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Life and loves of the daughters haunt Chirac
The Times UK ^ | February 18 | Matthew Campbell, Paris

Posted on 02/18/2007 4:48:05 PM PST by Cincinna

THREE months away from the end of Jacques Chirac’s presidency, the ramparts of privacy shielding his family from the public eye are beginning to crumble amid revelations about the troubled lives of his daughters.

Behind her public persona as the leader’s most trusted adviser, Claude Chirac, 45, his younger daughter, has led a jetsetter’s life of love affairs with actors and sportsmen even while haunted by tragedies such as the suicide of a husband, according to two books published in Paris last week.

The greatest shadow over the family, however, has been the suffering of Laurence, 48, Chirac’s elder daughter, who has tried to kill herself several times.

A dominant figure in French politics for more than four decades, the 74-year-old Chirac has zealously guarded his family’s privacy through numerous domestic crises but, as he prepares to leave office, the barrier protecting his personal affairs appears to have fallen.

Just as François Mitterrand revealed, before he left office in 1995, that he had an illegitimate daughter with his mistress, Chirac last week acknowledged having extramarital affairs and called the mental illness of Laurence “the drama of my life”.

Nothing, however, exposed the tortured dynamics of France’s first family as graphically as the story of Claude, a single mother who became Chirac’s closest accomplice.

According to sources close to the family, her extraordinary influence over the leader is deeply resented by Bernadette, the president’s wife, and is linked to Chirac’s feelings of guilt about being an absent father during his quest for executive power.

Laurence’s severe anorexia put paid to a promising medical career for which she had worked hard in her teens. With a taste for cigarettes and alcohol, the less studious Claude showed a rebellious streak, prompting Chirac to order his chauffeur to “keep an eye on her”, according to a book about her by journalist Renaud Revel.

Her parents watched a series of boyfriends troop through the Paris town hall where the family lived in a palatial apartment for many years when Chirac was mayor. For several months she had a relationship with Patrick Abada, a pole vaulter. However, the aristocratic Bernadette was determined that Claude should marry into European royalty — topping her list was Prince Albert of Monaco — or a captain of industry.

This prompted bitter rows including one that ended when a tearful Claude got out of the car at a red traffic light, shouting: “You and papa want to sell me.”

Instead of marrying Albert, she befriended Princess Steph-anie, his sister, the “wild child” of the centuries-old Grimaldi clan, and for a while they were the life and soul of glittering allnight parties in Los Angeles that often ended up at a nightclub owned by Jack Nicholson.

Friendly with Anthony Delon and Paul Belmondo, the sons of famous French actors, Claude dated Christophe Lambert, the dashing star of the film Grey-stoke. She was also friendly with Gerard Dépardieu, who was once photographed nibbling her neck, and had a liaison with Nicolas Sarkozy, who whisked her off to London for the weekend on a friend’s private jet when he was deputy mayor of Neuilly.

Sarkozy, the interior minister, has been at loggerheads with the president ever since he backed a rival of Chirac in the 1995 presidential election. This betrayal was made all the more bitter for ending the president’s dream of Sarkozy one day becoming a son-in-law as well as political heir.

“To think that I’ve seen him in his underpants,” Chirac was reported to have commented after hearing about Sarkozy’s “treachery”. Bernadette was just as upset. “That boy is the only one to have known the family sheets,” she once told a friend, referring to the fact that Claude had entertained her friend in a private flat belonging to the family instead of in the official residence.

Claude, apparently, has never forgiven the betrayal and likes verbally eviscerating the front-runner in the race to succeed her father.

Claude may also regret her relationship with Philippe Habert, a political journalist. The two were married in a ceremony attended by various celebrity friends of Claude.

From the beginning, it did not seem that promising a match. The first thing Habert told Chirac on being introduced to him was: “1988 was a fiasco, you were lousy.” This was a reference to Chirac’s second, failed presidential campaign.

In April 1993 Habert was found dead. Claude had been planning to divorce him and he took a drug overdose after watching the video of their wedding. A year later, Claude began seeing Thierry Rey, the former judo world champion, and in 1996 she gave birth to Martin, the president’s only grandchild. Chirac was thrilled.

However, Claude and Rey separated and she dedicated more and more time to her father, becoming his most important adviser. She addresses him as “Chirac” instead of “papa” and has, on occasion, been overheard scolding him as though he were a badly behaved child.

Chirac’s wife has paid a terrible price, cruelly sidelined by Claude, who believed that her mother’s old-fashioned mores were alienating young voters.

This was not Bernadette’s only humiliation. Chirac has always had a reputation as a ladies’ man and in The Stranger at the Elysée, another biography published last week, he admitted that he had loved women other than his wife. Even so, he seemed to deny persistent ru-mours that he had fathered an illegitimate child in Japan.

He made clear that he had long been tormented by the condition of Laurence, an “intelligent and pretty” girl, he said, who had been hit by anorexia at the age of 15. When she fell ill, he had lunch with her each day hoping to make up for his absence when she was a small child. It did not work.

In 1990 Laurence was severely injured when she jumped out of her fourth-floor flat. She has taken overdoses of pills and once tried to leap from a car on the motorway.

So concerned was Chirac about her that he got a businessman to rescue a Swiss clinic that was facing bankruptcy so that her treatment would not be interrupted.

As for Claude, tragedy struck again in 1998 when Jacques Pilhan, a spin doctor who had taught her the tricks of the trade and whom she regarded as a second father, died of cancer.

“It took her a while to get over it,” said a friend.

The family has paid dearly for power. In the last days of his reign, Chirac has become a symbol of failure, discredited for having befriended African despots while alienating his countrymen.

