French President Sarkozy gets my good marks.

by Fripouille | January 19, 2009 at 10:52 am
264 views | 38 Recommendations | 13 comments

Photos

Sarkozy in Casino Royale-Photo-01

Sarkozy in Casino Royale-Photo-01

see larger image

uploaded by Fripouille

“Time flies when your’e having fun” they say. Well, if that’s the case, French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s last eighteen months haven’t just flown by, they’ve rocketed by!!

He’s been everywhere, from Peking to Portugal, from Washington to Warsaw. From England to Egypt. He’s met everyone too. From Bush to Obama, from Hu Jintao to the Dalai Lama.

So what has all this hyper activity resulted in?

Well, the results are mixed, although they are better than he could have hoped for, or expected.

After spending the six months after his election being called a fascist, a king, a dwarf and a dictator by the left and its supporters, he finally began trying to do what he was elected to do. That is, reform this notoriously nostalgic country whose inhabitants generally equate reform with the-end-of-France-as-it-has-always-existed. The result is surprisingly positive.

He has actually succeeded, with the help of the Government, in reforming the pension system, the legal framework of national TV, the Constitution (unbelievable huh?), the university financing system, and the Government has also implemented a law which guarantees minimum service during public sector strikes, and another banning smoking in all workplaces, restaurants, in fact everywhere but outside and at home. In the pipeline is further reform of the catastrophically outdated school education and further reform in work and contract legislation. Most of this legislation is approved by public opinion.

Less well received, though, was his (in?)famous “Fiscal Package”, which was seen by many, even some of his supporters, as being overly-generous to the rich whereas the middle and lower classes were (and still are) being asked to tighten their belts. He gave himself an enormous pay rise too, which didn’t help. Proposed legislation on the collection and use of criminal statistics also had to be watered down.

Upcoming legislation in trouble includes proposals to free up shops and businesses from very tight Sunday-trading laws (the Catholic and union lobby), and certain aspects of judicial law, notably reform of the magistrature and the penal classification of young offenders.

Then there’s his European Presidency, which finished at the end of December. A general and reasonable criticism is that he failed (then again who hasn’t?) to unify Europe in terms of long-term diplomatic, economic and social legislation issues. The European Defence Force is also on semi-hold, notably due to fears of the British getting the lion’s share of operational control over it. This hasn’t stopped some progress though, like the coordinated response to Somalian piracy, which is even being co-ordinated from England. His ideas for a Mediterranean economic organisation (from which France in particular would have had the most to gain) had to be severely watered down.

Major successes include his firm stance, echoed by other European and particularly Eastern European countries, on the Georgian crisis, which paid off in terms of Russia having to back down on certain of its demands.

A big success was his handling of the economic crisis, during which he managed (with the help of Brown and Aznar) to get Europe round the table and agree on a general response. It’s not perfect, notably due to German objections having to be taken into account, but the fact that Europe was able to speak with more-or-less one voice was a major achievement in itself.

And, to top it all off, he has been instrumental in the organisation of the Charm el Cheikh summit, putting France back into the Mideast equation.

All this activity has pushed up his ratings in France. Most people think that his Presidency has been a relative success up until now.

And this has translated into his being able to persuade the French that he and the government are not responsible for the fact that recent economic events are going to have a hard impact here, as they shall elsewhere. Convenient, yes, but that’s the way the dice roll.

His biggest ally during his eighteen months in office though, has been the Socialist Party.

Yes, your eyes are ok, and no this is not a typing error, and no I have not gone crazy.

The Socialist Party has saved Sarkozy.

He has been lucky enough to have an opposition party in such a state of disorganisation and petty internal feuding that they have not been able to mount credible counter-attacks against his actions. The best they have managed is “total and frontal” opposition to anything and everything, without being able to offer any credible alternatives. The French have understood this of course, to the point where a common joke here is, even among Socialists themselves, when asked if they are socialists by those who don’t know them, to answer “Yes, I’m a socialist, but don’t worry, I’m getting treatment”.

So, love him or hate him, Nicolas Sarkozy is on a roll, mostly because a lack of serious opposition to his policies.

This will be of invaluable help to him because now that his European Presidency is over, and that we are probably going to see a pause in the Mideast crisis, he will have to get back down to the more mundane and thankless task of running France’s internal affairs.

And there will be much to do.....

Marks out of ten? Oh, I’m feeling generous today. 7.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
158

Thanks for a very good report.

I agree with you.  He has had a good start and is certainly different from recent French presidents. I have hopes he can accomplish much for France.

0
Fripouille

Thanks 158.

I hope so too, not because I'm a particularly big Sarko fan, but because it's time France's Presidents did more for their country than glorify the past whilst sacrificing the present.

And I honestly think that the French appreciate his approach, whether they say so openly or not........

0
Fripouille

Yes, I well understand why you thought that. Most people here thought he was an opportunist too, until his presidential campaign really got underway. (He was also helped by a weak opponent in the person of Ségolène Royal).

