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Au Revoir: De Gaulle, Le Pen, and the Communist party have been expunged from French politics.
NRO ^ | 5/8/2007 | Laurent Murawiec

Posted on 05/08/2007 1:54:46 PM PDT by Uncledave

Au Revoir De Gaulle, Le Pen, and the Communist party have been expunged from French politics.

By Laurent Murawiec

Good news for the French, good news for us: Nicolas Sarkozy’s impressive victory in this weekend’s French presidential election sounds the death knell of key components of French political exceptionalism.

GAULLISM AT HOME… First, the Gaullist exception in both the domestic field and in international affairs has finally been done away with. Domestically, Gaullism has been terrible for the Right. In France, after 1945, the figure of General de Gaulle singlehandedly prevented the consolidation of a powerful and durable Christian-Democratic party as arose in Germany or Italy and as existed in Britain. Even after de Gaulle’s retirement, his legacy prevented the often-attempted establishment of a conservative, right-of-center party. This fragmented the center and the Right, and forced a general shift to the center. The Right was softened, which in turn enabled the rise of an uncouth ultra-right in the form of Jean-Marie Le Pen, whose National Front took a large part of the conservative electorate.

Furthermore, de Gaulle essentially established a pact with the Communist party, which paralyzed the political landscape: Against an erratic coalition of Gaullists and Communists, it was virtually impossible to effect significant change. For the better part of fifty years, the Communist-dominated unions were like a lead balloon burdening the body politic, a powerful lobby on behalf of corporatist status quo.

No figure comparable to that of Mrs. Thatcher ever rose to break the back of the unions, no figure remotely comparable to that of Ronald Reagan ever appeared to free the political system from the poisonous legacy of Gen. de Gaulle. Sarkozy’s ascent represents the consolidation of a genuine right-of-center force in French politics and the final vanquishing of the Gaullist exception.

…AND ABROAD In international affairs, de Gaulle repeatedly broke ranks with Atlantic solidarity; he tried to sunder NATO and flirted with Moscow. De Gaulle foolishly France, with him at it head, as the leader of an international “third way” in which the “non-aligned” and the Soviet bloc would join him. The Islamic world, Latin America, and Asia would heed his anti-American call. De Gaulle’s successors kept up that tradition, though with partial exceptions: President Pompidou improved relations with Richard Nixon somewhat; Socialist president Mitterrand supported Reagan’s deployment of the “euro-missiles” (but furiously opposed missile defense). Jacques Chirac turned out to be the most virulent hater of America, ready to go to almost any length to harm the U.S.

Sarkozy’s very first statement upon being elected pointedly emphasized a strong alliance with and friendliness toward the United States. This is an enormous change: For the first time since the strongly Atlantic-oriented Fourth Republic, Paris will not be anti-American. This does not mean that Sarkozy’s France will be “aligned” with, or a mere appendix of, American diplomacy — in his speech, Sarkozy first underlined that he was “a good European” and favorable to a stronger Europe. Rather, it means that Sarkozy’s France will stop trying to berate, harass, and scoff at the United States at every opportunity; that Sarkozy’s France will stop trying to lead a worldwide anti-American coalition, as was the case under the bumbling but tenaciously noxious stewardship of Jacques Chirac. The professional America-loathers at the French foreign ministry, the Quai d’Orsay, will have to watch their step. Israel will be able to count on a more level playing field and less Islamophilia. Washington can do business with Nicolas Sarkozy, whereas Chirac only wanted to do injury to America. The European Union can again envision a center-right French-German leadership that is not intent on pitting the EU against America.

THE END OF LE PEN The second French exception that suffered a fatal blow Sunday is Jean-Marie Le Pen, a clever, oafish demagogue. By defying the politically correct denial that there was any problem at all with Muslim immigrants, with their wayward, violent, and inassimilable children, or with the ghetto-like “banlieues” — breeding grounds for drugs, criminality, and Islamic recruitment — Le Pen proved a powerful attraction for the popular electorate and dragged it away from the mainstream, which in turn strengthened the Left. Mitterrand and the Socialists underhandedly supported Le Pen so as to weaken the Right, which gave Le Pen an otherwise unattainable lease on life. The fact is that Le Pen’s strength was a mainstay of Socialist power. Deprived by Le Pen of more than 15 percent of the electorate, the Right was politically weakened; with Le Pen unwilling to engage in coalition politics except on his own terms, the conservative camp was in poor shape. The farce of the 2002 presidential election, where all the Left voted for Chirac — “the crook,” as they called him — in order to stop “the Fascist” Le Pen was the crowning tomfoolery of the French exception.

The portion of the popular electorate that supported Le Pen, at least 15 percent of the whole, had shifted over decades from de Gaulle to the Communists and then from the Communists to Le Pen. Sarkozy’s strategy, tested and steadfastly practiced over many years, much resembles Richard Nixon’s recapture of George Wallace’s electorate. Nixon did not deny, as the respectable elites did, that there were serious reasons for disaffection among blue-collar workers and disenfranchised whites. Sarkozy likewise stated the obvious, which the Chiraquist, as well as Socialist, elites were discounting — giving Le Pen, as a result, a monopoly on proclaiming that uncontrolled North African and West African Muslim immigration had created a massive problem; that the withdrawal of police and justice from the high-density clusters of immigrant and second-generation Muslims and the abandonment by the authorities of the poorer, lower-middle-class French had worsened the problem; and that some major policy-shift was urgent.

