Sarko vs. Royal, Don't Read if You Don't Give A Phoque About French Presidential Politics

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He is a nutty fromage

"The United States had placed tariffs on the importation of Roquefort cheese as punishment for the European Union's restrictions on importing hormone-treated beef (see Sanitary and Phytosanitary Agreement). In one of his books, Mr Bové tells the story on how subsequently, he travelled to the United States with thirty kilograms of Roquefort in his luggage, and how he was let in."

Frogman Henry, Saturday, 21 April 2007 02:02 (sixteen years ago) link

so i just babelfished that and it's just an opinion poll stating that le pen would beat bayrou, but still come in third to royal and sarko, so no, le pen would not go to the 2nd round. i think.

hstencil, Saturday, 21 April 2007 02:03 (sixteen years ago) link

but potential le pen voters could be telling porkies, like last time.
the fact that he's polling so high even before you factor that in is pretty worrying. i still think he will come in third, but blimey, he beat jospin, so anything's possible.

Frogman Henry, Saturday, 21 April 2007 02:08 (sixteen years ago) link

i'm optimistic that bayrou will do better than this poll, actually.

hstencil, Saturday, 21 April 2007 02:09 (sixteen years ago) link

I hope so.

Michael White, Saturday, 21 April 2007 02:10 (sixteen years ago) link

he travelled to the United States with thirty kilograms of Roquefort in his luggage

Cue joke about stinky Frenchmen.

Michael White, Saturday, 21 April 2007 02:11 (sixteen years ago) link

I understand where he's coming from but I think Bové is a clown.

Michael White, Saturday, 21 April 2007 02:13 (sixteen years ago) link

Is this right? v fast translation, but my french is terribly rusty too!!

[em]Jean-Marie Le Pen would be ahead of François Bayou in the first round of the presidential election according to voter intent, while the distance between Nicolas Sarkozy and Ségolène Royal would only be a single point, according to a CSA poll for the Web site of the Parisien, released several hours from when the ban on publishing polls takes effect before the first round of voting.

The Socialist party candidate would receive 25.5% support in the first round against 26.5% for Nicolas Sarkozy while the head of the National Front would be credited with 16,5% support, ahead of the centrist with 16%.

Some 19% of those polled planned to abstain and vote for no one or leave it blank.[/em]

daria-g, Saturday, 21 April 2007 03:06 (sixteen years ago) link

Yes that's correct. Bayrou is gonna get a very disappointing score, I predict. I see it around 14%. Most people are chickening out on him in the final stretch, due to fear of letting Le Pen get to the 2nd round.

baaderonixx, Saturday, 21 April 2007 10:20 (sixteen years ago) link

it's all about "useful" votes

RJG, Saturday, 21 April 2007 10:25 (sixteen years ago) link

and the stupid electoral system that created them

RJG, Saturday, 21 April 2007 10:26 (sixteen years ago) link

Bayrou peaked way too early. Also, his campaign hasn't been that great. Baaderonix is right, more and more people are chickening out on him. I knew a lot of people who wanted to vote for him a few months back who've changed their minds in the last 2-3 weeks.

Le Pen, according to intent polls, is credited with 16,5% of the votes. That is the highest he's ever got right before an election unless i'm mistaken. The thing with Le Pen voters however is that they don't always say they're going to vote for him. He wasn't supposed to reach the 2nd round in 2002 either (iirc only the RG expected him to reach the 2nd round) according to those polls, yet he did. So, you could maybe see him coming through to the 2nd round on that basis but it seems a bit unlikely. Sarkozy, in the past weeks, has been trying to appeal to Le Pen's voter base by strengthening his speeches etc and it seems to be working.

There is only one thing that is certain about this 1st round and that is that Sarkozy will reach the 2nd round. A few weeks back, i might've added that the other spot in 2nd round was going to be a very close call between Bayrou, Royal and maybe Le Pen but now?