He has withdrawn behind the palace walls with courtiers such as Claude as the country limps from one crisis to another, presiding over the collapse of France’s status in Europe and its growing isolation on the wider international stage.

He came to power with a pledge to heal the “social fracture” but deepening social divisions resulted in the worst street riots since the 1960s.

“It is hard to see how history can judge that legacy kindly,” said one European diplomat.

Will that discourage 11-year-old Martin from one day pursuing a political career and a possible Chirac comeback? His grandfather no doubt likes that idea. His mother will have to advise him.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: chirac; france; frenchelection
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You really need to shower after reading this.

From what I know, the elder daughter is in a vegetative state, being kept alive first, in their residence at l'Hotel de Ville, now in the Elysee Palace,

1 posted on 02/18/2007 4:48:08 PM PST by Cincinna
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To: Cincinna

I would try to kill myself too, if Chirac was my father.


2 posted on 02/18/2007 4:54:46 PM PST by LtdGovt ("Where government moves in, community retreats and civil society disintegrates" -Janice Rogers Brown)
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To: Cincinna

She jumped out of a 14th story window of Paris's City Hall and remains in a vegetative state to this day.


3 posted on 02/18/2007 4:55:22 PM PST by Cincinna (HILLARY & HER HINO "We are going to take things away from you for the Common Good")
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To: Cincinna; MadIvan; All

OMG how sadddd Cinncinaa

That so saddddd


4 posted on 02/18/2007 4:56:24 PM PST by SevenofNine ("We are Freepers, all your media belong to us, resistence is futile")
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To: Cincinna

Why did Chirac name his daughters Claude and Laurence?
Why couldn't he have given them lovely feminine names like Yvette or Genevieve?


5 posted on 02/18/2007 4:57:45 PM PST by Lizavetta
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To: Cincinna
"For several months she had a relationship with Patrick Abada, a pole vaulter."

Ahem, well...

Say no more.

6 posted on 02/18/2007 4:57:48 PM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: Cincinna

"The family has paid dearly for power" This statement really stood out to me. This family did not pay the price because of power they paid the price because they had a cheating/lying husband and father.



8 posted on 02/18/2007 4:59:19 PM PST by Kimmers
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To: Lizavetta

Claude and Laurence are traditional names for girls in France. Nothing unusual about that at all.

What is unusual is the strange family relationship these girls were forced to live in.

The younger daughter's husband committed suicide.

It is very sad, indeed.


9 posted on 02/18/2007 4:59:46 PM PST by Cincinna (HILLARY & HER HINO "We are going to take things away from you for the Common Good")
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To: Cincinna

"So concerned was Chirac about her that he got a businessman to rescue a Swiss clinic that was facing bankruptcy so that her treatment would not be interrupted."

Corruption is alive and well as always in france...


10 posted on 02/18/2007 5:01:12 PM PST by traviskicks (http://www.neoperspectives.com/Ron_Paul_2008.htm)
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To: Kimmers

This is truly a story of family destroyed by power and ambition of the father, and enabling of the mother.

Shakespearean, isn't it?


11 posted on 02/18/2007 5:01:26 PM PST by Cincinna (HILLARY & HER HINO "We are going to take things away from you for the Common Good")
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To: Cincinna

So? They're French.


12 posted on 02/18/2007 5:02:00 PM PST by toddlintown (Six bullets and Lennon goes down. Yet not one hit Yoko. Discuss.)
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To: Cincinna
Claude Chirac, 45, his younger daughter, has led a jetsetter’s life of love affairs with actors and sportsmen...

The term 'doorknob' seems to be appropriate.

13 posted on 02/18/2007 5:02:47 PM PST by ConservaTexan (February 6, 1911)
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To: traviskicks

"Corruption is alive and well as always in france..."

That is the reason why so many believe Chirac must run for President. Only in office can he avoid prosecution for the criminal corruption charges that await him.

IMO he will cut an amnesty deal, and not run.


14 posted on 02/18/2007 5:03:42 PM PST by Cincinna (HILLARY & HER HINO "We are going to take things away from you for the Common Good")
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To: Cincinna

I guess this explains why Chirac excused Clinton's games and why Clinton tried to protect Chirac's loans to Iraq.

What a sick bunch of people! Good grief!


15 posted on 02/18/2007 5:07:01 PM PST by CyberAnt (Drive-By Media: Fake news, fake documents, fake polls)
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To: Cincinna
My heart breaks for his children....Those deep scars they received as children do not heal just because they are adults.

I doubt "big daddy" takes any responsibility for the damage he inflicted.
16 posted on 02/18/2007 5:08:03 PM PST by Kimmers
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To: Cincinna
Image hosted by Photobucket.com
Tant piss...

17 posted on 02/18/2007 5:12:42 PM PST by Chode (American Hedonist ©®)
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To: LtdGovt

A gal named Laurence is almost as bad as a boy named Sue;) This family seems to have actually "out-slutted" the royal family of Monaco! However, I'm sure a pole-vaulter must have some "interesting" pickup lines, hehe;)


18 posted on 02/18/2007 5:14:18 PM PST by Frank_2001
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To: Cincinna

Chirac's greatest crime is, IMO, being in bed with Saddam.

His family suffered from his personal indescretions, but the whole world suffered from his liason with Saddam.

They don't call him "Jacques Iraq" for nothing.


19 posted on 02/18/2007 5:20:20 PM PST by Cincinna (HILLARY & HER HINO "We are going to take things away from you for the Common Good")
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To: Cincinna

Yes, I was thinking perhaps they should have had girl's names. Very sad situation.


20 posted on 02/18/2007 5:20:41 PM PST by originalbuckeye (I want a hero....I'm holding out for a hero (politically))
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