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Presidential election contest in France: Panic grips the Socialist
Party
By Peter Schwarz in Paris
15 March 2007
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On the evening of March 12, Ségolène Royal, the
presidential candidate of the French Socialist Party (Parti SocialistePS),
spoke in the Japy sports hall in the 11th district of Paris to
artists, scientists and intellectuals supporting her candidacy.
Royal read off clichés from her prepared manuscript
in a monotonous tone. One had the impression that every word had
been carefully chosen to appeal to her audience. Nothing she said
gave even a hint of being sincerely believed or felt.
One should not overuse the phrase the style is the man,
or in this case the womanparticularly in the field of politics.
There are serious-minded politicians who are bad speakers, and
vice versa. But in the case of Royal, there is an obvious connection
between her monotonous delivery and the content of her politics.

She had begun her election campaign as a moderniser
in the manner of Tony Blair, ditching past social reform concepts
along the way as she sought to position herself even further to
the right than her main rival, Nicolas Sarkozy, the candidate
of the governing Gaullist party, the UMP (Union pour un Mouvement
Populaire). When this strategy encountered opposition, with Royal
plummeting in opinion polls, she changed course, seeking to cultivate
a more socially friendly image and develop a clearer demarcation
between left and right.
At Mondays meeting, she announced that she stood for
an alternative social model to that espoused by Sarkozy, and went
on to speak of the incompatibility of economic liberalism and
social policy. Finally, she brought the elephants
of the Socialist Party on boardi.e., those leading veteran
PS politicians from whom she had previously deliberately tried
to distance herself.
The twists and turns have exposed Royal as an unrestrained
opportunist, who says whatever seems opportune and does what the
powerful and wealthy forces in the background tell her to do.
The rise of Francois Bayrou
Under conditions where many voters are vehemently opposed to
Nicolas Sarkozy, a right-wing provocateur, a man no one reckoned
would be able to capitalise on Royals decline, François
Bayrou, the head of the bourgeois liberal Union pour la Démocratie
Française (UDF), has climbed rapidly in the polls and is
now narrowly trailing the two front-runners, Sarkozy and Royal.
According to recent polls, Bayrou would win 23.5 percent in
the first round of the election, with Royal at 25.5 percent and
Sarkozy at 27 percent. Bearing in mind the broad margin of error
in poll estimates, it appears quite possible that Bayrou could
make it to the second ballot, where he would have a real chance
of victory, with many voters of the third-placed candidatewhether
it be Royal or Sarkozyvoting for him.
The UDF was founded in 1978 by the French president at the
time, Valéry Giscard dEstaing, and is traditionally
aligned to the conservative bourgeois camp. From 1993 to 1997,
Bayrou was education secretary under prime ministers Edouard Balladur
and Alain Juppé. When Jacques Chirac sought to gather all
of the countrys conservative forces in a single party in
2002todays UMPBayrou and a section of his party
stayed outside and maintained the UDF as an independent organisation.
Now, Bayrou presents himself as someone who stands above the
quarrels of the other parties and is capable of bringing together
the right and left. He told a press conference last week that
his success in the polls meant that something is developing:
It is a message for the French people saying: we are ready
to turn over a new leaf. We have had enough of your bickering
and non-stop wars! We want the people to stick together.
Bayrou has been able strike a chord with voters tired of the
squabbling between parties, whose verbal disputes are inversely
proportional to their lack of any real political differences.
In terms of content, there is little to distinguish the programmes
of Royal and Sarkozy from one another.
Poll results accord to Bayrou the same level of competence
as to Royal and Sarkozy, but Bayrou is regarded as considerably
more honest by the largest percentage of those asked.
Thirty-eight percent consider Bayrou as the most honest candidate,
with his two opponents lagging behind with 26 percent respectively.

Frances radical left parties have played their own role
in contributing to Bayrous momentary success. Five years
ago, more than 10 percent of the electorate were prepared to vote
for candidates of the radical left as a supposed alternative.
