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French presidential election
Bayrou poses as alternative to Sarkozy
By Peter Schwarz in Paris
21 April 2007
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There is a tradition in France of obsolete petty bourgeois
politicians presenting themselves as peoples tribunes and
striving for power on the back of the apparatus of the old workers
organisations. Prior to the Second World War, this was the role
played by the Radical Party, which, despite its name, was deeply
conservative and hostile to workers interests.
In 1936, the Radicals in alliance with the Social Democrats
formed a Popular Front government and, with the support of the
Stalinist French Communist Party, suppressed a powerful general
strike and saved the bourgeois order. Thus, one of the last opportunities
was lost to stop the fatal shift to the right in Europe that would
finally lead to the Second World War. Two years later, Edouard
Daladier, the leader of the Radicals, signed the Munich Treaty,
which gave Hitler free rein to invade Czechoslovakia, and banned
the French Communist Party.
Today, François Bayrou, the presidential candidate of
the right-wing, neo-liberal Union for French Democracy (Union
pour la Démocratie Française, UDF), is attempting
to tread in the footsteps of the Radicals. He is using the political
bankruptcy of the official left parties to pose as
the only candidate who can stop Nicolas Sarkozy. Bayrous
entire election campaign is based on this premise. For the broad
social layers who fear and despise the candidate of the Gaullist
Union for a Popular Movement (Union pour un Mouvement Populaire,
UMP), Bayrou poses as a saviour who can deliver them from Sarkozy.
For the French ruling elite, he poses as a man whounlike
Sarkozycan defend and advance their interests without risking
a social explosion.
Bayrous campaign is concentrated on these issues. Everything
else is unctuous clichés, hollow promises and non-committal
phrases. His central election slogan, With all our strength
for France, is typical in this respect. It can mean anything
to anybody.
Bayrou is the 55-year-old son of a small farmer from the Pyrenees,
where he still lives. He is a grammar school teacher in classical
literature and a practicing Catholic. At the last parliamentary
election, his UDF party won just 4.8 percent of the vote and controls
29 seats in the National Assemblythanks to a deal it struck
with Sarkozys UMP. Bayrou does not even have the support
of his entire party. Prominent memberssuch as the UDF founder
Valéry Giscard dEstaing, Education Secretary Gilles
de Robien and the former president of the European parliament,
Simone Veilsupport Sarkozys candidacy.
Bayrou held the post of minister for education between 1993
and 1997. During this period, he managed to provoke a million
French citizens into mobilising against his plans to finance private
and religious schools with public funds. This does not prevent
him from posing today as an advocate of teachers interests
and a defender of the secular state.
This crafty and adaptable politician now poses as the candidate
who can reconcile France, overcome the divisions between
right and left, provide hope and lead his country
to a better future. He has castigated established right-wing and
left-wing politicians as sectarians, because they
oppose collaborating with one another and are only interested
in reestablishing their fortresses and castles so everything
remains as it was. It was necessary to strip them of their
power and send them back to their studies, he thundered.
Bayrou held his final election rally on Wednesday evening (April
18) in the sports hall at Paris-Bercy. The main purpose of the
meeting was to provide proof that Bayrou could fill a hall with
17,000 seats and has sufficient support to beat Sarkozy in the
second round. Public opinion analysts assume that in the first
round of voting, many undecided voters will vote for the candidate
they believe has the best chance of beating Sarkozy.
The meeting in Bercy was carefully orchestrated, using state-of-the-art
video techniques and intolerably loud music. The candidate appeared
one hour late and, only visible on large video screens, crossed
the room shaking hands before planting himself on a huge stage,
surrounded by two loud choruses of supporters, who animated the
audience with the wave in the manner of a football
audience.
The stage was coloured in orange, as were the T-shirts of the
UDF supporters. The party has learned its lesson from Belgrade,
Kiev and Tiflis, and Bayrou expressly referred to the Western-supported
revolutions in those cities. Whoever seeks to defend
order and private property by means of revolution
today drapes himself in orange. Bayrou also recycled the slogan
We are the people, which was popular during the collapse
of the Berlin Wall. The orange T-shirts read We are Bayrou.
The audience in Bercy was overwhelmingly white, and it was
necessary to scour the crowd in the sports hall to find anyone
with an immigrant background. And although the meeting took place
in Paris, it was evident that a large proportion of the audience
was of rural origin. This is Bayrous real clientelethe
rural middle class, which has suffered from the effects of globalisation.
It is to them that Bayrous election programme is chiefly
addressed.
Leon Trotsky once described the Radicals as the party
with whose aid the big bourgeoisie preserves the hopes of the
petty bourgeoisie in a progressive and peaceful improvement of
its situation. This description is entirely applicable to
Bayrou. A large part of his speech was dedicated to small and
medium-sized businesses, with Bayrou promising an increase in
public contracts, lower taxes, less bureaucracy and the right
to hold two jobs free from tax and social security contributions.
Bayrous election programme evokes the longing for a romanticised
past, when France was the Grande Nation, the world
was predictable and social tensions were bearable. In large parts
it reads like a European Christian-Democratic or social-democratic
programme from the 1960s. It promises a greater role for social
partnership, more finance for research and education, better public
services in deprived areas and the countryside, environmental
protection, the construction of social housing, increases to minimum
pensions, more democracy and many other things.
