Mrs. Royal, future female President of France?

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MissMaCo

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Thursday, November 16th, the French Socialists elected Ségolène Royal as the Socialist Candidate for the 2007 French Presidential Elections. A glimpse of female hope in the political chauvinistic world? :sexywink:

PARIS — Is France, which has been led by male political lions like Charles de Gaulle, Francois Mitterrand and now Jacques Chirac, ready for a female president? And a woman who is a glamorous, unmarried mother — and a new-breed Socialist at that?
Segolene Royal, 53, who hopes to be the republic's first female president, will get a partial answer to that question this week. The Socialist Party's 200,000-plus registered members go to the polls today to choose their nominee for April's presidential election. Results are due Friday.

Royal already has shaken up French politics, traditionally dominated by men from the elite universities that groom the nation's leaders and move up through France's bureaucracy.

She has graced the covers of magazines such as TIME Europe. While on vacation in August, paparazzi photographed her in a turquoise bikini. "She's very glamorous. She's very pretty. She's seen as separate from the French ruling elite," says Rachna Uppal, European analyst for Global Insight, a London-based consulting firm.

On the final day of campaigning Wednesday, Royal's two male opponents, Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Laurent Fabius, denied her accusations of chauvinism.

Royal quoted Strauss-Kahn this week as saying that she "would have done better to stay at home rather than read out her cookery notes." She told party members that Fabius had wondered "Who is going to look after the children?" if she became the party candidate.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2006-11-15-france-female-leader_x.htm
 
That's really interesting. It'd be cool if France got a female head of state. If I lived in France I'd vote Socialist no matter who's head of the party. This certainly doesn't make me change my mind!
 
:wave:
I already joked to my hubbie yesterday, if she makes it, she will be presented as Mrs.President Royal.

Sounds really funny if you ask me :lol:

Did you agree with her issue of keeping the teachers longer in schools,making more hours?
 
MissMaCo said:

Royal quoted Strauss-Kahn this week as saying that she "would have done better to stay at home rather than read out her cookery notes." She told party members that Fabius had wondered "Who is going to look after the children?" if she became the party candidate

What a surprise. But plenty of people would say that in the US about any female Presidential candidate if we ever have one-including some people right here in FYM.

Hey guess what, she can be President and cook and look after her kids if that's what she wants to do, it's 2006 :happy:

Why doesn't anyone ever question whether all these male politicians are neglecting their kids and fatherly duties?
 
I had to laugh, there was a french socialist on tv being asked who he would vote for, his reply:

'Royal is sexy, the other candidates are not so sexy, so really it is her by default'

If only deciding who to vote for was soo easy:wink:
 
She's not a Mrs. actually, since Royal is her birth name.

She's an interesting figure, clearly a "personality candidate" in much the same way Sarkozy--who's likely her only serious competition, I suppose--is. It looks to be an interesting election.
 
greety said:
:wave:
I already joked to my hubbie yesterday, if she makes it, she will be presented as Mrs.President Royal.

Sounds really funny if you ask me :lol:

Did you agree with her issue of keeping the teachers longer in schools,making more hours?

:wave: Greet!

:censored:

Well... I'm positive about the fact that she does know that teachers just don't only work during their classes. We got lots of stuff to prepare, we have to organize oral and written exams and then correct them... sometimes I have like 100 copies to correct in one week... and we generally do that at home, so indeed, teachers are often considered as lazy and never happy with their conditions cause they only work about 20 hours/ week, I mean AT SCHOOL.
I don't feel personally concerned now cause I work in high school and uni / college (and she was talking about secondary schools's teachers) but I'm pretty sure this won't be accepted by the teachers' syndicates.
 
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I really like Ségolène Royal. She'd certainly be different. I'm afraid that Sarkozy will win though. It's a pity.
 
This is more about the election in general than Ms. Royal specifically.
Tensions Over French Identity Shape Voter Drives

By ELAINE SCIOLINO
New York Times, March 30


PARIS — France’s presidential campaign has been seized by a subject long monopolized by the extreme right: how best to be French. The conservative candidate, Nicolas Sarkozy, wants to create a ministry of “immigration and national identity” that would require newcomers to embrace the secular values of the republican state. The Socialist candidate, Ségolène Royal, wants every French citizen to memorize “La Marseillaise” and keep a French flag in the cupboard for public display on Bastille Day. The far-right candidate, Jean-Marie Le Pen, of the National Front party, chortles that his rivals have stolen — and therefore validated — his message of “France for the French.”

