|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
France: Likely Socialist Party presidential candidate wants
unruly youth drafted into the military
By Antoine Lerougetel
10 June 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
On May 31, Ségolène Royal, former Socialist Party
minister for the family, staked her claim as the hardline law-and-order
candidate in the 2007 presidential elections. Royal gave a speech
in Bondy in the north Paris suburbs, close to Monfermeil and Clichy-sous-Boisthe
scene of two previous nights of anti-police rioting by youth.
She accused the present interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy,
of not being sufficiently tough. Criticising Sarkozy, she declared:
Today, we can see it, the flagrant bankruptcy of the law-and-order
policy. It represents a failure for the main person in charge,
who himself contributes to upheavals, disorder and inefficiency.
Another, much firmer policy is required.
Sarkozy is the chairman of the ruling Gaullist UMP (Union for
a Peoples Party) and leading contender for the partys
nomination for the presidency. He has been responsible for legislation
increasing police powers of repression and surveillance and has
pursued aggressive and provocative policing methods on working
class housing estates.
Royals statements, signifying the Socialist Partys
open abandonment of a social reform approach to the crisis facing
youth in Frances urban ghettos in favour of a policy of
repression, have been widely recognised as a significant shift
to the right. The lip service that the Socialist Party has given
to humanitarian principles is being dropped.
The seventeenth century moralist François duc de la
Rochefoucauld observed: Hypocrisy is the tribute that vice
pays to virtue. Even the traditional forms of hypocrisy
are now being abandoned by wide sections of the official left
within the political establishment.
Royal made her remarks in the context of a growing crisis of
the Gaullist government. In the face of mass opposition, it was
obliged in April to back down on the New Jobs Contract
(CPE), a measure that would have given arbitrary powers of dismissal
to employers of young workers. Since then, the approval ratings
for President Jacques Chirac and Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin
have hit record lows, and they have become entangled in multiple
corruption scandals.
With her tough talk against immigrant and working class youth,
Royal sent a clear signal to French and European ruling circles
that their interests would be in safe hands under a Socialist
Party administration with her at the top.
At the same time, her authoritarian stance, nominally directed
against Sarkozy, has lent credibility to the reactionary policies
associated with the right wing of the governing UMP. It is, moreover,
an oblique attack on the mass movement of the university and high
school students against the CPE. One of their main demands was
amnesty for all those who had been victims of police repression
and had been sentenced by the courts, not only in their own movement
but also among youth punished for their alleged involvement in
anti-police riots that spread throughout Frances immigrant
and working class suburbs last autumn.
Since last September, Royal has been promoted by the media
as a leading candidate to become the Socialist Party standard
bearer in the 2007 presidential elections. This suggests that
powerful forces in the French political and business elite are
behind her bid to sever the past association of the Socialist
Party with social democratic reformism and place it squarely on
a capitalist market footing, after the manner of British Prime
Minister Tony Blairs New Labour. Royal has repeatedly
expressed admiration for Blair.
Reading from notes in a carefully prepared intervention, Royal
said in her Bondy speech that it was necessary to remettre
au carré les familles, i.e., make families
toe the linea phrase with a military connotation.
She said that disruptive children may be failing, but there
is no room for commiseration.
Calling for disciplinary actions against parents of unruly
primary school children, she proposed an obligatory system
for parents to take courses in parenting, and to have ways of
placing family welfare payments under administrative control,
as happens now, but with the aim of educating parents for the
purpose of social reintegration.
In regard to secondary education, she suggested the withdrawal
of the eight to ten disruptive pupils who dominate and spoil the
entire school. They would be automatically placed
in internats-relais [educational boarding institutions]
in the vicinity.
Royals most draconian proposal was reserved for delinquent
youth over 16, who, she declared, should be placed in the custody
of the military. She demanded that from the first act of
delinquency they be placed automatically in a service
supervised by the military. She added: For them it
would represent a revival of obligatory military service, where
they would learn citizenship.
The national leadership of the Socialist Party, meeting on
June 6, incorporated the substance of Royals proposals into
the partys draft programme for the 2007 elections, while
excising her reference to the military. In this manner, the party
has adopted an authoritarian posture.
The Gaullists and the far right immediately recognised this.
Sarkozy commented: Bravo, Madam Royal, you are on the right
track. Prime Minister de Villepin said: I note that
she is going the same way as we are.
The UMP deputy for Saône-et-Loire remarked that Madam
Royal is in line, adding that she was a true officers
daughter. Georges Fenech, UMP deputy for Rhône, expressed
his delight at Royals break from bleeding-heart socialism
[angélisme] and urged military centres
on the Chicago boot camp model.