Jibe, Saturday, 21 April 2007 11:13 (sixteen years ago) link

Baaderonixx, Bayrou getting 14% may sound like a disappointing score but come on, that's twice his score in 2002 so not that bad. Compared to the 24% he got in one intent poll a month or two ago, it doesn't seem that great, but he has the most volatile voter base so it really isn't that surprising.

Also, Bayrou said a few years back (can't remember when exactly) that he would "get a two-digit score in 2007, be elected in 2012". He is at least right on the first point.

Jibe, Saturday, 21 April 2007 11:24 (sixteen years ago) link

I've been enjoying your Flickr series of French political posters, RJG.

Madchen, Saturday, 21 April 2007 12:15 (sixteen years ago) link

And also the fact that 'Sego' is Italian for 'I wank'.

Madchen, Saturday, 21 April 2007 12:16 (sixteen years ago) link

she's really going for the broadest appeal possible

RJG, Saturday, 21 April 2007 20:16 (sixteen years ago) link

Sarko and Royal going through.

Frogman Henry, Sunday, 22 April 2007 18:38 (sixteen years ago) link

Le Pen in 4th with 11.5%; nicely trounced.

Frogman Henry, Sunday, 22 April 2007 18:39 (sixteen years ago) link

the initial estimates showed about three points between sego and sarko, widening, now, to more like six

RJG, Sunday, 22 April 2007 18:54 (sixteen years ago) link

what is the appeal of sarko? je net get it pas..

i see arlette l. is still in the game after all this time!

daria-g, Sunday, 22 April 2007 19:58 (sixteen years ago) link

"what is the appeal of sarko? je net get it pas.."

http://www.visitingdc.com/images/george-w-bush-picture.jpg

Frogman Henry, Sunday, 22 April 2007 20:26 (sixteen years ago) link

he likes tony blair, too

RJG, Sunday, 22 April 2007 20:44 (sixteen years ago) link

OK, so I was completely wrong. I am really depressed by those results. Sarkozy is basically unreachable. I already regret not having voted Bayrou in the end...

baaderonixx, Monday, 23 April 2007 09:14 (sixteen years ago) link

What do people see in Bayrou? He's an elite right winger! Is it because he comes from the countryside? (Near Pau, I think?)

I would not call 11% for Le Pen getting "trounced" I would call it frighteningly high, especially given that there's another authoritarian on the ballot this time.

This is so depressing. Even in Paris Le Pen got 11%. I was talking with the lovely Emma B about this, expressing my dismay and confusion that 11% of Parisian voters would vote that way and saying that a third-party right-wing presidential candidate in the US would never get 11% of the vote in New York City, for instance, and she reminded me that "Paris is a very conservative city".

Tracer Hand, Monday, 23 April 2007 09:48 (sixteen years ago) link

Actually, Tracer, Le Pen "only" got 4,5% in Paris: http://www.liberation.fr/_looks/liberation/php/pages/pageResultatsElections.php

baaderonixx, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:00 (sixteen years ago) link

As for what people see in Bayrou, basically the only chance of beating Sarkozy. The fear of letting Le Pen reach the 2nd round, cultivated by bogus reports of secret polls indicating he would, led a lot of people to choose between losing gracefully with Royal (and thus spare us the infamy of another 21 April) or voting for the only candidate with a decent chance of beating Sarko (but with the risk of spreading the votes too much).

baaderonixx, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:04 (sixteen years ago) link

Very depressing result, but more or less what I predicted (apart from the Front National slump). I don't think Royal has a chance in hell. But I never thought she did in the first place. She's a very weak candidate, clueless politically, and a cold fish in the personality stakes. A lot of people are scared of Sarko, and if only the Socialists had put up a solid candidate they would have been in with a very good chance. Royal has been a catastrophe.

underpants of the gods, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:11 (sixteen years ago) link

fingers crossed

RJG, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:12 (sixteen years ago) link

Huh that's weird - I could have sworn last night that they were reporting 11% for him in Paris. Your number makes me feel better! I should have read an English-language account, I guess.

Say that all the Le Pen voters go for Sarko, Bayreau's voters split down the middle, and the Communists, Revolutionary Communists, Trotskyists etc. vote for Sego. That gives Sarko 51% and Sego about 45%. That looks bad, but if Sego can swing just another 1/6th of Bayreau's supporters over to her she could have a chance.

