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At Paris meeting on eve of vote
French Socialist Party leaders slander no voters
in referendum on EU constitution
By Peter Schwarz
27 May 2005
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PARISTo experience just one of the 450 meetings organised
by the French Socialist Party to drum up support for the European
Union (EU) constitution confirms ones conviction that the
referendum will most likely fail on Sunday.
Organised May 25 by the Socialist Party (PS) in Paris at the
Mutualité in the Latin Quarter, the meeting brimmed with
self-satisfaction, cynicism and arrogance. About 150 people turned
upprimarily loyal party members. The atmosphere was informal.
Everyone knew one another and addressed each other in familiar
terms. The speeches were interspersed with little jokes and anecdotes.
The realities of everyday life were left behind as soon as
one entered the meeting. None of the speakers referred to unemployment,
welfare cuts, poverty and all the other ills that plague the lives
of millions of people in France and throughout Europe. Instead,
speakers painted an illusory picture of a democratic and harmonious
continent.
The meeting began in a subdued fashion. A representative of
the Radical Party, a relic of the major bourgeois pillar of the
Third and Fourth Republics, justified his support for the constitution.
It stands for a democratic Europe, he claimed bluntly. His proof?
Its prohibition of the death penalty. In China thousands were
executed annually, and dozens in America. Most listeners failed
to follow the logic of the argument; after all, no one has suggested
introducing the death penalty in Europe in the event of the constitution
being rejected.
The next speaker was Anne Hidalgo, deputy mayor of Paris. In
her mid-forties, her résumé includes a spell as
an executive at the water company Vivendi. Hidalgo kept to the
official party line: For a strong France in a strong Europe
and the export of the French social model. Throughout
the whole world, she argued, for example, South America
and Asia, one hears the call, We need a strong Europe.
Occasionally, Hidalgo spat out invective against opponents of
the constitution. She advised Laurent Fabius, a leading spokesman
of the no camp within the Socialist Party, to take
a trip to a psychiatrist.
Then the proceedings gradually became noisier. Francois Rebsamen,
number three in the PS and the member of the partys executive
committee in charge of the yes campaign, resorted
to all sorts of demagogy.
He conjured up the ghosts of former leading French Socialist
figures, Jean Jaurès and Léon Blum. One of the most
fundamental values of socialistsinternationalismwas
at risk, he maintained. Rebsamen forgets that socialist internationalism
aims to unite workers against the bourgeoisie and its governments,
while the essential purpose of the proposed EU constitution consists
in uniting European governments and big business against the population.
Nevertheless, Rebsamen went on to justify the fact that free
and genuine competition has been enshrined in the constitution
by pointing out that this stipulation had already been included
in the Treaty of Rome of 1957. It was a conclusion drawn from
the experience with Hitlers national socialism, he argued;
after all, as is well known, national socialism had relied on
the large monopolies and trusts. Rebsamen ignores the fact that
the free market economic regulations stipulated in
the constitution favor precisely the most powerful European financial
interests.
Rebsamen praised the responsible decision that
the Socialists had made on the constitution. In a revealing comment,
he noted that if the Socialist Party did not call for a yes
vote, then 70 percent of the French voters would vote no.
It is no doubt true that the ruling class in France has many reasons
to be grateful to the Socialists. Whether their efforts are enough,
however, to ensure passage of the constitution, remains highly
uncertain.
This possibility was sufficient to enrage Rebsamen, who concluded
his contribution by accusing opponents of the constitution of
irresponsibility. They refrain, he blustered, from posing the
question, What happens afterward?
The main speaker at the meeting was Pierre Moscovici, the former
European affairs minister under Lionel Jospin. A graduate of the
National School of Public Administration (ENA), a principal training
school for the French political elite, Moscovici was a member
of the Ligue communiste révolutionnaire (LCR) led by Alain
Krivine, before switching to the Socialist Party in 1984. A participant
in the drawing up of the constitution as a member of the constitutional
convention, he now let loose a barrage of abuse against its opponents.
