Sarkozy promises return to French politics
20 Sep THE INDEPENDENT
Nicolas Sarkozy announced on his Facebook page yesterday that he was
returning to politics to create a "new" and "vast" 21st-century
political movement which will "transcend traditional political
divisions", and he proposed a "new project" for France.More prosaically,
he is running for the vacant presidency of his old centre-right party,
the Union pour un Mouvement Populaire (UMP). He intends to "transform"
the UMP into a new Sarkocentric movement in three months to freeze out
rival candidates for France's presidency in 2017.
Despite a tangle of a half-dozen legal investigations into his
activities, Mr Sarkozy's comeback was long expected. He will make his
plans clearer in a television interview tomorrow night and a speech in
Lille next week.
Friends compare Mr Sarkozy to General Charles de Gaulle, who returned
from self-imposed exile in Colombey-les-Deux-Églises in 1958, or to
Napoleon who escaped from enforced exile on Elba to restore the Empire
in 1815.Critics say Mr Sarkozy, 59, is more like the Count of Monte
Cristo, determined to get revenge on those who have belittled and
thwarted him.In private, he is especially vicious about President
François Hollande, the man who turned him out of the Elysée Palace in
2012.
The former President says Mr Hollande should not be defeated but
hounded out of office and "tarred and feathered".At the same time, Mr
Sarkozy's friends have let it be known that the born-again Sarko plans
to be a gentler, more inclusive leader, less impetuous, less
self-regarding and more focused on the reforms France needs.
He is returning, they say, not from personal ambition or from a
spirit of revenge but because he is the only man who can rescue France
from the menacing rise of Marine Le Pen's cosmetically laundered,
far-right Front National.
Either way, Mr Sarkozy has been forced to declare his hand early and
to take an enormous risk (against, it is reported, the wishes of his
wife, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy). He will run in November in an internal party
election for the vacant presidency of the UMP - a job that he mocked as
beneath his ex-presidential dignity a year ago.He will do so partly to
try to rescue a party which has been torn apart by financial scandals,
largely of his own making.
He will do so in an attempt to re-establish himself as the de facto
leader of the opposition before his credibility is destroyed by one or
more of the cat's cradle of criminal investigations in which his name
has appeared.He will do so mostly to try to derail dangerous rival Alain
Juppé, the popular but ageing former centre-right Prime Minister.
Mr Juppé, 69, announced last month he will run in an "open primary"
planned by the UMP in 2016 to select the centre-right candidate for the
presidential election the following year.Mr Sarkozy remains heartily
disliked by more than 60 per cent of French people. He is
hero-worshipped by grass-roots members of the UMP, especially the
younger ones.He would struggle to beat Mr Juppé in a primary open to all
French electors. He will easily win the internal election for party
president in November.
Mr Sarkozy then plans to, in effect, abolish the UMP and start a new
party with a new name. In his brief statement on his Facebook page, he
said this would be a "new and vast political gathering [he used the
Gaullist word rassemblement], which will go beyond the traditional
[left-right] divisions, which no longer have any connection with
reality".
Since the new party will be built in Mr Sarkozy's image, there will
be no need he will argue for a primary election in 2016. Mr Juppé will
be, as Mr Sarkozy curtly says in private, "no longer an issue".The
strategy could work. Mr Sarkozy could become the first defeated
president of the Fifth Republic (post 1958) to run again. Despite the
long list of legal investigations involving his activities before,
during and after his 2007-12 presidency, he could return to the Elysée
Palace.Mr Hollande, and the entire left, is desperately unpopular.
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