Is
France poised for a revolution?
by Michel Gurfinkiel of PJ Media
Less than one year after François
Hollande’s election as president and the stunning victory of his socialist
supporters at the National Assembly, there is a widespread feeling in France
that his administration is doomed. According to the latest poll
released by Journal du Dimanche on April 21, 74% of the French now
entertain bad opinions about Hollande as president, whereas only 25% still
support him. These represent the worst figures ever for a head of state at the
same point in his mandate since the founding of the Fifth Republic in 1958.
The French media wonder whether such
discontent may lead to a constitutional crisis — or even a revolution. A French
Spring. “Is this 1789?”
asked Le Point, a right-of-center magazine. This is a reference to
the Great Revolution of 1789 that terminated the Old Regime not just in France,
but all over continental Europe. Le Point’s cover featured Hollande as
Louis XVI, with a white wig and surrounded by bloodthirsty sans-culottes.
Le Nouvel Observateur, a left-wing magazine, offered a different yet equally
ominous parallel: “Are the 1930s back?“ The 1930s were a time for both
left-wing and right-wing revolutions in Europe: Stalin-style communism on one
hand, Fascism and Nazism on the other hand. In France, it materialized in
right-wing riots in 1934, in a Popular Front electoral victory in 1936, and
finally — after a crushing military defeat at the hands of Nazi Germany in 1940
— in a far right dictatorship: the Vichy regime.
L’Express, a left-of-center magazine, devoted its cover to “an imploding Left.“ The point is that the Left should currently
be, in classic democratic terms, fully equipped to shape current French
politics at will. In addition to the presidency and the National Assembly, it
holds a majority in the Senate, the regional assemblies, and most
municipalities, either alone or together with its left-wing allies the Green
party and the neocommunist Left Front. But its actual grip over the country, or
its ability to pass legislation, is dwindling.
Why so much bad luck? First and
foremost, there is the personal factor: Hollande has no charisma whatsoever. He
was elected against the unpopular outgoing conservative president Nicolas
Sarkozy, rather than on his own merit or on his escapist, loony Left platform.
He used to be pudgy; he is now flabby. He does not know how to dress — a deadly
detail by French standards. He is a poor orator, due both to a high, pinched
voice and to a shabby command of the French language and French literary
classics.
His private life cannot be turned
into an asset either: he lived for decades with Ségolène Royal, another
socialist politician (who actually ran as a much more charismatic presidential
candidate of the Left against Sarkozy in 2007) and fathered her four children,
but did not marry her. He now lives, still unmarried, with a rather
unmanageable journalist, Valerie Trierweiler. The French have always expected
their leaders, until now, to be sexually active, but at the same time to pay
lip service to traditional mores, which two presidents before Hollande —
François Mitterrand and Jacques Chirac — knew very well. Mitterrand, a socialist,
never divorced his wife Danielle, turned his mistress Anne Pingeot into an
almost official “second wife,“ and Mazarine Pingeot, his daughter
out of wedlock, into a princess of the blood (with Danielle’s explicit
consent). Chirac had scores of mistresses — from movie stars to journalists —
but remained loyal if not exactly faithful to his wife Bernadette.
What should be taken as Hollande’s
real qualities, and might have carried much weight in America — his modesty,
his sincerity, and his real courage in extremely touchy issues — is ironically
seen in France as further evidence of his weakness.
During the presidential campaign
last year, Hollande said he would be, if elected, a “down-to-size president.” That
statement was intended as a further attack on Sarkozy, who tended to be an
oversized president. But it backfired so much — you don’t elect a non-hero —
that in the final TV debate with Sarkozy he had to reassert himself as a more
virile candidate, and point no less than fifteen times in 3 minutes and 21
seconds to what he would do if elected: “Moi, président de la République …
“.
The trick worked. Alas, Hollande
reverted, once elected, to an unassuming and thus unconvincing image. He
earned, in the process, a very unflattering nickname: “Pépère” (or “Daddy-o”).
“Can Pépère make it?” asked Le Point a fortnight ago, something
that came quite close to sheer character assassination.
Hollande’s second problem is the
economy. Most European economies (including, first and foremost, the French
economy) are in recession: business is slowing down, jobs are fading away,
budgets cannot be balanced. The French economy is no exception in that regard.
Pierre Moscovici, the minister of finance, posits a 0.1% growth in 2013. The
IMF forecasts a – 0.1% growth. And such a situation means, in
practical terms, that the average household is going to bleed.
Most European governments ascribe
their present economic difficulties to the global financial crisis ushered in
by the American financial meltdown of 2008. There is some truth about
that assertion. America was, since 1945, the driving force behind prosperity in
the world and especially in Europe (either the Cold War Western Europe, or the
post-Cold War, ever-expanding European Union). America’s periodic setbacks in
economic matters were thus bound to have consequences in Europe. And the 2008
American crisis had to have very important consequences.
