China, he said, the sudden and
unacceptable invasion of the European market by Chinese
textiles would be subject to safety clauses due to be announced
by the European Union (EU) shortly. As for Turkeys desire
to join the EU, opposition to which has become a focal point of
the campaign of the extreme right for a no vote in
the referendum campaign, Chirac said he considered the values,
the way of life, the functioning of Turkey to be incompatible
with our values.
In an attempt to strong-arm the electorate, Chirac made it
clear that in the event of a no vote, the constitution
would not be renegotiable. And if people thought the referendum
could be used against him as a plebiscite on his governments
record, they would be disappointed. He would not resign.
Chiracs euro-chauvinist ravings clearly failed to connect
with his audience. According to Le Monde, many parliamentary
delegates in Chiracs party, the UMP (Union for a Peoples
Movement), were obliged to admit, after returning to their constituencies
on Friday, that the head of the state had persuaded nobody. The
daily paper quotes one of them as saying: This group of
youth was very representative of public opinion. They asked questions
that everybody is asking, but the president did not concretely
answer them. He did not keep his feet on the ground, but instead
took to lecturing on international politics. People feel that
they are not being heard.
Although the young invited audience had been given a copy of
the constitution, a large majority confessed that it was unreadable
and incomprehensible. How could people be expected decide on the
basis of reading a 480-page treaty? Why wasnt it possible
to have a 20-odd-page constitution, as in France or the US?
Thursdays TV event underscored that the growing opposition
to the European constitution is fuelled by democratic and social
concerns. While right-wing parties, like Jean-Marie Le Pens
National Front, Charles Pasquas Rassemblement pour la France,
and sections of Chiracs governing UMP itself, oppose the
constitution from a narrow chauvinist standpoint, the wider popular
opposition is dominated by fear of the social effects of the free
market policies associated with the constitution and their
impact on democratic rights. The resistance to the economic policies
of the government of Prime Minister Jean Pierre Raffarin, who
was appointed by Chirac, and, above all, concern and anger over
growing unemployment (already 20 percent among youth) and fear
of a relocation of industry find their focus in the growing sentiment
for a no vote in the referendum.
Under these conditions, Chirac is relying heavily on the official
left parties in his campaign for a yes vote. Leading
members of the French Socialist Party, as well as German Social
Democrats and the head of the Greens in the European Parliament,
Daniel Cohn-Bendit, are intensively campaigning on Chiracs
behalf. There is a striking parallel here to the second round
of the 2002 presidential election, when the bulk of the campaign
for Chirac was conducted by the leftin the name of defeating
his challenger, Le Pen of the National Front.
In a TV debate on the referendum on the public channel F2,
held on April 11, the yes camp featured leading Socialist
Party member Pierre Moscovici (European affairs minister in the
plural left government of Lionel Jospin in 1997), who asserted
that the constitution was a compromise between a social and liberal
Europe.
Moscovici lauded the constitutions formulation calling
for a highly competitive social market economy ...for free
and fair competition...which tends towards full employment and
social progress, and contrasted it with what he called a
monopoly. There might not be enough of a social component
in the document, he argued, but nevertheless, it represented progress.
He cited the European Trade Union Confederations campaign
for a yes vote as proof of the good intentions of
those backing the constitutional treaty.
On the same platform, Jo Leinen, a member of the European Parliament
from the German Social Democratic Party (SPD), sought to appease
Marine Le Pen, the daughter of Jean-Marie Le Pen and de facto
leader of the National Front, who argued for a no
vote, claiming that the constitution placed the French nation
in danger. Leinen stressed that the first article of the constitution
preserved the nations identity, which was therefore not
in peril.
His argument for a yes vote was identical to Chiracs.
A no vote, Leinen remarked, leads to a weakened Europe
and a loss of time in the effort to measure up to the US and China.
Moscovici repeated the same mantra. He claimed that a no
vote would mean a weakened France and an impotent
Europe.
Also present was Olivier Besancenot, the spokesman for the
Ligue Communiste Revolutionnaire (LCR), who called for a no
vote.
In contrast to the 2002 presidential election, when virtually
the entire left from the Socialist Party to the LCR
united behind Chirac, there is now a considerable left
camp opposing the European constitution. It extends from a minority
in the Socialist Party (SP) and the Greens to the Citizens
Movement of Jean-Pierre Chevènement (MRC), the Communist
Party (CPF) and the LCR.
Simultaneous with Chiracs TV appearance, these parties
organized a joint meeting at the Zenith Hall in Paris, attracting
5,000 people. Jean-Luc Mélenchon (SP), Communist Party
leader Marie-George Buffet, the Green Partys Francine Bavay,
Georges Sarre (MCR), Olivier Besancenot (LCR) and radical peasant
leader José Bové shared the platform.
Most of theses parties and individuals are experienced props
of the French bourgeois order. Successive Socialist Party-led
governments under François Mitterrand and Lionel Jospin
carried out attacks on the working class, paving the way for the
conservative-right regime headed by Chirac. The main concern of
these left parties and far left groups is to prevent
the social resistance fuelling the opposition to the European
constitution from assuming an independent working class form,
thereby threatening bourgeois rule in France.
For the MCR, which evolved out of the so-called sovereignist
wing of the Socialist Party, the defense of the sovereignty of
the French state has priority over all other political questions.
Similarly, the PCF has a long history of championing French nationalism.
For a number of years it shared power in Socialist Party-led governments.
In order to keep control over the no camp, these
parties have joined together, temporarily abandoning their political
differences. At the Zenith Hall meeting, Mélenchon even
regretted the absence of fellow party dissenters like Laurent
Fabius, an ex-prime minister and notorious right-winger, even
by the standards of the Socialist Party.
It was left to Besancenot to present this unprincipled and
fundamentally reactionary alliance as the basis for a future left-wing
party. A victory of the no camp on May 29, he claimed,
would usher in a new relationship of forces to develop a
left that is 100 percent on the left.
In fact, it would do nothing of the kind. The World Socialist
Web Site calls for a no vote on the constitution,
which represents the attempt of the most powerful corporate and
financial interests in Europe to establish a new framework for
the exploitation of the European working class and the promotion
internationally of the imperialist interests of the major European
powers.
However, our opposition is based on a socialist and internationalist
perspective that is fundamentally opposed to all those forces,
both on the right and on the left, that oppose the constitution
from a nationalist standpoint, and seek to encourage illusions
that the social interests and democratic rights of working people
can be defended within the framework of the existing capitalist
nation-state system. Our answer to the project of the European
ruling elites for European integration on capitalist terms is
the struggle to unite and mobilize the working class independently
of all bourgeois governments and parties for a United Socialist
States of Europe.
A no vote by itself will not achieve the crucial
task facing the working class in all European countriesthe
need to break politically with the organizations tying it to the
bourgeois order and fight for a revolutionary transformation of
Europe from below, on the basis of a genuinely democratic and
egalitarian, i.e., socialist, program.
See Also:
The French left and the referendum on
the European constitution
[8 April 2005]
Vote "no" in Spanish
referendum on European Union constitution
[19 February 2005]
French referendum on the European constitution:
opinion polls point to defeat
[4 April 2005]
After the March 10 demonstrations:
France: Chirac government, Socialist Party close ranks on European
constitutional referendum
[19 March 2005]
French referendum on European
constitution set for May 29
[18 March 2005]
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