MARGINALIZED FRINGES On the abhorrent basis of ideological racism and hatred for “foreigners” (he even badgered Sarkozy for his Hungarian roots), Le Pen recognized the Muslim problem and spoke up strongly about it. In so doing, he strongly contributed to the disintegration of the Communist party, which was once one of the most vigorous in Western Europe, with a quarter of the vote and a powerful grip on labor: Le Pen stole the Communists’ popular base. In the present election, Le Pen lost about half his electorate and the Communist candidate polled 2 percent of the vote.

The radical (Left or Right) hijacking of blue-collars has come to an end, even if various Trotskyites and Greens and sundry absurdists managed to siphon off about 10 percent of the total vote in the first leg of the election. In France, the fringe radicals are on the wane. Just as, in Germany, the CDU-CSU was wide enough a tent to include more nationalistic oriented voters, so it will now be in France.

THE END OF AN ERA The exceptions of Gaullism, the Communist party, and Le Pen have been fatally weakened or eliminated altogether. The French body politic is ripe for a thoroughgoing reshuffle, and this is what will occur now. A new, post-Gaullist conservative pole will take shape around Sarkozy. Should the new president go to the country to acquire the parliamentary majority he needs, he would consolidate a five-year majority for himself, enabling him to implement what priorities he will select, which, if the campaign is any indication, will represent a pro-market inflection (not revolution) in the étatist policies of the French state.

The Socialist party will be torn by defeat, by the exhaustion of the ’68 generation, by the failure of the post-’68 (Ségolène Royal’s) generation to capitalize on even as calamitous a 12-year legacy as that of the pseudo-conservative Chirac. The moderate, more Social-Democratic types in the Socialist party have been signaling their willingness to deal with the center: Former Socialist government minister Bernard Kouchner, founder of the “French Doctors,” is now talking of joining François Bayrou’s new Centrist (Christian-Democratic) party. Claude Allègre, renowned geophysicist (and noted global-warming skeptic) and a former Socialist minister of Education, was spotted leaving Sarkozy’s offices a few days ago.

The grip of the “Sixty-Eighters” (soixante-huitards) on the political and cultural establishment and the complete connivance between Gaullists, Communists, and ’68ers on anti-American, anti-Israeli, anti-Christian, pro-Arab, pro-Muslim, pro-Russian, and pro-“third world” policies has now been seriously weakened. In his campaign, Sarkozy emphasized national identity and cultural roots (Judeo-Christian, Catholic, French, and Western) — subjects that drive the Left into fits of rage. The ’68ers idolized cultural relativism and multiculturalism; the new president has no sympathy for their shibboleths. The virtues he stresses and the vices he attacks have nothing in common with the worldview of the ’68ers.

With the end of its persistent and toxic “exceptions,” from the so-called French social model to the conceit of French international leadership, and with a new chief executive unburdened by these follies, France will join again the ranks of reasonably governed nations. Good news for the French, good news for us.

— Laurent Murawiec is a senior fellow with the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C. His next book, The Mind of Jihad, will appear next year.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: eu; france; sarko; sarkozy
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1 posted on 05/08/2007 1:54:51 PM PDT by Uncledave
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To: Uncledave

I have to say that I think this is the best French election analysis I have read. Excellent


2 posted on 05/08/2007 1:58:18 PM PDT by 3AngelaD (They've screwed up their own countries so bad they had to leave, now they're here screwing up ours.)
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To: Uncledave
"Au Revoir: De Gaulle, Le Pen, and the Communist party have been expunged from French politics."

"Au Revoir: Roaches have been expunged from France."

Don't bet on it.

3 posted on 05/08/2007 1:58:43 PM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
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To: Uncledave
Au Revoir: De Gaulle, Le Pen, and the Communist party have been expunged from French politics

Gaullism= French arabo-phile elitist wannabe-superpower Le Pen- French Fascism Communist party- Ummmh... Communism

I sure hope those three are put to sleep forever.

4 posted on 05/08/2007 1:58:58 PM PDT by SolidWood (Islam is an insanity cult that makes everyone act Arab)
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To: Uncledave

Looks like wishful thinking. Sarkozy has options, but French politics have been the way they’ve been because the French want them that way. If Sarko goes heavily free market, look to fringe parties of the right and left to pick up votes. If he doesn’t he’s just more Gaullism.


5 posted on 05/08/2007 2:04:39 PM PDT by x
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To: Anti-Bubba182

I agree as well.

While the ‘68 Movement may be growing older, they have imbued (in the younger generations) their spirit of unabashed socialism with a large serving of violence thrown in.

Witness the street protests that took place the night Sarkozy was declared the winner. If I stand correctly, the car burnings and protests didn’t happen ONLY in the Muslim suburbs.