On the other hand, the 2008 crisis
also exacerbated the systemic problems or contradictions plaguing the European
Union as a whole, and every single European country in particular, especially
France. It bared the fact, for instance, that it is nonsense to operate as most
Europeans do under a deflationary single currency — the euro — and keep at the
same time extensive welfare state dispensations. Or to opt for an overregulated
single market, run by an unelected bureaucracy unanswerable to the people — the
present European Union — or an overregulated and overtaxed domestic economy run
by an unelected statist nobility — the “French model” — and wonder why nobody
creates companies and jobs.
Nicolas Sarkozy promised to bring
France and Europe closer to the real world, but failed to deliver except for
some valuable piecemeal reforms. Hollande is much more serious-minded in this
regard. He insists, along with Moscovici, on a balanced budget and as many cuts
as possible, and thus runs not just against the program he had campaigned for
and was elected upon, but against a whole national culture of delusion.
However courageous the Hollande-Moscovici
policies are, they stay unfortunately too much within the euro and EU doxa and
inconsistencies, and accordingly will not or cannot bring about any improvement
to the French and European economy. And unfortunately again, the French voters,
either Right or Left, realize that in one way or the other. Moreover, the
minister of budget, Jerôme Cahuzac, one of the best proponents of the austerity
line, was found to be a tax dodger who kept an illegal bank account in
Switzerland, and a perjurer who lied about it to the president, the finance
minister, and the judges. Cahuzac resigned and will be tried. But the global
image of the administration declined even further. Hence the present tide of
disaffection about the president and by implication about the present state of
French democracy.
In a desperate attempt to keep his
consistuency loyal, if not happy, Hollande insists on a disastrous societal
reform: same-sex mariage. Technically, both the socialist National Assembly and
the socialist Senate approved it (the last National Assembly vote took place on
April 23). Fifty-four percent at least of the French adamantly resist it,
however, and many of those who say they approve it are not sure whether
everything in the package should be so easily accepted.
Most French do not object to gays or
lesbians or transgender persons living together and enjoying as such most of
the benefits ascribed to regular married couples (something that, as “pacs” or
civil partnership pact, was already part and parcel of French law for some
years). They object, however, to same-sex couples being registered as “spouse
one and spouse two.” Or being automatically allowed to
“share” children that, incidentally, might be produced by proxy mothers or
adopted. And, in an even deeper way, they are uncomfortable about the complete
blurring or blotting out of gender differences.
All in all, Hollande is facing
popular protest and unrest from all sides. Both Marine Le Pen’s National Front
on the far Right and Jean-Luc Mélanchon’s Left Front on the far Left ride on
economic frustations, advocate secession from the European Union and from the
eurozone, and preach — with the full oratory talent that Hollande lacks —
against the free market or globalization. At the same time, grassroots
opposition to same-sex marriage (or “marriage for all,” as the
socialists recast it) is growing, and translating in mass demonstrations week
after week.
Something as cosmic as the 1789
Revolution may not be in the making. But what about one of the minor
revolutions the French have been so prone to? From the storming of the Bastille
to the foundation of a lasting republic in the 1870s, there were no less than
eight “minor” revolutions in France: the country switched every ten or
twenty years, almost like a pendulum, from one dynasty to another, from one
political system to another, and from liberty to tyranny and back.
The Third Republic — from 1870 to
1940 — was a more stable regime. Still, it was challenged at least two times,
in the late 1880s and in the 1930s, and it collapsed instantly in 1940. The
postwar Fourth Republic lasted thirteen years: its transition to De Gaulle’s
Fifth Republic in 1958 was engineered through a military coup in Algeria, then
a French overseas province.
The Fifth Republic itself almost
collapsed ten years later, during the 1968 “Students Revolution.” It survived,
but faced in the ensuing decades, at regular intervals, protracted strikes or
protests. A mass protest for school freedom almost finished François
Mitterrand’s socialist administration in 1984. Eleven years later, large scale
strikes emasculated the Chirac conservative administration and postponed much
needed reforms by twenty years.
Will the present multifaceted unrest
coalesce into a similarly patterned crisis, or just melt away? Can it stir
similar movements throughout Europe, as was so often the case in the past? Are
we talking, at the end of the day, of mere cabinet reshuffles, or new
elections, or a referendum on reforms — or is democracy itself imperiled? My
guess is that a lot will depend on the most basic and most unpredictable
factor in human affairs: the weather. A rainy spring or a sunny one may affect
street protests and demonstrations. And change the face of Europe either way.
Michel
Gurfinkiel is the Founder and President of the Jean-Jacques Rousseau Institute,
a conservative think-thank in France, and a Shillman/Ginsburg Fellow at Middle
East Forum.
There are many hints around us...out
in plain sight if you will. One is that our Federal Congress has been discussing
voting themselves an exemption to Obamacare...an exemption that would apply to
its hired staffers, too. This exemption would not apply to the regular people. Another
hint is that the IRGC in Iran has become a military dictatorship, with all its
usual baggage.
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