<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=28219>
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=28219
France’s Thatcher               
By
<file:///C:/Program%20Files/Common%20Files/Microsoft%20Shared/Stationery/aut
hors.asp?ID=1021> Kenneth R. Timmerman
FrontPageMagazine.com | May 9, 2007 

“Sarko, the American.” For much of the French presidential campaign, it was
an epithet used by the enemies of conservative candidate Nicolas Sarkozy to
suggest that he was not his own man but a handmaiden of Washington. 

Instead of complaining, or accusing his detractors of defaming his
character, the former Chirac protégé adopted the slogan and wore it as a
badge of honor.

 

Imagine that, a French political leader, proud of being called an American!

 

That’s just the first of many things that will change when Nicolas Sarkozy
takes office on May 16.

 

Less than seven minutes into  <http://www.election-presidentielle.fr/?p=973>
his victory speech on election night, Sarkozy sent a message to America.

 

“I want to launch an appeal to our American friends,” he began to a cheering
audience, “that they can count on our friendship, forged in the tragedies of
history we have confronted together.”

 

“I want to tell them that France will be at their sides when they need her.
But I also want to tell them that part of friendship is accepting that
friends can think differently.”

 

There was a huge gasp in the room, as the shadow of Jacques Chirac appeared
to descend from the ballroom ceiling, threatening to shatter the magic of
the renewed France that Sarkozy seemed to embody. But then the French
president-elect veered off in an unexpected direction.

 

He wasn’t about to chastise America over the war in Iraq, or the ongoing war
on terror. He wasn’t even going to raise the very real difference he has
with President George W. Bush over the entry of Muslim Turkey into the
predominantly Christian European Union (Bush favors Turkey’s entry as part
of his politically-correct salaam to ‘Islam, religion of peace’; Sarkozy is
against).

 

No, it was about global warming.

 

“A great nation such as the United States has a duty to not become an
obstacle to the struggle against global warming but instead to take the lead
in this battle, because what’s at stake is the fate of all humanity,”
Sarkozy said. He capped it off by vowing to make the fight against global
warming his “first battle” as president.

 

Before you laugh, be thankful. Sarkozy wasn’t pledging to create a
Palestinian state over the bodies of dead Jews, as is predecessor had done.
He wasn’t vowing to dislodge America from its super-power status, nor was he
demanding that  <http://www.kentimmerman.com/french-betrayal.htm> America
subordinate its right to self-defense to a show of hands at the United
Nations among countries who wish us ill. 

 

Instead, he was calling on America to take a leadership role.  This is a new
France, indeed. (And there is more than just puffery in Sarkozy’s choice of
global warming as his signal foreign policy issue. Remember that France has
some of the most advanced nuclear power technology in the world, and wants
to perfect and export 4th generation reactors to developing countries. As he
reminded his Socialist rival, Ségolène Royal, during their two hour
mano-a-mano last week, nuclear power is “clean energy” and does not
contribute to greenhouse gases.)

 

But while Sarkozy says there is “much to admire” in America, his real
aspiration is to become France’s Thatcher. 

 

Indeed, the task facing Sarkozy is dreadfully similar to the one that faced
Margaret Thatcher when she first assumed office in 1979, after decades of
disastrous socialist economic and social policies.

 

Sarkozy inherits an economy with high unemployment, little job mobility, and
a massive social welfare state supported by powerful trade unions that fear
losing their influence.

 

Like Britain a generation ago, today more than 50% of the French gross
national product is spent by the state. That compares with 42% in today’s
Britain and the United States. 

 

Sarkozy has pledged to renew a country demoralized by 12 dismal years of
Jacques Chirac, undoubtedly the worst president the French have ever had the
misfortune to elect.

 

The Chirac era was fraught with corruption and baseness of all sorts. If the
French were to apply the letter of the law, Chirac could be headed for the
housegaw after losing his presidential immunity on corruption charges
stemming from his 18 years as mayor of Paris.

