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Sarkozy stigmatises immigrants and glorifies the French nation
By Antoine Lerougetel
15 March 2007
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In a TV interview last Thursday and at a rally before 10,000
supporters in Caen in Normandy the following Friday, Nicolas Sarkozy,
presidential candidate for the ruling Gaullist UMP (Union for
a Popular Movement), announced his intention, if elected, to set
up a new ministry of immigration and national identity and to
further strengthen immigration restrictions.
Sarkozy wants to create a social and ideological base whereby
any action by workers to defend their rights and living standards
would be counted as unpatriotic and even treasonable.
He scapegoats immigrants and denies their human rights: A
person who enters France illegally, a person who makes no attempt
to integrate, that person should not expect to have the same rights
as a French person.... I want undocumented immigrants to be excluded
from the legal right to be housed. I want an immigrant who is
legally resident not to be able to bring his family over,
unless, prior to entering our territory, that family has learnt
to speak French and we are sure that the income from his work
enables him to look after it and house it decently (emphasis
added). He justifies this by the claim: I want to protect
France and its values.
The messagethat immigrants represent a danger to the
French way of life and culture, and that an increased hounding
of them is justifiedhas been enthusiastically welcomed by
neo-fascist presidential candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen. He commented
that Sarkozy was whoring for votes on the National Fronts
patch, but defended him from his critics, saying that to
refuse to associate immigration and national identity
is to deny that immigration can harm the national identity.
The anti-racist organisation MRAP (Movement against Racism
and for Friendship between Peoples) commented that Sarkozy obviously
did not choose these terms by chance, but in associating these
terms, he unleashes racist speech and ideology, he gravely threatens
national cohesion, he makes a social choice, that of the rejection
of the other, in a logic of incendiary division.
After a period, particularly on the occasion of his acceptance
speech for the party nomination on January 14, of attempting to
humanise his abrasive and provocative image in order to offset
his Socialist Party (PS) opponent Ségolène Royals
close challenge to his lead in the opinion polls, Sarkozy has
now made a sharp turn to the right for several reasons.
Writing in the conservative daily Le Figaro, Bruno Jeudy
notes: Convinced that the presidential elections are going
to be decided on the right, Nicolas Sarkozy is pre-empting the
issue of national identity. He adds that Sarkozy
thus aims to harden his right flank at a time when Bayrou is making
inroads into the moderates among Sarkozys electorate.
François Bayrou, presidential candidate for the right
centrist UDF (Union for French Democracy, the party of former
president Valéry Giscard dEstaing), under conditions
where there is no clear alternative to the right-wing agenda of
the PS and UMP contenders, has made a breakthrough in the opinions
polls, where Bayrou, Sarkozy and Royal are now bunched around
25 percent. A few weeks ago, Bayrou was barely above 6 percent.
Some polls indicate that, in a run-off against either Royal or
Sarkozy, Bayrou would win. Bayrou pledges, if elected, to form
some kind of coalition national government of harmony between
left and right.
Sarkozy rejects this for a clear right-wing agenda: The
election campaign must have a purpose. Why do I make precise pledges
to the French people? Because I want the French people to make
a clear choice. He is here serving notice of his determination
to carry through harsh attacks on democratic rights and severe
reductions in social services.
Sarkozys camp, according to Bruno Jeudy, also does not
rule out the Le Pen threattheir candidate being beaten in
the first round by Le Pen, as happened in 2002 with the Socialist
Party candidate Lionel Jospin. Le Figaro points out that
the well-known pollster Laurent Solly considers that, though Le
Pen has remained for some time around 14 percent of polled voting
intentions, he is at 31 percent approval rating (up by 6
percent) in the Paris-Match barometer, and the rate of
certainty of his voters is close to 80 percent. It is thought
that his real score would be some three to four percentage points
higher than in the opinion polls, as it turned out on April 21,
2002.