The invoking of an idealised past is a general characteristic
of the present election campaign, taken up by all the candidates.
The realities of the twenty-first centurythe impact of globalisation,
foreign policy, the Iraq warbarely make an appearance and
have largely been filtered out. Three candidatesPhilippe
de Villiers of the Movement for France (Mouvement Pour la France),
Frédéric Nihous of the Hunters Party (Chasse-Pêche-Nature-Traditions)
and Gérard Schivardi of the Workers Party (Parti
des travailleurs, PT)have all made the preservation
of rural life (ruralitè) the heart of their campaign.
When following the election campaign from inside the country,
one feels like he is on a different planet. Wishful thinking and
an evasion of social reality largely dominate the campaigns. This
serves a political purpose. The propagation of illusions is aimed
at winning voters while blinding them as to what is to come.
Bayrous social promises will be quickly relegated to
the waste bin should he make it to the Elysée palacewhich
is not very likely. Central to his programme is the trimming of
the state budget, which excludes any new expenditure for social
purposes. Bayrou also vehemently defends the neo-liberal economic
policy of the European Union. He describes the rejection of the
European constitution by the French electorate as a misunderstanding
based on incomprehensible formulations in the text of the constitution.
Behind the façade of social democracy, justice and solidarity
decorating his election programme lurks a right-wing, authoritarian
stance. In Bercy, he described himself as left-wing when it comes
to equal opportunity and rights and as right-wing
over issues that required hardness and severity. He
called for the more rapid prosecution of young offenders, stressed
that education must be based on standards rather than laxity and
favoured the building of a second French aircraft carrier. He
endorses the strict control of immigration and rejects any general
legalisation of immigrants lacking proper residency papers.
Like his predecessors in the Radical Party, Bayrou will not
hesitate to proceed with brutality against any social movement
that challenges the existing capitalist system. His differences
with Sarkozy are of a purely tactical nature. Both men unreservedly
defend the interests of big business.
That this right-wing provincial politician who lacks any real
support can pose as an answer to Sarkozy is due to the political
bankruptcy of the social democrats and Stalinists. The Socialist
Party largely discredited itself through the policies carried
in the era of François Mitterrand and Lionel Jospin, while
the current Socialist Party presidential candidate Ségolène
Royal has shifted even further to the right. The Communist Party,
which was the most influential French party after the war, has
trailed behind the Socialist Party for the past 35 years and has
been reduced to an ineffective rump. Its candidate Marie George
Buffet will be lucky to pick up 2 percent of the vote.
In the meantime, as Bayrou proudly proclaimed in Bercy, three
prominent SP membersMichel Rocard, Bernard Kouchner and
Claude Allègrehave switched their allegiances to
his camp.
Rocard, a former Socialist Party prime minister, met Bayrou
for lunch last Sunday. Shortly before, he had proposed an alliance
of the Socialist Party and the UDF prior to the first ballota
move that in effect amounts to supporting Bayrou. Since then,
Rocard has denounced opponents of such an alliance as accomplices
of Sarkozy. I accuse the guardians of socialist dogma, who
regard any alliance other than with the Communists to be impure,
of being effective allies of Sarkozy, he said.
Frances radical left parties have also played a considerable
part in strengthening Bayrou. They persistently refuse to call
for a break with the Socialist Party and the building of an independent
political movement of the working class. Instead, they spread
the illusion that it is possible to persuade Royal to carry out
different policies through grass-roots pressure.
The representatives of the French ruling class have been very
clear about the role of these parties for a long time. The media
treat them with the utmost civility. They know that they are necessary
as a means of letting off steam and represent no danger to the
existing system. The well-known journalist Alain Duhamel, a supporter
of Bayrou, summed this up recently in the daily newspaper Libération.
Referring to the six candidates standing to the left of the
Socialist Party (Arlette Laguiller of Lutte Ouvrière,
Olivier Besancenot of the Ligue communiste rèvolutionnaire
(LCR), Schivardi of the PT, Marie-George Buffet of the Communist
Party, Dominique Voynet of the Greens, and anti-globalist José
Bové), Duhamel writes: All six restrict themselves
to a language that is one more of protest than revolution. Some
still sing the Internationale and wave red flags,
but there is no danger of them giving nightmares to the lords
of the 40 biggest corporations.... They put away their ideological
nostrums and concentrate their efforts on social goals, which
do not presuppose a break with capitalism. They debate in all
seriousness about the desirable level for the minimum wage (net,
not gross, as they point out), in the manner of the Socialist
Party in 1980. In their heart of hearts they remain faithful to
their old religion. But in the immediate, their only ambition
is to serve as social levers that dream of pressuring Ségolène
Royal to make a few additional small steps. They are moderated
by their modesty.
See Also:
Presidential election in France: The dismal
world of Lutte Ouvrière and Arlette Laguiller
[20 April 2007]
French presidential election: Extreme
right candidate Le Pen profits from the bankruptcy of the left
[19 April 2007]
Further lurch to the right in French
election campaign
[18 April 2007]
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