Since then, despite the fact that I, like you, do not agree with all his policies, he is proving to be an international political figure to be reckoned with. It is also becoming clear that he is saying out loud what French people have been whispering secretly for years. France needs change.

So much the better for France, and so much the better for international relations.

A surprising personality.

Thanks for this pertinent comment.


0
Davis Bradley

Sarko is very popular where I live (in the minority areas).  His policy of removing the children of undocumented workers from schools is very popular.  The internement center in Vincenne is another very popular decision.  Anyone found without documents are kept there incomunicado for months at a time until they are deported. His urban policy of destroying older buildings to make way for sky-scrapers is extremely popular.  Those who disagree with his policies are investigated and isolated (another popular move).  The power of the intelligence services against internal targets has dramatically increased (to the delight of those being investigated).  The population of prisons has exploded and overcrowded jails are the norm (mostly filled with people with immigration problems or discrepancies).  Overall, I'd say his policies are fantastic as he has rid France of all those pesky Africans and Arabs.

 

 

 

0
Fripouille

Well, you have every right not to agree with Sarkozy's policies.

The problem with the issues you quote though is that none of the policies they refer to were actually initiated by Sarkozy.

The expulsion of illegal immigrants and their families (and children) existed long before Sarkozy was even a Minister. The same goes for detention and detention centres. Urban housing developement in Paris is managed by the Paris region, in the person of the Socialist Bertrand Delanoé right now, and the Government in certain instances, but not the President. As someone who disagrees with his policies (although, as I said, we don't know yet which of HIS policies you actually disagree with), you may like to tell us about the French Intelligence Services' investigation against you and your isolation? France has one of the highest percentage of immigrant population in the whole of Europe, if not the highest.

Thank you.

2
Paschen

Sakozy is one of those politician that do not fit in any draw, he seems right wing and then he acts left wing and vice versa. He did surprise me on several occasions in rather positive way, like his speech on the 14s of July redeeming those French Soldiers that where still seen as having betrayed la Grande France... Further his speech at the European Russian summit in Nice, now that was rather memorable and then his proposal to integrate all Mediterranean Countries in to a trade zone. And what about his proposal to make make the G8 a G20 that was welcome news around the World except for the other G8 members that did not want to hear about it. Yes, some times he should think a little more before talking and so should we all. His reforms, well much needed in deed and yet as it is with reforms we will only see their benefits or not as time goes by and may have to re-reform some of his reforms as well. He is charismatic, that is for certain, the rest History will be the judge.

0
Fripouille

Amen to every word here Päschen. You are obviously very well-informed about the "feel" of France and who Sarkozy is.

Moreover, his 'neither left nor right' posture suits me down to the ground. I have never been left or right, I have just tried to judge policies on their own merit, whoever's they may be. "Re-reform". The veracity of what you say there shall surely be proved as the education reforms drag on (and on and on....)

He has three and a half years left. As you say, history shall judge him thereafter...

Thank you very much for writing.

0
Art_By_Alida

Very informative....


0
Fripouille

Thank you!

(Mind you, it's difficult NOT to be informative about Sarkozy. He's all DO DO DO DODO!! and there's always something to write about him, for better or for worse).

Hope you're well.....

1
Not from Paris

Sorry to say, but mainstream media coverage and what we're living here it's very different.

We're fed up of this frenetic puppet. He's not DO DO DO, he's just CUT CUT CUT in all the wonders that made France a society. That cannot last.

0
Fripouille

Hello Not from Paris,

Why do you say "we"?

I take it you live in Paris? It has a Socialist Mayor. I live in Lyon, Socialist Mayor too. But Paris and Lyon are not France, I'm afraid.

I was not talking about the media, I was giving my personal opinion. That's why this is called an "opinion" post. You may not agree with it, fine, but I don't really think you should be talking in the name of the whole of France.

Thanks for writing.


0
Maireid Sullivan

Yes, but what has he REALLY achieved of value for the people of France?

He is just a socialite, pretending to be a leader!

0
Fripouille

Hello Maireid,

Well there are certainly people here who would agree with that, but I honestly think that if the only thing people can find to criticise in him is that he wears Rayban glasses and goes on holiday on a boat, he doesn't have much to worry about. I think it's safe to say that many French people themselves would agree that jealousy of others' wealth is not rare here. That, coupled with French society's tendancy towards conformity in public, would explain some of the criticism. (I wrote a post on that subject recently, if you're interested).

Maybe it's a little too early to talk about achievements (or the lack of them). However, if reforming certain elements of French society could be taken as being one, he's made a reasonable start.

The jury's out on this one in my case. Im playing wait and see.

Thank you very much for writing.


This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

deleted_user_241632
First Flagged at 11:54 AM, Jan 19, 2009 by deleted_user_241632
These members have powered this story:

Related Stories

Recommendations (38)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from