You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Europe
Sarkozy reaches out to far-right voters
2006-04-24
France's interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, has been accused of pandering to the extreme right in his campaign to become president by telling those who do not like the country that they can get out. Speaking this weekend to 2,500 members of his ruling right-of-centre UMP party, he appeared to use the language of France's anti-immigrant parties - a move that won applause. "If people don't like being in France they only have to leave. We've had more than enough of always having the feeling that we must apologise for being French. We cannot change our laws our habits or our customs because they don't please a tiny minority."
Surprise meter didn't budge, this is Sarko and I'd expect him to say this.
Philippe de Villiers, the leader of the nationalist Mouvement pour la France party, accused Mr Sarkozy of copying his slogan, France, you like it or leave it. "The Sarko-show goes on," he told Le Journal du Dimanche, adding: "Since he's been in power what has he been waiting for to stop immigration, to expel Islamic extremists, to ban their activities linked to terrorism, to impose a republican charter for the building of mosques?

"How can he propose to finance them [mosques] with taxpayers' money, suggest that foreigners be given the right to vote, positive discrimination and then try to wipe out all that with a catchy slogan."
'cause, just like a good politican, he sees where the voters are headed and is determined to get out in front.
One poll by Sofres predicted that the National Front leader, Jean-Marie Le Pen, could finish third in the first round of voting for France's president next year. It put him behind Mr Sarkozy and Socialist contender Ségolène Royal but ahead of the prime minister, Dominique de Villepin, who is a man. In another poll by IFOP, more than a third of respondents said Mr Le Pen's party was in tune with "the concerns of the French people". Immigration was cited as a worry for 67% and security for 63%.

Christophe Barbier, deputy editor of L'Express magazine, said: "He [Le Pen] has profited from the riots and the protests. At the same time his rivals have been poaching his political territory with apparent success."

At Saturday's meeting Mr Sarkozy appeared to openly woo voters from the National Front and former Communist party supporters who have also turned to Mr Le Pen. "I hope they identify with us," he said."Why should I only speak to some electors ... people should be happy that someone who leads a republican political party goes to find voters one by one to convince them that Le Pen is a dead end."

Mr Sarkozy is championing tough new immigration laws which would make it more difficult for the poor and uneducated to start a new life in France. He has also announced that those who have spent 10 years in France will no longer be automatically granted the right to stay. During Saturday's speech to new UMP members Mr Sarkozy criticised Ms Royal, who has overtaken him in the presidential polls, berating her for a lack of ideas.

A poll in Le Figaro last week predicted that in a Ségo versus Sarko run-off, she would win with 51% of votes cast against 49% for him. However, 14% of those asked said they were undecided.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  Trailing Wife,

Umm, we should remember that Chirac was hailed as an Atlanticist back when he was Sarko's age.
Posted by: Ernest Brown   2006-04-24 21:10  

#2  Driving de Villepin and his coterie out of government would be worth a good deal, I think. And if Minister Sarkozy can win against the Chiraq machine, however cynical his positioning...

On this subject, that the electorate has moved to such a surprising place that a wily politition has to run to get in front of the crowd bodes well for France -- there is now the possibility that she might have a future, instead of the certainty that she has none.

Good luck to la belle France! Much as she annoys us, I'd far prefer an annoying, but free, France to Paris as the capitol of Eurabia.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-04-24 14:23  

#1  Philippe de Villiers, the leader of the nationalist Mouvement pour la France party, accused Mr Sarkozy of copying his slogan, France, you like it or leave it.

There's some Teamsters who'd like to discuss "slogan copying" with Philippe, too.
Posted by: mojo   2006-04-24 01:20  

00:00