 

(I doubt Sarkozy will allow Chirac to be prosecuted, and personally I think
he should pardon him– not because of any love lost for Chirac, but because
the French would prefer to forget that Chirac ever existed and don’t want to
be reminded of him in the news. Neither should we.)

 

When Chirac was first elected in 1995, unemployment topped 10%. After
spending tens of billions of euros on make-work programs and various social
welfare fixes, unemployment still hovers well above 8% even according to the
tricked-up official figures, which count young people on job-training
internships as full-fledged members of the work force.

 

Internationally, Chirac steered France into a hysterical, anti-American and
anti-Israel alliance, siding
<http://www.nationalreview.com/interrogatory/timmerman200403220851.asp> with
Saddam Hussein against George W. Bush, and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah
against Israel.

 

Chirac also alienated Britain’s leaders, adding personal snubs to political
hostility, going so far as to
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/07/05/wchir05.xml
> show up more than a half hour late to Buckingham palace during a state
visit with the Queen.

 

When anti-Semitic attacks erupted in France after 9/11, Chirac sat on his
hands. Sarkozy, newly appointed as Interior Minister, donned a bullet-proof
vest and visited the Muslim ghettoes around Paris, warning Muslim
<http://www.kentimmerman.com/news/insight_france_020805.htm> leaders to stop
preaching violence against Jews.

 

I believe history will accord Chirac the summary judgment he deserves. 

 

Sarkozy campaigned on a platform of sweeping reforms, pledging to dismantle
large portions of the social welfare state and to make France competitive on
world markets again.

 

He pledged to reduce taxes, shrink the size of government and shut down
redundant government programs. (Rudy Guilliani was listening, and picked up
one of Sarkozy’s key reforms – replacing only one of every two retiring
civil servants – just yesterday). 

 

But most importantly, he pledged to “put France back to work.” The French
have lost faith in work, he says. “Reviving the work ethic is at the heart
of my program.”

 

Sarkozy dreams of awakening France from generations of sclerosis, just as
Margaret Thatcher did Britain a generation ago. 

 

Seventeen years after Mrs. Thatcher left office in 1990, Britain remains the
economic engine driving Europe. Even the Labor Party was forced to adopt her
reforms.

 

Hundreds of thousands of young French men and women voted with their feet
and emigrated to Britain in search of better pay, lower taxes, and greater
freedom to create. 

 

Sarkozy hopes to lure French expats back home by reducing taxes on small
businesses, and by making workers more mobile. During last Wednesday’s
debate with his Socialist opponent, he called a key Socialist gain, the
35-hour work week, “a widespread catastrophe for the French economy” 

 

In conciliatory remarks aimed at his harshest opponents in the Muslim
ghettos around Paris, Sarkozy offered a new job-training program, “a
contract, and a paycheck” to unemployed young Muslims and African
immigrants.

 

In a video-taped message that played on his website along with the election
victory announcement, he pledged a helping hand “so that all can live in
dignity from their work.”

 

But in exchange, he warned, “I ask them to get up early, because no one can
hope to be helped by society if he doesn’t help himself.”

 

“I want to build a Republic where everyone can succeed,” he added.

 

Foreign policy played virtually no role in the election campaign. During the
more than 2 hour debate with Royal, the United States was not even mentioned
once.

 

The overwhelming emphasis of Sarkozy’s campaign of reforming French
political, social, and economic structures will translate into a strong
domestic agenda for his presidency. It will be a welcome break from Chirac’s
knack for inserting himself wherever he was wanted the least, almost
invariably on the side of dictators and tyrants.

 

Sarkozy frequently evokes the need for a “break” with the past. If he
succeeds in his ambitious project of dismantling the social welfare state,
he will be hailed as the Margaret Thatcher of France.

 

And, who knows? There may come a time in the not-so-distant future when
Sarkozy will cross the Atlantic to urge his American counterpart not to go
“wobbly at the knees,” and like Maggie, pledge his nation’s full support in
the worldwide struggle for freedom.

 



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