Some political commentators have accused Mr. Sarkozy of harking back to the darkest period in modern French history: the collaborationist Vichy government during the Nazi occupation. Ms. Royal, meanwhile, is being attacked by both her rivals and her own camp for manipulating symbols that historically have been the domain of the far right. With the first round of the election 24 days away, the battle over French identity has overtaken discussion of more practical issues like reducing unemployment and making France more competitive. On Tuesday, as if to underscore the tensions over identity, roving bands of young people threw objects at the police, smashed store windows and damaged property for several hours at the Gare du Nord, a major train station in Paris. The trouble started when an illegal immigrant from Congo jumped a turnstile in the subway and tried to punch a transit agent who asked to see his ticket. The police shut down the subway and commuter train system, arrested 13 suspects and used tear gas before restoring order after midnight.

The shift to debating Frenchness is aimed in part at luring the right-wing vote away from Mr. Le Pen, who shocked France in 2002 when he finished the first round of voting in second place. It is also an attempt to reassure jittery voters that France will remain an important power at a time when it is losing prominence in a larger European Union and a globalized world and struggling with a disaffected Muslim and ethnic Arab and African population at home. “Resolving the identity crisis in France is a very serious problem, but both Nicolas Sarkozy and Ségolène Royal have trivialized it in this election,” said Eric Dupin, a political scientist and an author. “Both of them are playing on the fears and the base emotions of the people.” François Bayrou, the centrist candidate who leads the tiny Union for French Democracy party, denounced the “nationalistic obsession” that had infiltrated the campaign. “Every time in our past that we have wanted to go back to external signs, it has led to periods that are unhappy,” he said.

For the past few years, France has struggled with economic and cultural issues related to its immigrants. One is shared by much of the rest of Europe: how to stop the influx of illegal immigrants who drain a country’s economy and social services. A second is how to force French citizens of immigrant origin to obey laws, including those banning practices like polygamy and the wearing of head scarves by Muslim girls and women in schools and universities.

As interior minister before he stepped down Monday to focus on his campaign, Mr. Sarkozy tightened immigration laws and boasted that he had expelled tens of thousands of illegal immigrants and prevented others from entering. His pledge in 2005 to rid France’s ethnic Arab and Muslim suburbs of “scum” contributed to a three-week orgy of violence there. Mr. Sarkozy, who has largely avoided the suburbs during his campaign, has criticized immigrants and their offspring who resist the French model of integration, saying it is unacceptable to want to live in France without respecting and loving the country or learning French. He touched off the current debate in a television appearance on March 8 when he announced a plan to create a “ministry of immigration and national identity” if elected.

Ms. Royal called the plan “disgraceful,” adding, “Foreign workers have never threatened French identity.”

“Indecent,” was the reaction of Azouz Begag, the minister for equal opportunity. “I’m not stupid, and neither are the French,” he said. “It’s a hook to go and look for the lost sheep of the National Front.” Simone Veil, a beloved former government minister and Holocaust survivor, found herself denouncing Mr. Sarkozy’s idea shortly after she endorsed him for president. “I didn’t at all like this very ambiguous formula,” she told the magazine Marianne. She said a ministry for immigration and “integration” would be a better idea. Mr. Sarkozy was unfazed. “I want the promotion of a common culture,” he said in reply to his critics.

Indeed, an OpinionWay Internet poll for the newspaper Le Figaro, splashed on the paper’s front page this month, indicated that 55% of French voters approved. 65% agreed that the “immigrants who join us must sign up to the national identity.” Although the poll was conducted using a representative sample via the Internet, not by using more reliable telephone surveys, it was widely cited as evidence that the French wanted a more restrictive immigration policy and that they wanted Muslims here to conform to secular French customs.

But Mr. Sarkozy’s proposal has revived memories of the Vichy era. The idea of a national identity ministry has been compared to the General Commissariat of Jewish Affairs, which was created with ministerial rank under the Vichy administration. “Only Vichy developed administrative structures in their efficient way to defend a certain concept of ‘national identity,’ ” the columnist Philippe Bernard wrote in Le Monde last week. He said that the Commissariat, “even before being a tool in the service of the policy of extermination, responded to the objective of purification of the French nation.” Some conservative Jewish voters, who were planning to vote for Mr. Sarkozy because of his staunch support of Israel, say they now are considering shifting to Mr. Bayrou.

Despite Ms. Royal’s criticism of Mr. Sarkozy, she followed his lead by wrapping herself tightly in her own mantle of nationalism. She started by encouraging her supporters to sing “La Marseillaise,” the national anthem and the rallying cry of the right, at the end of her rallies. Last week in southern France, which historically votes for the right and extreme right, she called for a “reconquest of the symbols of the nation” from the right. She said all French citizens should have the French flag at home, adding, “In other countries, they put the flag in the windows on their national holiday.” And she promised that if elected, she would “ensure that the French know ‘La Marseillaise.’ ”

In the end, both camps acknowledge that they are trying to appeal to voters on the right. “Ségolène Royal is taking back the terrain too often abandoned by the left for ages to the right and the extreme right,” said a former defense and interior minister, Jean-Pierre Chevènement, who supports her.