His entire contribution revolved around the key word rage,
and he was not afraid of hitting below the belt. The representatives
of the no camp, he claimed, were anti-socialist, anti-internationalist
and simply stupid. They were misrepresenting the constitution
and spreading illusions. They wanted to restore the Iron
Curtainsomething that he, as the son of a Romanian
father and a Polish mother, emphatically rejected. He praised
the economic progress of eastern Europe in the strongest terms,
saying nothing about the devastating social conditions prevailing
in that region. He then dealt in detail with the suggestion that
Laurent Fabius visit a psychiatrist.
Gradually the mood in the hall warmed up.
The applause increased when Moscovici accused President Jacques
Chirac of lacking commitment to the constitution. Every time the
president had intervened publicly to encourage support for the
constitution, he noted, opinion polls recorded a decline in support
for the measure.
On this point Moscovici spoke directly to the hearts of the
frustrated party faithful assembled at the Mutualité. In
2002, PS members led the campaign for Chirac, after their own
candidate, Jospin, was beaten out in the first round of the presidential
balloting by the neo-fascist Jean Marie Le Pen of the National
Front. At that time, Chirac patched together his UMP (Union for
a Popular Movement) and prepared for the parliamentary election,
which he promptly won with a large majority (due in large measure
to the perfidy of the French left). And now, the PS was once again
obliged to do Chiracs dirty work, with the latter only making
matters worse through his thoughtless and unpopular interventions.
Moscovici reserved the rest of his rage for those
voting no on Sunday. He did not want to put the left-wing
and right-wing opponents of the constitution into the same pot,
but a success of the no camp would be a triumph for
Le Pen. Polls have shown, he asserted, that more than 50 percent
of the opposition to the constitution emanated from the camp of
right-wing extremism.
This is nothing less than slander. Moscovici seeks to intimidate
opponents of the constitution, by implying they are helping right-wing
demagogues to their first big victory.
The Socialists have learned nothing from the events of 2002.
At that time, Le Pen finished ahead of their presidential candidate,
after many voters rejected Jospins anti-working class policies.
The PS leadership than fled into the arms of Chirac and declared
that this right-wing politician, who had been involved in a series
of corruption scandals, was the saviour of the Republic. Now they
once again spearhead an election campaign for Chirac, and denounce
anyone who opposes them as accomplices of the fascists.
The meeting ended with comments from the public. Party stalwarts
made agitational speeches in a desperate attempt to revive receding
hopes. But there were also some more thoughtful contributions
to be heard.
A young black mother said she had attended several election
meetings so far and still did not know how she should vote. She
did not understand what the constitution meant for herregarding
the minimum wage, care and education for her children. Her contribution
was mostly greeted with astonished looks from the podium and the
audience.
An older, somewhat shy participant dared to remark that the
campaign would perhaps be more successful if some positive messages
were introduced instead of just flaying ones opponents.
However, he himself was only able to suggest a few advertising
slogans such as A Europe of the heart instead of a Europe
of fear (which rhymes in French).
What is one to make of such a meeting?
It shows the enormous divide that has opened up between the
Socialist Party and the population at large. Not only is the party
unable to articulate the problems and concerns of ordinary people,
it is indifferent to them. Insulated and insensitive, the party
leadership feels provoked and offended by signs of opposition
from inside or outside its ranks. It took quite some time before
a campaign mood developed inside the hall, but this sentiment
was less an expression of any genuine enthusiasm than a cover
for the party hierarchys own despair.
The PS feels pressured, not by the powers that be, but by the
opposition coming from below. This lies behind the hysterical
denunciation of no voters as conscious or unconscious
abettors of the extreme right. The Socialist Party will undoubtedly
react to every new challenge from working people with a further
shift to the right.
See Also:
French referendum on European constitution:
the official debate
[26 May 2005]
Vote no in French referendum
on European constitutionFor the United Socialist States
of Europe: Statement of the WSWS Editorial Board
[25 May 2005]
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