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French presidential elections
Royal moves into the camp of Bayrou
By Peter Schwarz
28 April 2007
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Ségolène Royal, the presidential candidate of
the French Socialist Party, has reacted to the April 22 election
by throwing herself into the arms of François Bayrou, the
candidate of the right-wing bourgeois UDF. Bayrou took third place
in the first round of the presidential election with 18.6 percent
of the vote, trailing Royal (25.9 percent) and the Gaullist Nicolas
Sarkozy (31.2 percent).
Royal offered Bayrou a public television debate and indicated
that his party would receive ministerial posts should she win
the final round of voting on May 6. Both of her suggestions amount
to the formation of an alliance with Bayrous party, which
has been a permanent fixture of right-wing bourgeois politics
in France since its foundation 30 years ago by Valéry Giscard
dEstaing.
A public debate with a candidate who was defeated in the first
round and is not on the ballot for the second would be unprecedented
in French politics. Royal is offering Bayrou a platform to propagate
his right-wing views in order to better incorporate them into
her own campaign.
Bayrou, who calls himself a politician of the centre, stands
for a tight budget policy, an end to state intervention in the
economy and a lowering of labour costs. As education minister
in the 1990s, this practicing Catholic unleashed a storm of protest
when he sought to introduce the financing of religious and private
schools with public funds.
Bayrou intends to create a new Democratic Party
before the national parliamentary elections set for June. The
partys name is taken from the American Democrats, as well
as the organisation presently being formed in Italy by uniting
the Margherita alliance with the Left Democrats (the successor
to the Italian Communist Party). Bayrou maintains close relations
with Francesco Rutelli, the leader of Margherita.
The purpose of the new Italian Democratic Party is to provide
a stable parliamentary base for Romano Prodi, the head of the
Italian government. The Left Democrats are making available their
party apparatus and their remaining influence, while Margherita
provides the political leadership-comprising mainly conservative
career politicians who lost any credibility or popular support
long ago.
A similar project is now underway in France. Royals offer
to Bayrou is more than just a tactical move designed to win more
votes. It marks the end of the union de la gauche,
the unity of the left, which lay at the heart of the
SPs electoral strategy since the reestablishment of the
party in Epinay in 1971. Its most important ally then had been
the Communist Party (CPF), which still had considerable influence
in the 1970s. Later allies were the Greens, Jean Pierre Chevènements
Citizens Movement and the Radical Left Party, which together
with the Socialist and Communist Parties formed the plural
left coalition government led by Lionel Jospin.
The various left governments that have administered
France since the 1980s never represented the interests of the
working class. From 1982 onwards-just one year after his election
as presidentFrançois Mitterrand ditched all the reformist
promises he had made during his election campaign and pursued
a right-wing agenda in the interests of big business. The same
course was followed by the government of Lionel Jospin.
The parties of the plural left have largely discredited
themselves through their right-wing policies. The Communist Party,
in particular, has suffered a defeat of historic proportions.
Its candidate, Marie George Buffet, received less than 2 percent
of the vote in the recent election. The Green candidate Dominique
Voynet received 1.6 percent, while the Citizens Movement
and the Radicals Left did not even put up candidates.
Now, Royal thinks the time is right for an open pact with the
right wing. She has largely assumed both their rhetoric and programme.
On Thursday, she announced on the national television channel
TF1 that she is aiming for a presidential majority,
which overcomes the eternal confrontation of block against
block. The reconciliation of left and right had been at
the centre of Bayrous election programme.
She has also taken over a key demand made in Bayrous
programme: financial relief for businesses in the form of exempting
them from social security contributions for two of their employeesa
measure aimed at helping smaller enterprises. In the same television
programme, she emphatically supported the Gaullist doctrine
of nuclear sovereignty.
Royals overtures to Bayrou make an absolute mockery of
all those who have argued that she represents a serious alternative
to Nicolas Sarkozy, the right-wing candidate of the Gaullist UMP.
Royals current right-wing campaign not only repels broad
layers of voters seeking an answer to the social crisis, it strengthens
the position of Sarkozy. It will also form the basis of her governments
policies should she be elected.