Everything I've read about this for the last three months has presented it as a fait accomplit for Sarko. The unanimity of the conventional wisdom is very suspicious to me. I feel like the media have chosen their script and will repeat it till it's pried from their cold, dead hands: "French people want a strong leader" "Sego has not been bold enough" "Sarko the only viable option" etc etc

underpants would you mind explaining exactly why and how Sego has been a catastrophe? I feel like I don't know the whole story here.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:21 (sixteen years ago) link

I mean surely "clueless politically" is an inaccurate description of someone who has a realistic chance at the presidency of France?

Tracer Hand, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:28 (sixteen years ago) link

sounds, mainly, like she has been v vague/flip-floppy/non-commital on policy and has been caught out, a couple of times, when talking about international stuff

however, she hasn't, recently, been quoted as saying that people are genetically predisposed to paedophilia, etc

she's certainly not a catastrophe, in terms of polling, compared to jospin in 2002

RJG, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:37 (sixteen years ago) link

xpost ha.

being half french i've come to live with and accept my mental and physical disgust for le pen, and be practical about it. 4th place comes as a pleaseant surprise for this jade, especially consideing recent events and campaign rhetoric/tone on all sides. let's hope that was merely talk eh, and sarko's more concilliatory spirit eg last night will prevail. maybe it was just clothes-stealing.

Frogman Henry, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:38 (sixteen years ago) link

xp

Bayou voters splitting evenly in the 2nd round is a very optimistic assumption, I'd say that they'll go 2/3 Sarko and 1/3 Sego.

You can also add Villiers' 2,5% and Nihout 1% to Sarko and that puts him really beyond reach.

baaderonixx, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:41 (sixteen years ago) link

Why do I keep spelling Bayrou's name wrong? Is it because everyone always pronounces it wrong?

You're probably right about that vote not splitting evenly. Feck. I think a lot of his votes were "protest" votes but yeah, his policies don't much match up with what a Sego supporter would want to see go down.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:46 (sixteen years ago) link

xpost

Royal has committed gaffe after gaffe, some of them so abysmal that they left me thinking 'I could do better than that!'. She was perceived to be weak on foreign policy. So she went on various foreign visits to change that perception - only she ended up making herself look even worse. The first trip was to Lebanon, where she sat through a speech by a Hezbollah guy in which he said Israel should be wiped off the face of the earth. Royal applauded. Later, she said her interpreter hadn't properly translated the guy, otherwise she would have walked out. OK, I'll give her the benefit of the doubt there. Next up, she went to China, met some judges there, and said that France could learn a lot from the speed of the Chinese judicial system. A judicial system that every year expedites thousands of people to their deaths, that allows little freedom of speech, that is totally beholden to a single political party... Next up, she declared her support for Quebec sovereignty, earning a rebuke from the Quebec premier. She later compounded the gaffe when she was tricked by a radio DJ into thinking she was talking to the Quebec premier. During that conversation she told him that a lot of French people would like to see the back of Corsica, "but don't tell anyone that or I'll have another scandal on my hands". During a televised debate she appeared not to know what the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty entails. Only a few days ago, during an interview she appeared to believe the Taliban were still in control of Afghanistan... and that's only some of her gaffes!

underpants of the gods, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:48 (sixteen years ago) link

i roffled over that quebec thing.

Frogman Henry, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:50 (sixteen years ago) link

Intent polls for 2nd round give Sarko 52-54 and Sego 46-48. Bayrou voters are indeed around 2/3 Sarko. All in all, it is difficult to see how Sego has any chance.

Le Pen's 11.5% make it seem like he suffered a set back whereas in fact he got just about the same number of people voting for him this time than he did in 2002 ( around 4m voters). The very good participation in this poll (around 84%) has made it such that what once was a 17% first round score is now only an 11.5% one.

