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Will Alain Juppé turn out to be Sarkozy’s nemesis?

The French right could yet turn to the new foreign minister in next year’s presidential elections.

Last summer I wrote a piece for the magazine about the sinister turn taken by President Nicolas Sarkozy's "war on delinquency". Sarkozy's response to unrest in the suburbs of several French cities was to threaten to deprive French citizens of "foreign descent" of their nationality if they were found guilty of criminal offences and to deport hundreds of Roma to Bulgaria and Romania.

As I pointed out, Sarkozy's assault on the French republican conception of citizenship attracted criticism from right as well as left – notably from the former foreign minister Dominique de Villepin and the ex-prime minister Alain Juppé.

The criticism by big beasts like Juppé and Villepin will no doubt have stung the president. And Juppé was at it again last week, warning that the national debate on the place of religion in France proposed by Sarkozy risked "stigmatising" Islam, the second-biggest religion in the country.

Now, however, perhaps on the principle that it's better to have your enemies inside the tent pissing out than outside the tent pissing in, Sarkozy has appointed Juppé as foreign minister, after the resignation of Michèle Alliot-Marie and severe criticism of the performance of French diplomats since the Arab uprisings began in January.

What's more, it seems that he initially offered the job to de Villepin (who was foreign minister under Jacques Chirac at the time of the Iraq war).

With the next presidential election a little over a year away, the appointment is a significant admission by Sarkozy that things have gone awry in his administration. Hervé Gattegno, editor of Le Point, describes it as Sarkozy's "second abdication" (the first being his decision in November 2010, taken after months of vacillation, to retain François Fillon as his prime minister):

Sarkozy decides to thank Alliot-Marie for her services, having supported her for as long as he could. And everyone knows that Juppé has dictated his terms, starting with depriving Claude Guéant [Sarkozy's chief of staff] of any influence on foreign affairs . . . It is clear that Juppé demanded, and has been given, control of his own domain.

And, as an unsigned article in Le Monde suggests today, the right could yet turn to Juppé in next year's election if Sarkozy's poll numbers continue to plunge. Dare I say that the closing lines of my piece now look rather prescient?

"Power," Napoleon once said, "is my mistress. I have worked too hard at her conquest to allow anyone to take her away from me." Whether Sarkozy will be able to protect his conquest between now and the election in 2012 remains to be seen.

Tags: Alain Juppe  Nicolas Sarkozy

11 comments

mathieu's picture

+ 1: It's amazing (and scary) how easily Europe accepts former corrupt politicians in its midst.

http://www.gossipzone.be/fr/Default.aspx

swatantra nandanwar's picture

French politicians can certainly teach Brits about corruption and lax moral codes, and how to get away with it. Its about time the rest of Europe sharpened up its act and came into line with British standards. We need a Kitemark fr each deserving politician so constituents know the full picture.

swatantra nandanwar's picture

Hope not. Sarko's still got his wife to bat for him. ut its about time the Socialists took their turn to govern France. Pity they ditched Sego for an unknown.

Tommy le Renard's picture

A complete unknown?

The Socialists are running primaries later this year. Ségolene has already declared her candidacy.

Among the candidates may well be Strauss-Kahn, who, as former finance minister and current head of the IMF (whose name was put forward by none other than Sarkozy - perhaps as an attempt to get him out of the way) is by no means an unknown.

Other possible candidates include Bertrand Delanoë, mayor of Paris, Martine Aubry, head of the party, and François Hollande, Sego's former "partner."

Don't think the Socialists will have an unknown candidate.

DK's picture

Segolene Royal is catastrophic politically and intellectually, as is her ex-husband. DSK is tainted by his service with the IMF--the French left will never embrace him now. The best options are Delanoe and above all, Aubry.

Ross's picture

@Ivan Miletitch

"T.B is the man who brought (too) many years of conservatism to an end in Britain & made Labour electable!"

Well there's your first mistake. T.B. (also the abbreviation of a disease, may I add) didn't bring many years of conservatism to an end. He made Labour electable by making them the 'Tories Lite'. T.B. continued many years of conservatism, just under a red banner. Britain has been ruled from the right since 1979 - without a break

So I hope the French Socialists steer clear on any figure resembling "T.B." else he turns out to be Sarkozy in diguise

jansen's picture

It's amazing (and scary) how easily Europe accepts former corrupt politicians in its midst.

Ivan Miletitch's picture

It's about time the french socialists had their own Tony Blair (after all, regardless of the bad press he got towards the end of his premeirship, T.B is the man who brought (too) many years of conservatism to an end in Britain & made Labour electable! The french still use the old 60's socialist rethoric, have not moved one one bit! D.S.K (because of his centrist credentials) is the one who could do this...there are a few 'young turks', extremely able, but the old 'elephants' (Sego included) will try their best to keep them out of the way, with desastrous results. As for Juppe...this is the guy who was stripped of his civic rights for a number of years due to electoral fraud.... so this is a good choice for a conservative candidate!

Ivan Miletitch's picture

>> Ross
yeah...right, that's just the way to remain in opposition for another 10 years, thats really going to help!

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