Karl Lang, member of the European Parliament for the neo-fascist
National Front of Jean-Marie Le Pen, exclaimed: The Lepenisation
of peoples minds is progressing well beyond our hopes.
When Royal came under attack from sections of the Socialist
Party, who felt uncomfortable with so open an espousal of authoritarianism
and criticised the military supervision proposal, she hit back
vehemently. The abolition of military service was a mistake,
we must devise another, she said. She challenged her critics
to declare any contradiction between socialism and the men in
uniform: Who goes straight away to humanitarian catastrophes
around the world? The military, the firemen, the gendarmes...that
is, the uniformed professions.
Other elements within the party supported Royals propositions.
Julien Dray, official party spokesman and former member of the
LCR (Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire), expressed his approval,
as did the Socialist Party mayor of Paris, Bertrand Delanoë,
and many others.
Manuel Valls, who supports the nomination of former prime minister
Lionel Jospin as the Socialist Party candidate in the upcoming
presidential elections, said: Nothing shocks me in what
I have heard and read of what she saidthat is, priority
for law and order, authority, abiding by the rules. He added:
I dont think she got out of line. I think that she
made things clear and said what was expected in working class
neighbourhoods.
François Hollande, Royals common law husband and
first secretary of the Socialist Party, declared: If you
want to address working class people, you have to speak to people
who experience these difficulties, that is, unstable social and
work situations [précarité] and law-and-order
problems. He later distanced himself from Royals recourse
to the military.
François Chérèque, general secretary of
the CFDT (French Democratic Confederation of Labour), told the
media that Royal was right to raise the issue of the
struggle against delinquency, even if her statements might shock.
He added: The left would be making a great mistake
if it did not take up these questions. What shocks me is
the fact that we cant discuss them, he said. He added
that her call for military supervision was a bit strong.
The CFDT is Frances largest trade union body. It is close
to the Socialist Party and played a leading role in the Intersyndicale,
the grouping of 12 student and labour organisations that worked
to stifle the mass movement against the CPE.
The media has responded to Royals remarks by praising
her courage. Tributes to the originality
of her ideas have abounded, even though she has merely recycled
nostrums long considered the hobbyhorses of the far-right fringe
of French politics.
Le Monde, generally considered the centre-left newspaper
of the bourgeois intelligentsia, said in a June 3 editorial: Madam
Royals audacity is real. She could not care less about taboos,
she speaks directly, and advances proposals of the kind to raise
the hackles of most of her political friends. The language of
repression grates on the ears of Socialists and the left in general....
Madam Royal has the merit of clearly giving notice that the right
does not have the monopoly on law and order. This is what redounds
to the credit of the SPs putative candidate.
On the same day, the conservative Le Figaro editorialised
enthusiastically: She dared to do it! Ségolène
Royal dared to say that delinquency, together with unemployment,
was the main cause of social suffering. The
editorial added that though the ideas were not new, coming
from where they do, this statement is an event: it represents
a complete break with the bleeding-heart rights-of-manism
that, since the mid-80s, dominated the SP on the ruins of an exhausted
Marxism. The editorialist rejoiced that long-derided values
were coming back into fashion: authority, work, family,
merit, nation.
Royal, 53, was born in the then-French West African colony
of Sénégal, the daughter of an artillery colonel.
Her brother, also a military man, was involved in the sinking
in New Zealand of the Greenpeace ship the Rainbow Warrior by French
secret service agents in 1985. The ship had been involved in protests
against the testing of nuclear weapons in the Pacific by the Socialist
government of then-President François Mitterrand and Prime
Minister Laurent Fabius.
She is a graduate of the ENA (National School of Administration,
where most of Frances political and civil service élite
are trained) and in 1982 became a technical advisor to Mitterrand.
She has been, for more than 25 years, the partner of François
Hollande, and has four children.
She was a junior minister in the Plural Left government of
Lionel Jospin (1997-2002) and is presently the president of the
Poitou-Charente regional council, elected in the 2004 regional
elections.
She represents a layer of technocrats and management personnel
who gathered round Mitterrand. Nationalist, ferociously hostile
to Marxism and any independent revolutionary perspective for the
working class, this layer in the past associated itself with the
defence of gay rights, minority rights and feminism, and presented
itself as the defender of democratic principles against the rise
of Le Pens National Front.
This is no longer the case. The sharp rightward shift of the
forces represented by Royal are part of a more general abandonment
of democratic principles within the political establishments of
all capitalist countries, driven by a deepening global crisis.
That crisis is taking a particularly acute form in France.
See Also:
France: Amiens meeting discusses lessons
of struggle against "New Job Contract"
[6 June 2006]
Unemployed youth clash with police in
Paris suburbs
[1 June 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |