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Sarkozys electoral victory and the bankruptcy of the
French left
By Peter Schwarz
9 May 2007
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The election of right-wing Gaullist politician Nicolas Sarkozy
as French president has shocked many people in France and Europe.
One recalls the mood of euphoria two years ago when French
voters rejected the European constitution. The same population
forced the withdrawal of the unpopular First Job Contract
(CPE) through a series of protests and demonstrations just one
year ago.
At the time various petty bourgeois left organisations
declared that these movements had rendered the policies of the
the government of Jacques Chirac illegitimate and disavowed.
Now was the time to develop a common movement which is able
to take on the employers directly and question the entire neo-liberal
policy (Statement by the Ligue communiste révolutionnaire
[LCRRevolutionary Communist League]).
Now, less than a year later, a man is taking over as president
whose right-wing convictions are beyond disputehe is an
ideological ally of US president George W. Bush and the former
Spanish Prime Minister José Maria Aznar. Sarkozy wants
to revive the values of order, performance and reward, and regards
himself as the man to deal once and for all with the heritage
of the 1968 protest generation. The international business press
has enthusiastically welcomed his election. They expect him to
finally dismantle the French welfare state, slash the jobs of
many of the countrys five million civil servants, cut pensions,
make the labor market more flexibleand contrary
to his predecessorsnot give way to pressure from the streets.
How was it possible for this noxious politician to collect
19 million votes and emerge as the victor in an election characterized
by an extraordinarily high voter turnout?
For the Socialist Party (PS) and media the answer is clear:
French voters are to blame. The latter, so goes the argument,
have moved to the right and Socialist Party candidate Ségolène
Royal did not follow them fast and far enough. As former Finance
Minister Dominique Strauss-Kahn put it on the evening of the election,
the Socialist Party had so far missed its chance to carry out
a social-democratic renewal along the lines of the
German Social Democratic Party at its notorious Bad Godesberg
conference, (in 1958-59, when the German SPD officially repudiated
socialism). In particular, the PS had neglected voters from the
centre.
This explanation ignores social reality and fails to identify
the profound social contradictions behind the election result.
The voters of the centre are an abstraction. The middle
classes in France, as elsewhere, are enormously polarized. For
a long time they constituted the social glue which bound together
social extremes. However, under the effects of the globalization
a majority has descended into the proletariat, while a small minority
has been able to climb its way upward.
The classic member of the middle classthe craftsmen,
farmer, landlord and little businessmenconfronts many of
the same problems today as the average worker. The same applies
to the urban middle class. The days when a university degree guaranteed
a career and a regular income are long gone. Now it is common
in France to encounter the temporary worker with a university
degree, or the academic who moves from a work placement center
to a part-time job and then a short-term contract.
There is no reflection of this social polarization in official
politics. While broad sections of workers and young people have
been radicalized and have protested time and time against social
ills, the Socialist Party and its allies have intervened to sabotage
their struggles, spread disappointment and demoralization and
thereby paved the way for Sarkozy. His success has far less to
do with his own strengths than it does with the bankruptcy of
the left, its abject inability to present a progressive
social alternative.
Strauss-Kahn notwithstanding, the French Socialist Party has
long since put its Bad Godesberg conversion behind
it. It is a bourgeois party, which defends the capitalist order.
Into the 1970s, it did this through the means of social compromise,
or rather, the promise of social compromise.
Since then, however, pressure from international financial
markets and the effects of globalization have wiped out the basis
for any policy based on social compromise. Under the presidency
of François Mitterrand and the government of Prime Minister
Lionel Jospin one promise after another was broken Social gains
were slashed, unemployment stagnated at around ten percent, incomes
sank and living conditions in the suburbs became increasingly
intolerable.
The first to profit was the extreme right National Front led
by Jean-Marie Le Pen. With the help of an electoral reform introduced
by Mitterrand, his party was regularly able to notch up two-digit
election results.
The recent election campaign of Ségolène Royals
represented a new low-point for the Socialist Party. Groomed by
her public relations advisors, the PS candidate posed as a mixture
of a female version of Sarkozy and Alice in Wonderland. She competed
with Sarkozy when it came to professions of loyalty to national
identity and tough action against juvenile offenders, while at
the same time making all sorts of windy promises. She began every
second sentence of her speeches with the words I want:
I want France tomorrow to be calm country, which believes
in itself, where all Frenchmen have a place, and love it,
I want to take the best from each epoch, to reinvent the
France of tomorrow, and so on.