But these organisations failed to respond and refrained from showing
any way forward. In the second round of voting five years ago,
Olivier Besancenot, the candidate of the Revolutionary Communist
League (LCRLigue communiste révolutionnaire), called
for support for Chirac, while Arlette Laguiller, the head of Workers
Struggle (LOLutte ouvrière), declared that
her party was much too small and insignificant to be able to influence
political developments.
In any event, Bayrous poll ratings remain extremely unstable.
Like Sarkozy and Royal, he is a veteran of the ruling establishment
and has essentially nothing new to offer. His advantage at the
moment consists in the fact that he is relatively unknown and
even more colourless than Royal. On this basis, he can pose as
the candidate of political reconciliation, something many voters
from the middle class and academic layers are seeking. In a society
so wrought by social conflict, however, such yearnings are without
foundation and will at some point violently collide with social
reality.
Socialist Party gripped by panic
Nevertheless, Bayrous successes in the polls have been
enough to create panic in the Socialist Party. Traditional socialist
voters from the fields of academia and education in particular
have switched to the UDF candidate. Now, the party leadership
fears it will fail to make the second roundas was the case
in 2002. Then-Socialist Party candidate Lionel Jospin suffered
defeat at the hands of the National Fronts Jean Marie Le
Pen.
The meeting on Monday evening was aimed to a large extent at
restoring Royals fortunes amongst intellectuals. She had
been carefully prepared. Attendance was limited to 1,000 invited
guests as well as selected press representatives. It required
a great deal of patience and persuasion on the part of the author
of this article to convince event organisers to allow him into
the hall.
The chairs were aligned in a circle around the speakers
podium: white at the front for the prominent and famous; further
back, brown chairs for the less well known. Party youth were positioned
on the balcony to lift the spirits with rhythmic chants of Ségolène
Présidente.
The response was limited, however. Only a few famous faces
from French film and television turned up, and eventually Royal
took her place between the actresses Jeanne Moreau and Emmanuelle
Béart. A few other less well-known actors and television
personalities completed the groupand that was it.
Attending from the world of science was the mathematician Michel
Broué, son of Pierre Broué, the historian and biographer
of Trotsky. For a quarter of an hour, he ranted against Sarkozy,
and then for another 15 minutes against Bayrou. Finally, for a
few seconds, he praised Ségolène Royal, evidently
finding little positive to say about his favoured candidate.
In a one rather unfortunate contribution, the psychologist
Gérard Miller praised the feminine character of the candidate,
who unlike other politicians was not a phallic woman.
Royal placed the promotion of education, culture and research
at the heart of her one-hour speech. While generously making grandiose
promises, she remained remarkably vague and nebulous when it came
to detail. She mentioned no figures and failed to address the
attacks on education carried out in the 1990s by Socialist Party-led
governments, when she served as a minister.
The mood only changed when Royal criticised the nationalist
outbursts made by her rival Sarkozy, who had recently called for
the formation of a ministry for immigration and national identity.
Royal described the proposal as an intolerable amalgam
of immigration and national identity.
She then proceeded, however, to promote her own variety of
nationalism and national identity: When it comes to me,
national identity will neither lose its meaning nor disappear
as a consequence of globalisation. She then presented France
as a role model for the world. Her only disagreement with Sarkozy
was that the national identity of citizens should not be defined
by their land of origin, but by where they want to go together.
She proclaimed that the nation does not differentiate between
white, black or yellow, nor between Catholics, atheists, Jews
or Muslims. We are all citizens of the French Republic with the
same rights and obligations. But in the next sentence, she
insisted that immigrants have to respect our rules
before being granted equal rights and opportunities.
The entire meeting had an air of detachment and surreality.
The standing ovations at the beginning and end appeared thoroughly
staged and hollow. Social realityhigh levels of unemployment,
poverty and rebellions in the suburbs, huge job cuts at Airbus
and other companiesfound no way into this meeting.
It was a gathering of people who feel threatened by social
reality and are seeking to close their eyes to what is going on.
These are the layers who are still prepared to support Ségolène
Royal. Among broad layers of the population, Madame Royal is a
discredited force and has been written off.
See Also:
France: Socialist Party attempts
left re-packaging of Ségolène Royal
[28 February 2007]
France: Royals campaign
falters as Sarkozy consolidates support of big business
[19 February 2007]
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