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“Mademoiselle Thatcher” (Sabine Herold Alert!)
National Review Online ^ | November 6, 2003 | Richard Miniter and Alberto Mingardi

Posted on 11/06/2003 3:42:34 PM PST by Carthago delenda est

Last Sunday, November 2, Paris witnessed an unusual demonstration. A group of classical liberals, led by a fire-breathing 21-year-old college student, planted genetically modified seeds and distributed them to the all the passers-by. This happened in Champ de Mars, in front of the Porte de la Paix.

This shocking demonstration is how Liberté J'Ecris Ton Nom, a group of French libertarian students, answered to the "obscurantism" of all of those who want to inhibit free inquiry and scientific research — in the name of food safety. Liberté J'Ecris Ton Nom objects to the food protectionism of the European Union, and stresses the importance of freedom to trade in genetically modified agricultural goods. The debate is no longer monopolized by Jean-Luc Bové's cries; the neo-Luddite farmer has found an opponent up to him.

This opponent is a 21-year-old student who is both famous and infamous in France and an sudden celebrity across Europe. Her name is Sabine Herold. The Paris-based daily Le Figaro has called her "the Joan d'Arc of the liberals." Britain's largest quality Sunday paper, the Sunday Times, hailed her as "Mademoiselle Thatcher."

Just six months ago, Miss Herold was an ordinary student in political science at the University of Paris. On May 25, as striking workers marched through her hometown of Reims, she denounced the trade unions from the steps of city hall. Miss Herold mocked the strikers as "reactionary egotists."

Soon a crowd gathered, which French newspapers estimate at 2,000 people. They began to applaud — someone finally said it! After months of crippling strikes, the French, long known for tolerating even the worst excesses of their Soviet unions, had had enough.

Over the next few weeks, Miss Herold kept drawing ever-larger crowds. By June 15, she addressed a crowd of 80,000 in Paris with the same message. But these were no spontaneous gatherings. It was the start of a grassroots movement.

While the French are not about to abandon their chic anti-Americanism or launch a Thatcherite revolution any time soon, Miss Herold's is part of a larger trend. By all means, she is not the only French young person to preach free-market, private property, and sound science. An astonishing number of largely free-market clubs, online groups, and grassroots associations, have sprung up in France in the past few years. One estimate by the London-based Institut Molinari, was founded in Brussels.

Last June, when the masses were fed up with the arrogance of trade unions (who immobilized Paris to protest against prime minister Raffarin's pension reforms), Sabine Herold arrived as the answer to the middle class's prayers. Interviewed by a number of publications, she likes to drop names such as Nobel Prize winner F. A. Hayek, and refers with admiration to Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, as two political figures whose path she would like to follow. This is simply not done in French politics.

Now Miss Herold has succeeded in becoming a symbol of the free-market Right in Europe, a minority which has never been successful in manufacturing icons. We invited her to speak at a conference in Italy with Chilean social-security reformer Jose Piñera. She electrified the room. She was what no one thought existed and represents a new political combination: a Thatcherite with charm and, beauty.

And there is a chance that Miss Herold will last more than 15 minutes in the spotlight. She shows a firm commitment to free enterprise and seems eager to use her current popularity for the sake of advancing classical-liberal values. She is fascinated by the great classical liberal thinkers in France's past — even if liberal policies were seldom implemented. To fill the gap between theory and reality is the mission of this new generation of liberaux.

This is not the first time France's middle class seems ready to revolt against established authority. Fifty years ago, angry taxpayers joined the "Union in Defense of Merchants and Artisans," led by Pierre Poujade, a bookseller from the southern French town of St. Céré. Winning election to the local council, Poujade persuaded the area's merchants to refuse to pay their taxes to the central government and to resist government inspectors who demanded to see their books. Successful resistance spread the idea and the movement to neighboring towns, and finally to a large portion of France. It was France's first and only tax revolt.

But the Poujadists ultimately achieved nothing; the movement collapsed in but two years and didn't generate a lasting legacy. The success of a political movement requires more than exceptional individuals, but a sense that the time has come for change.

Increasingly, France looks ready to reexamine its postwar love affair with socialism. It has elected a center-right government. Public-opinion polls show support for reforms and tax cuts. Now Sabine Herold has emerged. The French shouldn't worry that she will succeed in liberalizing France, but that she could fail.

— Richard Miniter is senior fellow at the Centre for the New Europe, a Brussels-based free-market think tank. Alberto Mingardi is visiting fellow at CNE.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: classicalliberalism; france; sabineherold
Okay, let me get this out of the way: Sabine Herold is very attractive.

That said, you shouldn't disregard what she has to say - like good conservatives usually do in America when attractive people spout off their political opinions. She is in the vanguard of a French movement that has finally decided to take on the pesky labor unions. No wonder she is being compared to Thatcher.