Royal did not care to explain how her wishes were to be fulfilled.
Why should anyone have believed her? 1.6 million unfilled voting
cards from a total of 36 million voters indicates that many took
part in the election, though they doubtless found it hard to decide
between the candidates. Some chose to elect Sarkozy, whose program
was not attractive, but at least promised change.
According to election analyses Sarkozy received the same number
of votes from workers as Royal, with 53 percent of workers in
the private sector voting for the Gaullist candidate. He also
won 57 percent of those between 25 to 34 years. He had the support
of 77 percent of all self-employed, as well as 68 percent of pensioners
over the age of 70.
Royal, on the other hand, was only able to win a majority amongst
young voters under 24 (60 percent) and those voters who will be
directly affected by Sarkozys election. In the public sector,
where Sarkozy has announced plans for substantial job cuts, 57
percent voted for Royal, who also had the support of 75 percent
of unemployed persons. Some 58 percent of students also voted
for the SP candidate.
Do the millions of votes from workers and young voters for
Sarkozy mean agreement with his program? It would be absurd to
draw this conclusion. The election was characterized by a fundamental
contradiction. On the hand, there is a broad interest and urge
to participate in political lifeexpressed in the well-attended
election meetings and the high voter turnout. On the other hand,
the electorate was confronted with two candidates with right-wing
bourgeois programs, who differed from one another much more in
style than in substance.
The bankruptcy of the official left has created
a dangerous situation. Sarkozy is the most reactionary politician
to assume the post of French president since the end of the Vichy
regime in World War II. There can be no doubt that he takes the
threats he has made seriously. This is not just bound up with
his notorious fiery temperament, but also the enormous pressure
being exerted by the employers federations and financial
circles.
Sarkozy has already announced that he intends to reintroduce
the rejected European constitution in a slightly modified form
and without a new referendum. On May 17 he is expected to name
the former labor minister François Fillon as his prime
minister. Fillons attempts to reform the French
pension system four years ago brought millions of public and private
sector workers into the streets in protest. Two years later, in
his role as education minister, Fillon provoked renewed protests
from students.
According to the head of his election campaign team, Claude
Guéant, Sarkozy is also contemplating bringing left
ministers into his cabinet to draw the Socialist Party into his
attacks on the working class.
For its part, the working class must prepare for inevitable
clashes with Sarkozy and his government by drawing the lessons
from the bankruptcy of the Socialist Party and its allies. It
must take up the struggle against Sarkozy on the basis of an international
socialist program, which proceeds from the incompatibility of
the existing forms of capitalist relations with the basic needs
and requirements of working people. To this end workers require
a new independent socialist party.
The French left radical partiesthe LCR and Lutte Ouvrièresystematically
seek to prevent such a development. Both organizations called
for a vote for Royal in the second round and have now reacted
to her defeat in the manner of shocked opportunists. Both act
as if nothing significant has happened, refuse to make a political
balance sheet of the elections and return to business as usual.
In her statement on the election result, Arlette Laguiller
of Lutte Ouvrière blithely declares, For the
next five years the broad masses will have to put up with the
presidency of Nicolas Sarkozy and one or more governments, which
carry out social policies in line with those of the government
of the last five years. She does not dream of questioning
the legitimacy of a presidency who owes his post entirely to the
bankruptcy of the official left.
She calls upon her supporters to Keep their heads up,
and comforts them with the thought that we would have had
to fight if Ségolène Royal had been elected, to
ensure that things perhaps changed even a little in our favor.
It will be the same with Nicolas Sarkozy and the struggle will
be the same.
On election night Olivier Besancenot (LCR) made the call for
a united front of all social and democratic forces
In the name of unity such an alliancein reality, the LCR
in a pact with the Communist Party, the trade unions and other
reliable props of the bourgeois orderwould sabotage any
struggle against Sarkozy and his government. Any serious confrontation
would inevitably develop into a struggle for power and such a
struggle is firmly rejected by both LO, LCR and the trade union
bureaucracies they support.
See Also:
The French far left learns
nothing from the presidential election
[8 May 2007]
Nicolas Sarkozy wins French presidential
election
[7 May 2007]
Class issues in the French presidential
election
[4 May 2007]
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