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French Socialist Party congress backs government repression
By Stephane Hugues and Antoine Lerougetel
28 November 2005
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At an emergency congress of the French Socialist Party held
in Le Mans November 18-20 the partys various factions united
in order to defend the French state.
The party had previously lent its support to the Gaullist government
of President Jacques Chirac in the governments efforts to
repress the anti-police protests by youth that swept through Frances
impoverished suburban ghettos. Only when Prime Minister Dominique
de Villepin and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy extended a state
of emergency until February 21 did the Socialist Party make a
show of opposition.
The state of emergency grants the police and the government
extraordinary powers to curtail democratic rights. These powers
are directed not only at the youth disturbances, but more fundamentally
against all sections of the working class, which is broadly opposed
to the right-wing free market policies of the government.
The state of emergency was extended by three months on November
15, when the unrest and arson attacks by largely immigrant youth
were already waning.
At the Le Mans conference, the Socialist Party formally declared
itself opposed to the extended state of emergency, but underlined
its backing for repressive police measures. The re-elected party
leader, François Hollande declared in his closing speech:
We must show that the left is more credible for public order
and tranquillity than the right.
The congress saw the three main factionsthe majority,
led by First Secretary François Hollande; the New Socialist
Party (NSP) faction, led by Arnaud Montebourg, Vincent Peillon
and Henri Emmanuelli; and the faction led by ex-prime minister
Laurent Fabiusunite on a common programme seeking to project
a left face to the electorate. The aim of all concerned was to
reverse the partys ailing fortunes and provide the French
ruling elite with a vehicle through which mounting social and
political unrest could be brought under control, in the form of
a party combining a commitment to law and order with minimal social
reforms.
The congress, attended by 4,500 people, of which 614 were delegates,
was called in the wake of the devastating defeat of the Socialist
Partys joint campaign with Chirac and then-Prime Minister
Jean-Pierre Raffarin in support of the European Union constitution.
The decisive no vote in Mays referendum in France,
followed by a similar result in the Netherlands, expressed popular
opposition to the constitutions neo-liberal economic policies
aimed at eliminating welfare services.
In the intervening months, the situation facing the Socialist
Party and the whole of Frances ruling elite has only worsened,
with a series of militant strikes against job losses and the planned
privatisation of state services followed by the elemental explosion
of anger against social deprivation, discrimination and police
abuse that began in the suburbs of Paris.
The week following the Le Mans congress witnessed an indefinite
strike of railway workers, followed by a strike by Paris bus and
metro workers and a national teachers strike.
The delegates gathered under conditions where democratic rights
have been curtailed by the government under special regulations
provided for in a 1955 law drafted to repress resistance to colonial
rule in Algeria.
The Socialist Party refused to call for the paramilitary CRS
and the police to be withdrawn from the immigrant suburbs. It
gave support to the governments initial state of emergency,
declared for a twelve-day period. Vincent Peillon, who advances
himself as a left within the party, declared at the
time: If we want the republican state to be respected, whatever
I think of Nicolas Sarkozy... the minister of the interior does
not have to resign because people who are burning cars are demanding
that he do so...
The Communist Party and the petty-bourgeois radicals of the
Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire and Lutte Ouvrière
also refused to call for the removal of the riot police from the
immigrant ghettos.
This closing of ranks in defence of the republic
is the key to understanding the unity the Socialist Party was
able to establish at Le Mans. The essential nature of the Socialist
Party as a bourgeois party of order is to be found in the special
motion, supported by all tendencies, entitled, Respond to
the Social and Urban Crisis. Rather than demand the state
of emergency be lifted, it proclaimed, This violence [not
that of the riot police, but of the youth] is unacceptable and
inexcusable.
The resolution went on to state: The Socialists pay tribute
to the courage of the local elected councillors and mayors, the
police officers, the firemen, the social workers who have protected
the population, brought succour to the victims and enabled calm
to be reestablished.
However, the Socialist Party understands that police repression
by itself cannot maintain order, and can instead serve to fuel
social opposition. In order to make an appeal for support in the
working class, the statement registered opposition to the
social crisis and the damage done by free market policies
and the governments withdrawal of finance from social services
and associations on the working class housing estates. It pledged
a programme to emancipate the inhabitants of the estates from
their impoverished conditions and to reaffirm... that the
youth in the working class neighbourhoods, so often stigmatised
or rejected because of their diverse origins, have the same rights
and duties as all citizens.
