Fin de Regime
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
As the late
British parliamentarian Enoch Powell famously noted, all political
careers end in failure. Powell's grim maxim haunted Europe last
week.
In Britain,
PM Tony Blair's days are numbered as calls intensify for him to
set a resignation date. The Labour Party seethes with rumours about
Blair being unseated by the same kind of brutal putsch that kicked
out Margaret Thatcher. Britons are fed up over Iraq and Blair's
closeness to U.S. President George Bush.
Italy is a
political zombie. Former PM Silvio Berlusconi, ousted in a razor-thin
vote, has been forced to go back to simply owning Italy, rather
than leading it. But he and his allies are straining to thwart the
new centre-left coalition of Romano Prodi by promoting political
paralysis.
Germany's new
PM, Angela Merkel, has dedicated herself to doing nothing apart
from making nice to Washington after promising to reform and
revive her stagnant nation.
Here in glittering
springtime Paris, a sense of "fin de regime" hangs over
the City of Light. The government is torn by open political civil
war and barely able to conduct normal business.
President Jacques
Chirac, still ailing from what his spokesmen delicately described
as "a medical mishap," remains unwell. Only 20% of the
French still back him. Chirac has one more year in office and is
unlikely to run again.
With Chirac
offstage, his two would-be successors, Prime Minister Dominique
de Villepin and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, are waging an
embarrassing, increasingly ugly public battle. During the recent
riots over employment reform, De Villepin vowed not to give in to
mob demands. Chirac humiliated and betrayed him by doing precisely
that.
Now, De Villepin
is enmeshed in a vicious scandal that threatens his political demise.
The "affaire Clearstream" involves huge, secret "commissions"
allegedly paid to politicians from the sale of frigates to Taiwan.
It's being called the "French Watergate." De Villepin
is accused of trying to frame rival Sarkozy through faked documents
and false testimony. Even Chirac is accused of hiding kickbacks
in Japan.
Political street
fighter Sarkozy has access to police and domestic security agency
secret files, hence vast amounts of dirt on everyone, especially
his opponents. The hyperactive, ruthlessly ambitious Sarkozy is
now going populist, proclaiming himself defender of the little people
and promising to create a modern, dynamic France. In effect, "Sarko,"
as supporters call him, is running against his own government. Meanwhile,
high officials desperately try to decide which rival to back since
their careers will depend on the right choice.
Sarkozy is
also trying to capture working-class support by vowing to limit
immigration and toughen laws against non-French. This ploy could
backfire by legitimizing the far right candidate, Jean Marie Le
Pen, who champions halting immigration and sending France's five
million Muslims back to Africa. In fact, Le Pen, who beat the Socialists
in the last election, could very well emerge a front-runner.
Last
legs of the left
The left's
amiable leader, Francois Holland, is boring and bereft of ideas.
Europe's old political order is on its last legs, but there is nothing
new to replace it. Unless, of course, one counts Le Pen's National
Front, with its calls for racial and ethnic purity, restoration
of "Christian values," and "cleansing foreigners
and criminals."
Do
not underestimate ex-paratrooper Le Pen. This writer spent a good
deal of time with him and found him brilliant and charismatic, however
much he was a racist and anti-Semite. Le Pen yells what others only
whisper. There's even an outside chance France's next election might
end up pitting the little pit bull Sarko against the menacing Monsieur
Le Pen.
May
15, 2006
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail], contributing foreign editor for Sun National Media
Canada, is the author of War
at the Top of the World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 Eric Margolis
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