In its analysis of Royals cuddling up to Bayrou, the
newspaper Libération comments: By going for
the centre, Royal is geared on a strategic level to the coalition
in Italy led by Romano Prodi and on a more fundamental level to
the ideological renewal carried out by Tony Blair in Great Britain.
That is undoubtedly true. One could also add to this list the
former German social democratic chancellor, Gerhard Schröder.
From the point of view of the ruling class, such social democratic
or socialist-led governments have been much more effective
in cutting budgets and attacking social rights than right-wing
governments, which are internally divided or dominated by the
interests of disparate cliques. Unparalleled cuts in wages and
social rights have taken place, particularly in Germany during
the seven years of the Schröder government.
The working class today is incapable of defending a single
social gain without breaking from the Socialist Party and its
left-wing appendages. Many workers and young people
will cast their votes for Royal because they want to stop Sarkozy,
but this will do nothing to resolve the social and political crisis.
A Royal presidency will only differ in nuances from a Sarkozy
presidency.
It is left to the petty-bourgeois radicals to present Royal
as the lesser evil and help run her election campaign
under the slogan Anybody but Sarkozy. The Revolutionary
Communist League (Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire, LCR),
Workers Struggle (Lutte Ouvrière) and the Communist
Party have expressed their regret at Royals shift towards
Bayrou, but continue nevertheless to call for a vote for her in
the second round.
Alain Krivine of the LCR declared that Royals offers
to Bayrou were a very bad idea, which run the risk of demobilising
the left, but quickly added: We have clearly said
that the second round will be a referendum for or against Sarkozy.
We vote against Sarkozy, and the only means to do this is a vote
for Ségolène.
Lutte Ouvrière declared it was not surprised
by Royals suggestions, but persisted with their call for
a vote for Royal in order to keep Sarkozy in check.
The CPF is also continuing to call for support for Royal, in
order to beat Sarkozy. It is even preparing to participate
in an election meeting for Royal in Paris next week, together
with prominent socialists and the Greens. The Green Nöel
Mamère justified his readiness to participate in such an
event with the words: The house is burning in view of a
coalition between Sarkozy and Le Pen. This is not the time therefore
to ask questions. When we are invited to meetings, we have to
go....
Royals approach to Bayrou initially received a favourable
reaction inside the Socialist Party. This changed, however, when
at an election meeting in Montpellier on Wednesday, Royal promised
Bayrou participation in her government. Another speaker at this
meeting was the Green Party European deputy Daniel Cohn-Bendit,
who has long argued for an alliance between the socialists, the
UDF and the Greens.
This announcement provoked fear among some Socialist Party
functionaries about losing their positions and privileges. Due
to the French first-past-the-post electoral law, not only ministerial
positions and seats in the national parliament depend on agreements
between the parties, but tens of thousands of posts in regional
and municipal authorities as well. An alliance between the Socialist
Party and the UDF could cost many SP functionaries their jobs.
Royals offer to accept UDF ministers in a future government
was therefore a source of strife in the Socialist Party. The newspaper
Libération quotes a prominent SP functionary: To
turn to Bayrous voters is one thing, quite another when
one puts oneself into his hands. Even the chairman of the
party and Royals companion, François Hollande, felt
required to dissociate himself discreetly from Royals proposal.
Royal immediately made it clear that she will not yield to
pressure from her party. I am a practical woman, a woman
who adapts to circumstances, she told the television programme
France 2. I stand above the parties, because I must
win the support of every second French citizen.
On Wednesday, and in front of a camera team called specially
for the occasion, she had an ostentatious breakfast on the terrace
of a Paris restaurant with Dominique Strauss-Kahn. The former
finance minister has long been a proponent of a coalition with
the right wing and is seen as a possible prime minister under
Royal.
There can be no doubt that the Socialist Party, which once
loyally adapted to the right-wing agenda of Mitterrand, will also
faithfully follow Royals new course, so long as they are
guaranteed their posts and careers.
See Also:
After first round of French election:
the contest for the "centre"
[26 April 2007]
French presidential election: Sarkozy
and Royal to compete in second round
[23 April 2007]
French presidential election: Bayrou
poses as alternative to Sarkozy
[21 April 2007]
Presidential election in France: The dismal
world of Lutte Ouvrière and Arlette Laguiller
[20 April 2007]
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