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France: Nicolas Sarkozy goes to London
By Antoine Lerougetel
5 February 2007
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Nicolas Sarkozys first foreign excursion since his designation
as official presidential candidate of Frances ruling Gaullist
UMP (Union for a Peoples Movement) was a trip to London.
He spent January 30 visiting the Marylebone Jobcentre Plus, lunching
with Prime Minister Tony Blair and addressing an election rally
organised by the London branch of the UMP, which attracted 2,000
French expatriates.
The first round of the French presidential elections will be
held April 22.
The Guardian newspaper noted: Mr Sarkozys
choice of London for his first foreign trip since launching his
presidential campaign is seen as deeply symbolic. He is keen to
present himself as an international statesman, a friend of Mr.
Blair and close to the US-British alliance.
Sarkozy is reported to have met Blair for discussions on no
less than eight occasions. Their personal friendship is underlined
by unofficial meetings, including while on holiday in Florence
and during Sarkozys trip to London to celebrate his reconciliation
with his wife Cecilia.
When Blairs wife goes to Paris, she has dinner at the
ministry of the interior Sarkozy presides over.
The London visit, and particularly the rally at the end of
day, provides a snapshot of Sarkozys social base. There
are 60,000 registered voters among the big French expatriate community
in Britain (some 300,000), mainly living in London and the prosperous
southeast. Many of them are drawn by the low taxes and deregulated
economy stripped of labour and social rights, where the business
of accumulating wealth is untrammelled. The January 30 Guardian
editorial comments, The expatriate [French] community
in Britain is one of the biggest outside France. Whizz-kid bankers
and businessmen fleeing a homeland in a state of political (and
entrepreneurial) torpor are natural voters for the man who has
promised to break the mould of French politics.
According to the Daily Telegraph, Many of the
new arrivals work in the Square Mile [the City, Londons
banking and financial district], where bonuses mean that they
can earn five times what they would for the same job at home.
The Guardian gave this description of Sarkozys
audience: Hundreds of well-heeled city financiers, students
from Pariss posh suburbs, restaurant workers and teachers
living in Britain filled a hall at Old Billingsgate market.
The Telegraph reported, Upwards of 2,000 chic,
prosperous supporters chanted Sarko president as he
told them he wanted their support for his candidacy and his vision
of a new France.
Raphaël Leclerc, 21, studying politics at the London School
of Economics, told the Guardian that he had grown up in
a smart Paris suburb and came from a privileged background
and rightwing family and had played football against Sarkozys
sons. Alex Poitier, 29, a trader at a foreign bank, told the Daily
Telegraph, In terms of salary and the amount of responsibility
Im given there is no comparison with France, but I love
the whole philosophy of the place.
This philosophy, dominant in these social layers, is well expressed
by a piece by the French, London-based think tank Cercle doutre-Manche
in the January 30 Financial Times January 30. It asserts
that Britain has overtaken France as a place for money-making:
The UK generates 76 billion euros more gross domestic
product..... Twenty-five years ago the UKs GDP was 75 percent
that of France.
The article then explains the secret of this success: Margaret
Thatcher broke down many rigidities and reintroduced market practices
in the economy. With Tony Blair at the helm and Gordon Brown at
the purse, market fluidity has been introduced in almost all aspects
of the economy.
Here we see the significance of Sarkozys visit to the
job centre. The destruction of job protection is lauded with the
euphemism hiring people has been made easier. Forcing
people to accept any low-paid job offered by the job centre, on
pain of withdrawal of benefits for those who do not, is approvingly
described: Welfare resources are targeted to make it easier
for the long-term unemployed, older workers, young people and
single mothers to get back to work with a carrot and a stick policy.
These are the people for whom Sarkozy speaks and who want him
to do in France what Thatcher first did in Britain. What they
applaud in Thatcher and also Blair is that, as the Cercle doutre-Manche
puts it, they have held firm in the face of opposition.
The cynicism of Sarkozys claim, in recent statements,
to have the interests of workers at heart and even to approve
of better remuneration for work, is clearly revealed in a January
31 interview in the International Herald Tribune: I
want people to be recompensed and respected for their work. I
want people to understand the value of work. Im concerned
with people who want to work hard, and I want to speak to them.
When people work hard, they have to be recompensed for this. And
thats why I want to do away with inheritance laws, because
if someone has worked hard throughout his or her life, then it
must be possible to pass onto your children the fruits of your
work.... I dont accept that someone is poor if they worked
really hard.
Sarkozys message is not for working people, but for the
upwardly mobile and the financial elites who will have substantial
wealth to leave to their children. His call for hard work to be
rewarded is in fact a call for the rich to be allowed to get richer.