She is exactly what France needs - and I say that as someone who doesn't agree with everything she says, particularly on euthanasia and abortion. She is a classical liberal - the best kind. She detests collectivism in all its forms. She admires Friedrich Hayek.

And she is (drum roll, please) a FReeper!!!

Send her an Email of support at the following address:

sabine@liberte-cherie.com

1 posted on 11/06/2003 3:42:35 PM PST by Carthago delenda est
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To: Carthago delenda est; Sabine
God Bless You, Sabine! When you become President of France, I will actually come visit.
2 posted on 11/06/2003 3:55:01 PM PST by MoJo2001 (God Bless Our Troops! Thank You For Our Freedom!!)
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To: Carthago delenda est
The obligatory picture - Ann Coulter isn't the only hot chick out there. Sabine Herold picture
3 posted on 11/06/2003 3:58:06 PM PST by glorgau
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To: Carthago delenda est
Félicitations Sabine!

This woman must have a lot of courage and vision to be so young and still know where the path for her country needs to go...and to actually be effective in making the first steps in doing something about it in such a hostile environment.

Thatcher is a great model and someone whom I admire greatly. Thatcher's policies -- even fairly long ago -- have endured and are THE reasons that the UK has weathered the recent world downturn so well...in no small part because she got the UK government out of the business of UK business!

Taxes, unemployment, living standards/income, GNP growth (the UK actually has had growth compared to the flat to falling GNP in France and Germany) -- and so on and so on -- ALL are much better in the UK than in Germany and France.

I will e-mail her and send my congratulations!!
4 posted on 11/06/2003 4:08:06 PM PST by Jackson Brown
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To: Carthago delenda est; Sabine
Thatcher heck! If Sabine turns France around after Jacques chIRAQ, she's the reincarnation of Joan of Arc!!

Liberte'
5 posted on 11/06/2003 4:29:40 PM PST by .cnI redruM (Mouthing support for the workingman is one of the best ways to avoid actually being one.)
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To: .cnI redruM
She will be the new Joan of Arc if she can bring them work weeks longer than 35 hours and a flat tax like in Russia and Iraq.
6 posted on 11/06/2003 10:42:09 PM PST by Andy from Beaverton (I only vote Republican to stop the Democrats)
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To: Carthago delenda est
Sabine Herold picture I was there, Sabine is such a nice girl. Her friends too.
7 posted on 11/08/2003 12:30:55 AM PST by thierrya
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To: Carthago delenda est
Wow. Who would have thought it.

The only French person with balls would end up being a woman. Talk about irony....

Good for her.

Thanks for the informative post.

Regards,

L

8 posted on 11/08/2003 12:44:54 AM PST by Lurker (Some people say you shouldn't kick a man when he's down. I say there's no better time to do it.)
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To: Carthago delenda est
And, she is NOT a " Conservative " at all, but a LIBERTARIAN/Socialist. She's been praised to the skies, by male FREEPERs; however,when she was visiting in London, the article posted here,had her sounding VERY unFREEPERish, un Conservative, and no, not the second coming of Joan of Arc.
9 posted on 11/08/2003 12:48:49 AM PST by nopardons
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To: Lurker
Look up the other articles posted about her. Don't get too excited. LOL
10 posted on 11/08/2003 12:49:45 AM PST by nopardons
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To: thierrya; Sabine
Wow, I like that picture even more. Yes, she is indeed a very beautiful woman.

That said, I have more respect for her mind and her economic values and love of liberty. There's a lot to respect about her. I'd be thrilled if a few million like her would replace the current Democrat party in the U.S.

That said, though, if it is true that she is pro-abortion and pro-euthanasia, I'm afraid I can't swing as far libertarian as she does. The most pervasive threat to liberty is a government that enables and endorses the taking of human life on any level. That slope is far too slippery, as has been demonstrated too often in history.

Note - as far as euthanasia, that does not mean that I am opposed to ending "extraordinary measures" to keep someone alive. It means that I am opposed to the deliberate starvation and dehydration of human beings who can otherwise survive, regardless of any other aspect of their condition. Food and water is not an "extraordinary measure".

If her stand on euthanasia also rejects forced dehydration or other methods of prematurely ending otherwise viable lives, that would do a great deal to squaring my ideals with hers.

Assuming otherwise, then while I will quietly support her endeavors and do indeed believe that her ideology far surpasses any other popular ideology coming out of France these days, those issues keep me from being able to lend her my activist support. A great shame, really. I would otherwise love to actively campaign on her behalf. Either way, from a pragmatic level I hope she succeeds, as there is no other voice I'm hearing from France as worthy of support as hers.

Good luck to you in all your other endeavors, mademoiselle.

Qwinn
11 posted on 11/08/2003 12:58:16 AM PST by Qwinn
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