Jibe, Monday, 23 April 2007 10:53 (sixteen years ago) link

xpost That's what I thought. Everything you mention is trivial. Whether she clapped at a certain time or not. Getting pranked. Having a quote about China taken out of context. Once a couple of these things happen and the narrative gets written it's a dead cert the media will land on her head like a mountain if they see the slightest hair out of place. It is such bullshit. It's how Bush got sent to the White House, through an endless series of mainly invented "gaffes" by Gore.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 23 April 2007 11:09 (sixteen years ago) link

I watched the debate during which she clearly didn't know what the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty meant. Given the situation with Iran, that's not trivial. Recently, she was caught talking about "le gouvernement taliban"; was given an opportunity to say it was a slip of the tongue, but declined. During the campaign she's been all over the shop, making a sloppy play for the extreme right saying all French people should have a tricolor in their front window and recalcitrant children should be sent to boot camps. She's not had a good campaign - she's poor with detail, no better with the big picture. It's a bit too neatly cynical to put all that down to media spin.

underpants of the gods, Monday, 23 April 2007 11:18 (sixteen years ago) link

Tracer OTM. But of course he's not french, sexism is not a virtue in other countries.
and you know what ? it worked. i've even heard people who are not die-hard sarkozystes (i don't know if it's underpant's case) repeat these inepties. for some reason they never talk about sarkozy's "gaffes" : paedophilia is genetic, al quaida are shi'ites, etc... (i could go on forever)

brunob, Monday, 23 April 2007 11:36 (sixteen years ago) link

for some reason they never talk about sarkozy's "gaffes"

Sarkozy's "gaffe" about paedophilia being genetic was hardly ignored, it was a huge media story! I'm not so convinced it was a gaffe as such, though. It's a bit like "racaille" and "karcher". On the face of it gaffes, but ultimately they've bolstered his image and support. That's not to say Sarkozy hasn't made some serious errors; he has. But not nearly as many as Royal. As for sexism, yes I think it's played a part as well, perhaps slicing one or two percentage points off Royal's vote. (It cuts both ways though. The novelty value of having a woman candidate probably gave her a slight edge over the "éléphants" during the candidacy election.)

underpants of the gods, Monday, 23 April 2007 11:50 (sixteen years ago) link

it's a detail, but the Royal quote about the Talibans is much more ambiguous than that. She argues that the international community should do more against the "taliban system", which could mean the movement itself. Anyway, yeah these "gaffes" stories are grotesque and just feeds the typical French dream of an omniscient professor/candidate. The type of reasoning that has given us Juppé, Villepin, etc.

baaderonixx, Monday, 23 April 2007 12:56 (sixteen years ago) link

Narrative: Royal is flighty, air-headed, not "serious", unreliable - a woman. Everything she says, if seen through this lens, can be made to back it up. The Taliban "gaffe" being a particularly egregious example of the way these things work.

None of this is to deny that there does seem to be a real interest in an authoritarian leader in France.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 23 April 2007 13:05 (sixteen years ago) link

There is, but I still nevertheless find Royal to be a pretty weak candidate. The contrast last night between Sarkozy's "victory" speech and hers was pretty emblematic of why she's gonna get trounced in the 2nd round. A cheap but effective "look at me now ma', I made it to the top, all thanks to the French dream" vs. a dull, awkwardly-read rant so predictable that hardly anyone will remember today.

baaderonixx, Monday, 23 April 2007 13:11 (sixteen years ago) link

I was going to mention her awful like-a-robot-reading speech of yesterday, too.

I'm sympathetic to the idea that the right have basically rolled out Tracer Hand's "narrative". But I don't think it's been swallowed hook line and sinker by the French media. And I don't think that this attempt to manipulate the discourse changes the fact that she's been a poor candidate and that's much of the reason she's not going to be elected. In any case, even if her gaffes are trivial matters of presentation (although I think there's a little more to it than that), a good candidate should nonetheless be able to maintain some control over presentation. The narrative of "woman candidate = helpless victim of machinations" is just as mythical as the one Tracer outlined.