Beyond immediate electoral tactics, there are more fundamental
reasons for Sarkozys shift to the right. Under conditions
of growing friction between EU states and sharp differences between
Europe and the United States over access to energy resources and
the military interventions in the Middle East, Sarkozy wants to
gather the social and political forces to advance French imperialisms
foreign policy in a more aggressive way.
At his February 28 press conference, he outlined
an aggressive foreign policy, involving a strengthening of Frances
military presence in the world. This requires a chauvinist brainwashing
in pursuit of the national interest. Hence, his appeal
with fervent nationalist outpourings to the most backward elements
of French society, many of whom have attachments to the armed
forces or the former colonies.
He declares in tones with an ominously totalitarian ring: When
it comes to France, there can be no division into camps.
Speaking of the Airbus restructuring plan Power 8, he asserts
in his TV interview, I know how the Germans defend their
interests. Airbus must be run as an enterprise, an
industry. He accuses the German company Daimler-Benz, which
is a major private stakeholder in Airbus, of irresponsible greed:
it asks for dividends to remunerate its capital in a company
which is sacking 10,000 people; that I cannot accept.
The airbus restructuring is one part of a general restructuring
of the French economy affecting firms such as Michelin, Renault
and PSA Citroën-Peugeot.
The trade unions at Airbus, notably FO (Workers Power), are
following Sarkozys nationalist line. They refuse to mobilise
Airbus worker European-wide against the plan of the management
and present the dispute as a conflict between France and Germany.
Thus, they have called off a demonstration against Power 8 of
workers from all the European plants scheduled for March 16.
Sarkozys speech at Caen on Friday took the form of an
incantation punctuated by roars of applause where the words France
and French were repeated 200 times or more in a script
of nine pages.
Through empty rhetorical devices and phoney history, he sought
to amalgamate the historical class struggles in France into the
myth of a France, one and indivisible. He sought to
obscure the sharp class divide in French society with tedious
phrases invoking an abstract national identity: France
is a miracle.... It is Frances miracle to combine such a
strong identity with such a great aspiration to universalism...a
mysterious interweaving...a mysterious bond.... The Republic has
accomplished the ancient dream of the kings. It has made us a
nation one and indivisible.
Sarkozy insisted that France suffers not from a social crisis
but rather a moral crisis and that denigrating
the nation is at the heart of that crisis. Defending his
plan to create the ministry of immigration and national identity,
in Le Figaro March 11 he said, It is because immigration
policy is the identity of France in 30 years time.
He reserved for immigrants lynch-mob characterisations: The
person who does not wish to recognise that women are the equals
of men, the man who wants to shut away his wife, force his daughter
to wear a veil, to undergo excision, or to endure a forced marriage,
he has no business in France. At the same time, he claimed
to be the inheritor of Frances fighters for progress from
the Enlightenment to the Resistance against the Nazis.
Sarkozys invocation of nationalism goes along with his
strivings to create a battering ram against youth and workers
who resist his free-market, anti-welfare state programme.
Taken with the huge strengthening of police powers through
a series of laws sponsored by Sarkozy and the UMP government since
2002, and a weakening of legal labour protection and civil rights,
all of which have gone through with little or no opposition from
the trade unions and the left parties, despite massive sporadic
protests, his stated intentions pose a very serious threat to
the mass of the population. They clear the ground for the sweeping
away of social gains and democratic rights won in more than two
centuries of struggle.
See Also:
Prominent French intellectuals rally
to presidential candidate Nicolas Sarkozy
[3 March 2007]
Gaullist presidential candidate
Sarkozy allies with Italys post-fascists: Show me
your friends, and I will tell you who you are
[23 February 2007]
France: Royals campaign
falters as Sarkozy consolidates support of big business
[19 February 2007]
France: Nicolas Sarkozy goes
to London
[5 February 2007]
The coronation of Nicolas
Sarkozy
French interior minister named Gaullist presidential candidate
[20 January 2007]
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