Sarko vs. Ségo in France

By André Schiffrin

This article appeared in the May 14, 2007 edition of The Nation.

May 1, 2007

After weeks of uncertainty and anxiety, the French have voted pretty much the way the polls suggested they would in this first round of presidential balloting. A record 84 percent turnout put conservative candidate Nicolas Sarkozy in the lead at 31 percent, the Socialist Ségolène Royal at 26 percent and the center-right François Bayrou at a respectable 19 percent. The only surprise was the far-right neo-Fascist Jean-Marie Le Pen's vote, which at 10 percent was a million votes below expectations and his worst polling in three decades. Sarkozy's attempt to steal Le Pen's votes apparently succeeded. Presumably those who did vote for Le Pen were less worried about the second round (the two top vote-getters will compete in a runoff May 6), as were the 10 percent who voted for one of the candidates to Ségo's left. The second round would rally behind her those who cried "T-S-S!" (Tout Sauf Sarkozy, or "Anyone But Sarkozy"). Indeed, many voted for Bayrou because polls suggested he might defeat Sarkozy.

In the long and difficult campaign, one thing was painfully clear. Le Pen with his nationalist and xenophobic slogans succeeded in moving everyone to the right. As in the US elections before the Iraq War, everyone made concessions to the more conservative candidate. Sarko, already known for his anti-immigrant excesses, famously calling the inhabitants of France's ghettos "scum" during the rioting a year and a half ago, went even further in aping Le Pen's rhetoric. With every passing day Sarko, a clever and able politician, would invoke France's Catholic tradition, the mantle of de Gaulle, the need to crack down on illegal immigrants. (As Interior Minister he had already sent the cops into schools to ferret out children of undocumented immigrants, reminiscent of the collaborationist Vichy government's deportation of more than 11,000 Jewish schoolchildren during World War II.) Forgotten were his progressive proposals that France begin to consider affirmative action. Sarko's image as an angry and dangerous man was constantly reinforced.

Le Pen, who rightly boasted that everyone was trying to steal his thunder, became even more outrageous, calling Sarko an immigrant, pointing to his Hungarian, Greek (and Jewish) grandparents and stating that Sarko had only one French-born ancestor--again, a fallback to the criteria used by Vichy to determine who was Jewish and therefore not truly French.

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About André Schiffrin

André Schiffrin is the author of the recently published A Political Education (Melville House), in which he examines socialist ideas in postwar America. more...
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