underpants of the gods, Monday, 23 April 2007 13:21 (sixteen years ago) link

the main reason I wanted carcetti (royal) to win was so there might be some chance of clay davis (chirac) getting what he deserves

that's the only level on which that "THE WIRE"-based analogy works, though

RJG, Monday, 23 April 2007 13:28 (sixteen years ago) link

I've not heard that particular narrative repeated or put forward by anyone. So I guess that makes it a REALLY mythical narrative. Especially since so many male political hopefuls have been trashed in exactly the same way (interestingly, often by being painted as feminized, e.g. Gore and his female advisor who purportedly tried to teach him to be an "alpha male"; John Kerry and his suspicious "sophistication"; John "Breck Girl" Edwards' haircuts are a recent example). These aren't mythical narratives, they're real and they change the course of history. Royal is supposed to be a lightweight, to not understand the gravity of her position; the implication is that she will embarrass France in front of the world with her unreliability - all incredibly gendered narratives, and all deployed relentlessly by her opponents. The press frames ongoing events within this narrative simply because it fits in neatly with how a lot of French people think about women in positions of tangible political power. It just FEELS so right. Once the narrative gets set, it is incredibly hard to shift. Mainly because the press are literally lazy. Why do comparative policy analysis, compare public opinion on specific policy issues with those of the candidates, etc. when one can just bolt the latest trivia onto the pre-existing narrative, pretending that each insignificant nugget represents some telling clue into the candidate's soul. Why go through the trouble of looking at what each of the candidates has actually said and what the implications of those things are for France's future when one can pore over incredibly important things like whose pre-runoff speech was more convincing?

Tracer Hand, Monday, 23 April 2007 13:45 (sixteen years ago) link

i'm sure if france had a 2-party tradition, the center-left would never have put up a bayrou instead of the politically clueless royal and we would be right here in the same place, only faster. comment on dit "electability"?

gabbneb, Monday, 23 April 2007 14:29 (sixteen years ago) link

let's also take a moment of thanks for the protesters and the great revolution they led

gabbneb, Monday, 23 April 2007 14:31 (sixteen years ago) link

Bayrou's party (UDF) isn't center-left, it's right-wing! As for the rest of your post, and the one that follows it, I'm afraid I don't know what you're talking about.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 23 April 2007 14:37 (sixteen years ago) link

I think 10% in 2007 has to be put in perspective tho - 10% w/ a popular conservative running is comparable to 18% when the mainstream right-wing is unpopular. the nationalist issues aren't going anywhere so I can imagine marine being in exactly the same place 6 years from now.

iatee, Monday, 23 April 2012 13:54 (eleven years ago) link

i agree with you but only to an extent. once again with 6.4M ppl who voted for her, she got 1.6M more people to vote for her than the previous high in 2002! as for mlp, she is probably gonna be in the exact same place for the next presidential election. actually, according to some pundits, it's gonna be a lot worse. she has everything to gain from a hollande victory which is why she probably won't be giving out strong recommendations to vote for sarkozy. if sarkozy loses, those experts claim that ump will kind of implode and have to start anew. if and when this happens, mlp will continue to appear as a more and more credible option and she could rally quite a large number of right wing peeps around her. this would go well with her strategy these past few years of distancing herself from her father's racism/negationism etc. she might also change the name of her party to get rid of the negativity attached to the name front national. anyways, what i'm saying is that mlp and the fn are def here to stay, but man do i hate that.

Jibe, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 08:12 (eleven years ago) link

wrt name-changing, the FN are talking about contesting the next parliamentary elections under the banner of "Rassemblement Bleu Marine" (geddit?):

Le Front national pourrait devenir le "Rassemblement Bleu Marine" en associant des souverainistes et des indépendants pour les élections législatives de juin, a déclaré mercredi Louis Aliot, vice-président du FN.

"Nous partons sous la bannière Rassemblement Bleu Marine", a dit le compagnon de Marine Le Pen sur Radio Classique et Public Sénat.