He employs the same bogus claims of a commitment to a meritocracy
as Blair, where a supposed equality of opportunity for social
advancement and wealth accumulation is counterposed to calls for
greater social equalitywhich is denounced for holding back
the hard working and rewarding the lazy and shiftless.
Anyone who defends social equality is out of step with the
times, Sarkozy declares: My ideas are the ideas of todays
world: respect for work, social promotion, equal opportunities.
Let me tell you, I dont like egalitarianism. I dont
like people being unnecessarily helped. I dont like lowering
in the interests of equality. I want to bring everyone upwards.
And when quizzed as to his commitment to deregulation and privatisation,
Sarkozy reassures his interlocutor, Im not an enemy
of the state. A great country needs the state, but let me put
things very simply. I believe in capitalism. I believe in the
market economy. I believe in competition.
When asked why in a recent poll 51 percent of the people said
they were afraid of his policies and actions, he vaunted his success
in the opinion polls and attributed this to his readiness to confront
social and political opposition:
Speaking of how he faced up to 27 days of rioting in Paris
and major French cities, he replied, Fortunately Im
worrying. If I were reassuring what would things be...you come
along and you say, Mr. Sarkozy, why are you frightening
people? Why are people worried? What should be done not to frighten
people? Ive been number one, so presumably, there
must be some reassurance; at least thats the perception
of some.
Im not frightened of ideologies, credos. Im
not going to bow down to the latest fad, and Im not frightened
of facing up to difficulties, he boasted.
It is on this basis of his role as a strongman, an authoritarian
figure, that Sarkozy is making his pitch for presidential office.
He expressed his appreciation of former Gaullist Prime Minister
Alain Juppés courage in 1995, when he attempted to
make major cuts in the pension rights of public sector workers.
A mass strike movement, supported by the vast majority of the
French population, forced Juppé to retreat and led to the
eventual downfall of his government. Juppés mistake,
said Sarkozy, is that he forgot...to mobilise the electorate.
Sarkozys bombastic displays of self-confidence are not
due to any inherent strength or to the popularity of his elitist
policieshe leads in the polls, but with only 38 percent
of respondents. They are the product of the lack of any meaningful
opposition from the official left parties: Socialist Party, Communist
Party, Greens, the trade unions and their hangers-on in the so-called
far left and radical movements (the LCRRevolutionary
Communist League, LO Workers Struggle, the PTthe Workers
Party, José Bové and the anti-globalisation associations).
A recent poll has found that more than 70 percent of French
people do not believe in the free market as a condition for social
well-being. This was also expressed in the rejection of the European
constitution in the May 2005 referendum, the mass protest movements
of 2003 against pension cuts, and in 2006 against the dismantling
of labour and social rights and protections.
Luc Chatel, a UMP spokesman observed: Britain is a good
example of a country which has known how to be self-critical,
to modernise, to look to the future. So [Sarkozy] has much to
get out of an exchange of views with the British Prime Minister.
What Sarkozy is seeking to learn from Blair is how to make
a policy of the destruction of rights and living standards, imposed
by an authoritarian state, palatable to the electorate by dressing
it up in pseudo-progressive and liberal garb. He needs Blairs
advice on how to make enough voters believe that his credo I
believe in competition can also encompass what he described
to the IHT as an ethical form of capitalism.
He has promised, if elected, to curtail the right to strike
and picket, to generalise the New Job Contract at present only
enforceable in small businessesa contract similar to the
First Job Contract (CPE), which had to be withdrawn because of
the mass movement of youth and workers against it in the spring
of 2006. He proposes to withdraw benefits from unemployed workers
who reject a second offer of a job from the state employment agency,
lengthen working hours and make further drastic inroads into pension
rights.
Blair is the most despised politician in Britain for his lying
and complicity with US President George W. Bush in justifying
the illegal invasion and colonial-style occupation of Iraq against
massive national and world opposition. He is also hated for his
social policies.
Sarkozys visit to such a discredited figure is another
aspect of his alienation from the concerns of ordinary French
citizens.
Under todays conditions of accelerating competition for
the worlds resources and markets, the aspiration of French
big business to catch up with the UKs rate of exploitation
of its working class will demand a frontal assault on the democratic
rights and workers living standards. Sarkozy and the Socialist
Party presidential candidate Ségolène Royal, the
choice placed before the French electorate, represent such an
offensive. Julien Dray, speaking on behalf of Ségolène
Royal, who has yet to meet Tony Blair despite having expressed
approval for him, stated January 30, But it is not impossible
that she will see him before the election.
See Also:
The coronation of Nicolas
Sarkozy
French interior minister named Gaullist presidential candidate
[20 January 2007]
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