Criticism of the state of emergency occupied two lines in the
four-page document (The Right is trying politically to exploit
the violence to justify the continuation of a policy which has
failed. It is resorting to the laws of exception and a state of
emergency, which we oppose.) The real attitude of the party
was made clear in its paraphrasing of Britains Prime Minister
Tony Blair. The motion stated, We must be tough on violence
and tough on the causes of violence.
The first proposition of the special motions programme
of reforms for the estates is, The setting up of a new community
policing, with proper police stations, staffed by experienced
officers so as to deploy a coordinated strategy to fight crime,
especially the black economy.
Notwithstanding the congress call for certain minimal
reform measures, the Socialist Party has long since abandoned
any commitment to social reforms. When François Mitterrand
was elected president in 1981 he announced reforms, including
a program of nationalizations, but within 18 months he was brought
into line by the international financial markets. He then launched
an austerity programme that has become the hallmark of Socialist
Party-led governments ever since. The Hollande leadership defended
this legacy when it campaigned for a yes vote in the
referendum on the European Constitution.
The party was split, with a minority faction, led by Laurent
Fabius, calling for a no vote and claiming to oppose
plans to privatise the state sector and eliminate welfare provisions.
But as Mitterrands finance minister and later as prime minister,
Fabius had presided over the destruction of millions of jobs and
a freeze on wages.
More recently, Fabius, as finance minister, and Hollande, as
leader of the Socialist Party, worked hand in hand with Prime
Minister Lionel Jospin in the Socialist Party-led government of
the Plural Left, which cohabited with President Chirac
and imposed free market policies virtually indistinguishable
from Chiracs previous government, led by Alain Juppé.
The electorate paid Jospin back for his five years of neo-liberal
policies by relegating him to third place in the French presidential
elections of 2002. He came in behind not only Jacques Chirac,
but also the neo-fascist National Front candidate, Jean-Marie
Le Pen.
Under Hollande, the Socialist Party responded by rallying behind
Chirac and claiming that he represented a democratic bulwark against
the National Front threat to the republic. The Socialist
Party, the Communist Party and the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
campaigned for a vote for Chirac, with the result that he was
re-elected with an 82 percent margin in the run-off against Le
Pen. All these factions bear political responsibility for the
Chirac/De Villepin regime and its attacks on the working class.
At the Socialist Party congress in Le Mans the various factions
buried the hatchet and united in order to conceal this record
and refurbish the reputation of the Hollande leadership. After
the no vote in the EU constitution referendum, the
majority faction had expelled Fabius from the partys leading
bodies.
Prior to the congress, the three factions submitted resolutions
to be voted on by members of the party. Those put forward by the
Hollande leadership won a narrow majority of just over 53 percent,
with the resolutions of the New Socialist Party faction and Fabius
faction dividing the remainder of the vote roughly equally.
That the Hollande leadership has retained the support of a
majority of members, despite the explicit rejection of its programme
by its own electorate, is a measure of the partys right-wing
character. But a majority within the party does not translate
into popular support in the country.
In an attempt to reverse the partys fortunes, all leadership
challenges were shelved and Hollande was left as the only candidate
for first secretary. In return, Fabius was readmitted to the partys
leading bodies along with other opposition figures grouped around
Arnaud Montebourg.
The nominal opposition did the party leadership another favour
by providing it with a left-sounding programme with which to make
an appeal to working people. The minimal reforms proposed in the
final composite motion are largely borrowed from those proposed
by Fabius: a minimum wage of 1,500 euros, the repeal of the governments
most socially destructive legislation on pensions, support for
the 35-hour week, penalties for firms which sack workers just
to be more profitable, and maintaining public ownership of the
EDF electrical utility. This is combined with advocacy of nationalist
and protectionist economic measures, such as external tariffs
to safeguard European industry, a reinforced Eurozone with a new
stability pact, and political democratic control of
the European central bank to boost jobs and growth.
Such measures are considered necessary if the Socialist Party
is to present itself as an alternative to the Gaullists in the
presidential and legislative elections in 2007. However, the Socialist
Party has no intention of doing anything that contradicts the
demands of the major corporations for further anti-social measures,
which they declare necessary to make France globally competitive.
Should it come to power, the Socialist Partys de facto support
for the repressive measures of the Gaullists would be accompanied
by new attacks on the social and democratic rights of working
people.
See Also:
France: Gaullist officials stoke up racism
to justify state of emergency
[22 November 2005]
France: state of emergency extended for
three months
[17 November 2005]
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