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Europe
Young guns conspire to get rid of Chirac
2004-07-17
President Jacques Chirac's ambition to run for a third term as president, when he will be 74, has provoked a crisis at the heart of his government and party which has now flared spectacularly into the open. A younger generation, led by Nicolas Sarkozy, the finance minister, is flagrantly conspiring to end Mr Chirac's political career on their timetable rather than his, ahead of the 2007 presidential election. Rebels say they are tired of his moderation and cronyism and that France desperately needs more dynamic leadership. In a once unthinkable display of lese-majeste, supporters of Mr Sarkozy booed the president during the Bastille Day garden party at the Élysée Palace after Mr Chirac criticised his finance minister's ambition and manoeuvring in his annual televised interview.

The machinations in the court of the president, the finance minister and their party, the Union pour un Mouvement Populaire, were summed up yesterday on the front page of the newspaper Libération, which showed Mr Sarkozy and Mr Chirac shaking hands beside the headline: "How far will they go?" The newspapers have been packed for several days with reports from meetings of loyalists on both sides. Mr Chirac's old guard have been rallied for one last stand for their man, while Mr Sarkozy's gunslingers are taking every opportunity to paint the president as well past his prime. The latest twist came yesterday when Alain Juppé, the former prime minister and Mr Chirac's chosen heir, resigned from the presidency of the party. He had announced his resignation months ago, following his conviction for abusing public funds while he served Mr Chirac when the president was mayor of Paris. His conviction bars him from public office for 10 years, ruling him out of standing for the presidency at the next election.
Posted by:Mark Espinola

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