Posted on 05/01/2006 12:21:03 AM PDT by MadIvan
Chirac's waning days hurt France and beyond
A lame-duck prime minister whose time looks to be running out; feuding and power-hungry personalities convulsing Government; ministerial reputations tarnished; the pervading sense that a long-running regime is reaching its end: not Britain, but France. If Tony Blair had a moment of contemplation during his various ministerial crises and gazed across the Channel, he might experience a frisson of Schadenfreude at seeing an adminis-tration in worse straits than his own.
The cause of its current troubles is a dirty tricks row involving Frances three most prominent politicians. The claim that Dominique de Villepin, the Prime Minister, instructed a senior intelligence officer to investigate bribery claims against Nicolas Sarkozy, the Interior Minister and his presidential rival on the Right, is combustible. That he did so on the alleged prompting of Jacques Chirac is doubly explosive. A broad British parallel would involve Mr Blair prodding Charles Clarke to get MI5 to investigate the activities of Gordon Brown. M Chirac and M de Villepin have both denied the claims, made in court documents. And it has long been concluded that the linking of M Sarkozy to the long-running Clearstream corruption saga was bogus. But the effect has been to dent further the French Governments credibility shortly after its humiliating climbdown in the face of demonstrations against modest labour reforms.
M Chiracs woes are compounded by a book chronicling his presidency, which parts the veil of privacy that French writers have historically afforded their rulers and reveals to voters an unflattering, semi-tragic portrait of a president whose legacy is one of personal and political failure. Branding him the undertaker of Frances decline, the account, by a trusted figure in the Parisian journalistic establishment, pictures M Chirac as a broken man since his rebuff by French voters over the European constitution. The book, a bestseller, is in effect a political obituary a year before the presidential elections at which M Chirac is expected to bow out.
The developments call to mind the decay and political infighting that marked the end of François Mitterrands time in the Elysée Palace a decade ago hardly a flattering comparison. Yet there is little to suggest an imminent change of direction. It suits M Sarkozy for M de Villepin to limp on. If he tried to finish off his badly wounded rival, he would merely succeed in promoting the interests of another potential competitor. There is no doubt that the victor in all this is the alleged victim, M Sarkozy, who is not averse to a little politicking himself. Meanwhile, the fractured Left is trying to regroup around Ségolène Royal, already the darling of the liberal set, if not of her own party.
The losers thus far have been the French, even if many of them have encouraged the Government in its economic ossification. The wider world also requires a strong, clear and coherent voice. Instead, M Chirac offers another year in which France and Europes priorities take second place to the vanities of a failing monarch.
Ping!
..."ministerial reputations tarnished"...does that mean he didn't surrender?
Seriously, how long to you think France will be around in any recognizable way?
Il n'y a pas d'honte être français. Il y a seulement l'honte dans rester de français.
(There is no shame in being French. There is only shame in staying French.)
LonePalm, le Républicain du verre cassé (The Broken Glass Republican)
They simply cannot pay for it anymore.
The latter (25 years) is due to their declining birthrate, and rapid influx of uneducated Muslims. The French lost 1.4 million in WW I.
In another 25 years, there will be more French dead due to abortion than would have been killed in many, many World War Ones.
The Garlic Gallic is starting to smell.
"That will leave a mark. ;)"
Yep!
And, I thank you for posting it. ;o)
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