Sarkozy will have his hands full with France’s Left. I wish him well in his battles with them.


6 posted on 05/08/2007 2:05:12 PM PDT by MplsSteve
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To: Uncledave

These ideas may have received a well deserved smackdown, but I doubt they are dead.


7 posted on 05/08/2007 2:05:53 PM PDT by Unam Sanctam
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To: Anti-Bubba182
Don't bet on it.

Not by a long shot. Actually, this article speaks more to me about our two-party system, and what could conceivably occur here should either party fracture into multiple parties.

8 posted on 05/08/2007 2:06:42 PM PDT by bcsco
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To: 3AngelaD; Vicomte13; Cincinna

Sounds plausible enough to me, but I don’t know enough of the nuances of French electoral politics to judge whether we should be so optimistic or not. Maybe we have to see how the legislative elections turn out in a few weeks before anyone can talk about such grand re-alignments in French politics. Still, it’s great to see Sarko win against all the slime that’s been thrown at him.


9 posted on 05/08/2007 2:08:23 PM PDT by Enchante (Reid and Pelosi Defeatocrats: Surrender Now - Peace for Our Time!!)
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To: x

Sarkozy understands that the Ship of State moves very slowly.


10 posted on 05/08/2007 2:09:10 PM PDT by dfwgator (The University of Florida - Still Championship U)
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To: Uncledave

Thanks for this - great read.


11 posted on 05/08/2007 2:12:27 PM PDT by horse_doc (Visualize a world where a tactical nuke went off at Max Yasgar's farm in 1969.)
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To: Enchante

The nice thing is that this guy, Laurent Murawiec, does know a great deal about it, and has enough knowlege of and familiarity with the nuances of French politics to draw some conclusions. Too bad the newspaper and TV and radio don’t have informed people to analyze stories like this.


12 posted on 05/08/2007 2:12:54 PM PDT by 3AngelaD (They've screwed up their own countries so bad they had to leave, now they're here screwing up ours.)
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To: Uncledave
I read your article with great interest and fervently hope the conclusion is correct; but, living in Belgium for 17 years, I don’t think the socialists and particularly the unions are going to go down easily. Sarkozy will need to be a magician to deal with them.
13 posted on 05/08/2007 2:14:06 PM PDT by NGC 6822 ((If you're not careful, you may learn one new thing every day.))
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To: NGC 6822

True enough, but he’s got a heck of a mandate to do just that.


14 posted on 05/08/2007 2:20:50 PM PDT by Uncledave
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To: Uncledave

Bump!


15 posted on 05/08/2007 2:33:33 PM PDT by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: Uncledave

It’s a well-written analysis but I’m not going to hold my breath. The communists/socialists in france will fight Sarkozy tooth-and-nail.

To steal an idea from Charles Barkley, communists/socialists are like ex-wives. They keep coming back. You can’t get rid of them. They never just die. You have to kill them.


16 posted on 05/08/2007 2:45:57 PM PDT by El Gran Salseron (The World-Famous, popular DJ and FReeper Canteen Certified, Equal-Opportunity, Male-Chauvinist-Pig!)
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To: NGC 6822
Sarkozy will need to be a magician to deal with them.

Sarko, the Magic Frenchman?

17 posted on 05/08/2007 3:05:20 PM PDT by syriacus (Dems removed our troops too soon from S. Korea. 30,000 US troops died in 30 mos to RE-WIN SK freedom)
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To: Uncledave; nctexan; MassachusettsGOP; paudio; ronnie raygun; Minette; WOSG; fieldmarshaldj; ...

I highly recommend this excellent analysis of the profound changes the Sarkozy victory signals for France.

The death knell for “Gaullism, the Communist party, and Le Pen” and the weakening and breaking apart of the Socialist Party, is wonderful news for France, for Europe,for the US, and for Conservatives everywhere.

Defeating Leftism is a noble accomplishment.


18 posted on 05/08/2007 5:33:03 PM PDT by Cincinna (HILLARY & HER HINO "We are going to take things away from you for the Common Good")
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To: Uncledave; All

FReepMail me if you would like to be on the FRENCH ELECTION PING LIST.

Coming up : Continued coverage of the riots in France. Coverage of the Inauguration of Sarkozy on May 16, the Legislative Elections on June 12 and 19th, and lots more.


19 posted on 05/08/2007 5:44:41 PM PDT by Cincinna (HILLARY & HER HINO "We are going to take things away from you for the Common Good")
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To: Uncledave

In his campaign, Sarkozy emphasized national identity and cultural roots (Judeo-Christian, Catholic, French, and Western) — subjects that drive the Left into fits of rage.

Man, we have more in common with the French then I ever thought. I hope Sarkozy gets his parlimentary majority in July, and can make some great changes in France.

I also sincerely hope that he does drive the Left into fits of sputtering stuttering shock...I’d better stock up on popcorn if that happens...LOL


20 posted on 05/08/2007 6:03:22 PM PDT by padre35 (we are surrounded that simplifies things-Chesty Puller)
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