"C'est la marque pour les législatives. A l'intérieur il y aura les candidats du Front National, il y aura les candidats d'un micro parti qui vient de se créer et dont Monsieur Coûteaux est le président et il y aussi des indépendants dont Gilbert Collard est le chef de file", a-t-il ajouté.

http://www.lepoint.fr/fil-info-reuters/le-fn-envisage-un-rassemblement-bleu-marine-aux-legislatives-18-04-2012-1452679_240.php

NSFW Australia (seandalai), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 11:10 (eleven years ago) link

there was an interesting bit in the recent jonathan meades documentary on france, where he showed how you can trace a direct line from the OAP - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organisation_de_l%27arm%C3%A9e_secr%C3%A8te - and its concomitant right-wing "fatherland" type organisations to marine le pen

meades contended that the far right in france is forever impotent and its impotency is paradoxically the source of its continued attraction: the french right wing (like many right wings) constantly feels under assault, underappreciated, on the verge of extinction. he also contended that in france the far right never really changes, that it has nursed the same grievances and concerns for more than a century

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 12:49 (eleven years ago) link

(sorry i mean OAS, obv)

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 12:49 (eleven years ago) link

In 1972, Le Pen founded the Front National (FN) party, along with former OAS member Jacques Bompard, former Collaborationist Roland Gaucher and others nostalgics of Vichy France, neo-Nazi pagans, Traditionalist Catholics, and others.[4]

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 12:50 (eleven years ago) link

i agree with you but only to an extent. once again with 6.4M ppl who voted for her, she got 1.6M more people to vote for her than the previous high in 2002! as for mlp, she is probably gonna be in the exact same place for the next presidential election. actually, according to some pundits, it's gonna be a lot worse. she has everything to gain from a hollande victory which is why she probably won't be giving out strong recommendations to vote for sarkozy. if sarkozy loses, those experts claim that ump will kind of implode and have to start anew. if and when this happens, mlp will continue to appear as a more and more credible option and she could rally quite a large number of right wing peeps around her. this would go well with her strategy these past few years of distancing herself from her father's racism/negationism etc. she might also change the name of her party to get rid of the negativity attached to the name front national. anyways, what i'm saying is that mlp and the fn are def here to stay, but man do i hate that.

but isn't the flipside of this scenario a fairly empowered left? you can sorta imagine 2017 being 2002 w/ hollande instead of chirac.

iatee, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 16:05 (eleven years ago) link

Tracer, you can also trace them back to Royalists, Petainists, and anti-Dreyfussards.

L'ennui, cette maladie de tous les (Michael White), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 16:24 (eleven years ago) link

What scares me about Marine is the fact that as blonde, middle aged woman w/o the paratrooper connections of her father, she may appear less threatening. Sovereignty fetishists, anti-Schnegenists, anti-Euro partisans; this sounds like the UK to me but it has a certain resonance w/French nationalists and there is some legitimate fear that the FN may be speaking to white working class ppl better than the Socialists, which is both depressing and frightening.

L'ennui, cette maladie de tous les (Michael White), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 16:28 (eleven years ago) link

i see her as a nick griffin type who's using rhetorical tricks to make her out-and-out racism sound reasonable so that people don't hate themselves for agreeing with her

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 16:31 (eleven years ago) link

what I found interesting was how relatively young her voters seemed to be

iatee, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 16:31 (eleven years ago) link

Yeah, she's getting a lot of under-25 votes. Wtf? Sarko won the women's vote?!

L'ennui, cette maladie de tous les (Michael White), Tuesday, 24 April 2012 16:33 (eleven years ago) link

maybe due to mélenchon?

iatee, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 16:37 (eleven years ago) link

oh it's more a demographics thing:

http://www.slate.fr/france/53951/presidentielle-vote-femmes

Cela peut s’expliquer notamment par un vote plus conservateur des femmes. «La situation démographique fait que les femmes âgées sont bien plus nombreuses que les hommes de la même génération», remarque les Nouvelles News. Selon l'Insee, elles représentent 58% des plus de 65 ans.

iatee, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 18:46 (eleven years ago) link

man french voting demographics so weird

le pen won a quarter of the 25-49 y/o women...which means like what, 35% of white women?

iatee, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 18:56 (eleven years ago) link

i wonder what a number like that means w/r/t french state/mainstream feminism, the burqa ban, and so on.

goole, Tuesday, 24 April 2012 18:59 (eleven years ago) link

Bayrou supporting Hollande

it's over

iatee, Thursday, 3 May 2012 20:35 (eleven years ago) link

Man, I would honestly vote 'blanc'. The trouble France is in and both of these guys are smoking crack.