Mr. Sarkozy was more explicit. “Since 1983, we have the strongest far right in Europe,” he said this month. “We must not proceed as if it does not exist. I want to talk to those who have moved toward the far right because they are suffering.” During a campaign trip last week in the Caribbean, where some of the region’s residents can vote in French elections, Mr. Sarkozy boasted that after he proposed his immigration and national identity ministry, his standing in the polls jumped.
 
That idea of a a ministry of “immigration and national identity” just drives me crazy.
Royal's wish that all the French know La Marseillaise and own a french flag seems very less... dangerous to me. Just part of the culture.
 
MissMaCo said:
That idea of a ministry of “immigration and national identity” just drives me crazy.
Royal's wish that all the French know La Marseillaise and own a French flag seems less... dangerous to me. Just part of the culture.
 
web-vote22350.jpg



run off election
 
As far as I can see in this, Royal needs a bit more substance to back up her style, while Sarkozy needs a bit more style to go with the substance. That seems to be what i'm picking up generally.
 
If people want to look for a "last best chance for democracy" France is one place to consider.


When they have a new leader,
that leader will have been chosen by a "majority of the voters".

Their voting system is simple
and makes perfect sense.

Every one's vote has equal weight.
 
"last best chance for democracy". yeeeeks.
I really don't know about that : Sarkozy will be france's next president... not really a great chance for democracy !... poor France!
 
I accept that many will not like the winner.

But the election process is clear and fair.

The French people have every confidence that the winner did get a true "majority vote."

and that access to ballots,
were available to all that wanted to vote.

and the method of voting was uniform,
and the tally of votes is correct.



All of the above are not true in America.
 
The great thing about the election is that there is a clear choice. If I had to close my eyes and pick this minute, I'd say Sarkozy. But Sego has a very smart adviser sleeping right next to her (or at least in the same house) and she may yet pull it out.
 
silvrlvr said:
The great thing about the election is that there is a clear choice. If I had to close my eyes and pick this minute, I'd say Sarkozy. But Sego has a very smart adviser sleeping right next to her (or at least in the same house) and she may yet pull it out.

Also, in France each vote has the same weight.

Does you vote in Michigan count?

Everyone that ever votes GOP in CA or NY never has their vote count.

And anyone in all the Red States that vote Democrat never have their vote count.

Sadly we are down to maybe 3 -7 states that could go either way.

In France each vote will count,
and no one will ever take office that has not received a majority vote.
 
Who do you think the Centre party under Bayrou will back?

I've heard that the center tends to lean to the right when given a choice....but my knowledge of French politics is pretty weak.
 
Irvine511 said:
i am amazed that voter turnout was greater than 80%.

democracy in action. go France. :up:

I think the turnout is because, people actually have a real choice, both candidates are very different, unlike say in the UK where the Conservatives and Labour are extremely similar these days.
 
MissMaCo said:


How can you be so positive about it?

I'm not positive, i'm realistic... :)
the odds are in his favor... and i can't imagine Bayrou asking his voters to choose Royal (which would be her only chance : it's mathematic...)
Thus i predict Sarkozy will be France's next president !!
 
LJT said:
Who do you think the Centre party under Bayrou will back?

I've heard that the center tends to lean to the right when given a choice....but my knowledge of French politics is pretty weak.

Indeed, center in France IS right, at least until now it historically was, but now ?
Center since now was about 6/7% voters. On sunday there was 18.5 % of them... some are historical center and i think they will back up Sarkozy (around 1/3 of them), some are left-voters who thought Bayrou was the only one who could win against Sarkozy (or so the polls said) (around 1/3 of them also) who will back up Royal... the question is what about the last 1/3 who are they ? Some are righter voters who can't stand Sarkozy and who had an alternative staying with the right... some are ???
 
LJT said:
Who do you think the Centre party under Bayrou will back?

I've heard that the center tends to lean to the right when given a choice....but my knowledge of French politics is pretty weak.

Bayrou will talk about it today. Given that that he is a center candidate, I'm pretty sure he won't ask his voters to back one of the two candidates.
 
mumu2006 said:


and i can't imagine Bayrou asking his voters to choose Royal (which would be her only chance : it's mathematic...)

As I've just said, I think Bayrou won't ask his voters to choose bewtween Sarko or Royal but according to the polls, there's a majority of his voters who will vote for Ségolène Royal.
 
Anyway there's nothing we can do about taht, we'll just have to wait untill 6th may to know... may be i'll be prooved wrong... 10 days to go...
 
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