L'ennui, cette maladie de tous les (Michael White), Thursday, 3 May 2012 22:16 (eleven years ago) link

he's pretty blah but I'm a sucker for class warfare and I think there's a decent chance he'll end up being a positive force as far as the eurozone crisis goes

iatee, Thursday, 3 May 2012 23:38 (eleven years ago) link

Hollande seems like a ~cool dude~ but I don't know French so I could be rong.

Clive "The Chip" Crinkly (King Boy Pato), Friday, 4 May 2012 02:57 (eleven years ago) link

Hollande has kind of surfed on an anti-Sarko platform all along and I think most people would be very hard pressed to tell you what his main ideas are. Not that he doesn't have any, its just that he's spent a lot of time attacking Sarkozy on his choices, results etc and far less talking about what he plans to do (and I meantalking about it in detail, not just in broad strokes). I'm not really a fan of him but will probably vote for him, not because I agree 100% with everything he says (but then again, who ever is 100% aligned with the candidate they vote for) but because i've come to truly despise sarkozy. I watched the debate with some people yesterday and Sarko showed off a lot of the things I dislike about him: changing his opponent's words so as to make it sound like his opponent is a fool, asserting with total confidence numbers that are 100% false all the while calling out every stat Hollande came up with as being false and saying that observers would show who was right (knowing full well that most people would mainly remember him disagreeing vehemently and never check back the next day to see if he was right or not) etc.

Hollande did manage to come up with some good stuff of his too, especially at one point when they were talking about letting legal immigrants vote in municipal elections. Sarkozy claimed that he couldnt agree with this because those legal immigrants were Muslims and they would vote for muslim leaders who'd go against the country's laicité, to which Hollande replied that it was very telling that he identified all legal immigrants as being muslims AND that there were a lot of French muslims who voted in elections without trying to change laws to go along with their religion.

On the whole though, the debate between those two was kinda pointless, the both of them attacking each other and what they had said or done or not said or not done, or on whatever people from their respective parties had said about the other party etc. Good thing Sarko didn't get his way and there weren't three debates because that would have been incredibly annoying to listen to them arguing like children for the most part.

Jibe, Friday, 4 May 2012 07:18 (eleven years ago) link

Also iatee, i'd have said it's over from the day following the first round results. Ever since then all the polls show Hollande winning. Every redistribution of the 1st round votes between the candidates, with the smallest possible going to Hollande still had him winning. Its only in the past couple of days that his lead has shrunk a a tiny bit, potentially because people kept hearing that Hollande was sure to win which made some change their vote.

Jibe, Friday, 4 May 2012 07:21 (eleven years ago) link

If I were Hollande, I would be focusing all my energy hating on Sarko too. That has to be the easiest and best way to win votes, no?

Anyway, Hollande is going to smash it. Considering that Sarko is so desperate in that he's reduced to trying to win over Le Pen's supporters with hilariously pathetic soundbites.

No Repayment, No Pinterest (King Boy Pato), Friday, 4 May 2012 10:07 (eleven years ago) link

Also iatee, i'd have said it's over from the day following the first round results. Ever since then all the polls show Hollande winning. Every redistribution of the 1st round votes between the candidates, with the smallest possible going to Hollande still had him winning. Its only in the past couple of days that his lead has shrunk a a tiny bit, potentially because people kept hearing that Hollande was sure to win which made some change their vote.

yeah it's almost bizarre how consistent the polls have been, you don't really see that in american politics. I think there is less risk for some shocking result due to voter turnout disparities because almost everyone votes.

iatee, Friday, 4 May 2012 13:37 (eleven years ago) link

anyway rip sarko your wife was pretty and I kinda dug the grand paris project

iatee, Friday, 4 May 2012 13:40 (eleven years ago) link

changing his opponent's words so as to make it sound like his opponent is a fool,

I loved when Sarko chastised the Socialists for being behind DSK and Hollande said that they hadn't appointed him to the IMF.

L'ennui, cette maladie de tous les (Michael White), Friday, 4 May 2012 13:57 (eleven years ago) link

I have always been committed to European integration and it's sad that it's become the bugbear of French politics. There was nary a real reformer among the candidates except perhaps the tepid Bayrou and the numbers behind Le Pen and Melanchon are proof of a certain tradition of delusion among French voters.

L'ennui, cette maladie de tous les (Michael White), Friday, 4 May 2012 14:00 (eleven years ago) link

I don't think it's particular to france tho...that element exists throughout europe

iatee, Friday, 4 May 2012 14:02 (eleven years ago) link

Even Italy which has a tendency to be as ridiculous as possible has the Monti govmt.

L'ennui, cette maladie de tous les (Michael White), Friday, 4 May 2012 14:49 (eleven years ago) link

the problem with european integration is also that it has become a scapegoat for most politicians. if something doesn't seem to be working well, there's a 90% chance they'll lay the blame on european legislation. and when most of the things you hear about europe are about how its ruinng stuff, well then you're far less likely to actively root for it. as for bayrou i feel kind of bad for the guy. he's seriously probably the only candidate who offered reasoned, well-thought through solutions to tackle the economic crisis, yet no one really cares about him.

tbh i feel like a lot about politics in france is being influenced by shows like les guignols de l'info. i'd be curious to know if the flamby nickname that stuck to hollande came from that show for example (flamby is a flan-like dessert). that show also ruined bayrou's credibility a long time ago with the bus du colza and other stuff. i'd really love to read an informed study on that topic.

Jibe, Saturday, 5 May 2012 15:12 (eleven years ago) link

hollande beats sarkozy, as expected. however he does so without handing sarkozy the beating that was talked about. 51.7% of the votes for him.

Jibe, Monday, 7 May 2012 03:43 (eleven years ago) link

over 70% turnout is really impressive in the context of...everywhere else in western europe. is this par for the course in france?

liberté, égalité, beyoncé (lex pretend), Monday, 7 May 2012 08:40 (eleven years ago) link

The first round was over 80%, i think. Lower than 2007, though.

Just like you, except hot (ShariVari), Monday, 7 May 2012 09:13 (eleven years ago) link

i'd be curious to know if the flamby nickname that stuck to hollande came from that show for example (flamby is a flan-like dessert)

flamby en flambé!

(annoyingly i don't think the expression "on fire" translates the same in french, and i have a suspicion "en flambé" isn't accurate anyway)

liberté, égalité, beyoncé (lex pretend), Monday, 7 May 2012 09:30 (eleven years ago) link

the turnout is not particularly exceptional for a presidential election, as its been over 70% most of the time. for other elections i'm pretty sure the turnout is just as bad as it is elsewhere

xpost : not sure what you're trying to say with en flambé there so i'm gonna say you're right to be suspicious there

Jibe, Monday, 7 May 2012 09:38 (eleven years ago) link

i think he's trying to say that hollande is "on fire" i.e. "doing great"

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Monday, 7 May 2012 13:50 (eleven years ago) link

that's what i thought but felt like maybe he was talking about a new dessert, flamby flambé

Jibe, Monday, 7 May 2012 15:12 (eleven years ago) link

i'd be curious to know if the flamby nickname that stuck to hollande came from that show for example

It looks like it came from Jack Lang, though Montebourg has used it too.

L'ennui, cette maladie de tous les (Michael White), Monday, 7 May 2012 17:43 (eleven years ago) link

i read somewhere that bruno gaccio (the guignols de l'info guy) used that name as a general comment on the PS but that he now regretted having made this a huge thing.

Jibe, Tuesday, 8 May 2012 03:04 (eleven years ago) link


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