Sanchia Alasia reports on Francois Hollande’s victory over Nicoals Sarkozy in the French Presidential elections.
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France is celebrating its first Socialist President for 17 years, voting in François Hollande and bidding adieu to Nicolas Sarkozy.
Although Sarkozy may have clung on in the final live televised debate – watched by 18 million viewers – Hollande dealt with his cries of “liar” quite well, and with Fascist Marine Le Pen stating she would cast a blank vote, centrist François Bayrou pledging support for him and polls consistently putting the Socialist ahead, “M. Normal” won the day with just under 52% of the vote, in a Presidential race that ended much closer than expected.
Jubilant crowds partied all night at the Place de la Bastille in central Paris, the same place François Mitterrand celebrated his election win in 1981.
Hollande’s victory showed a rejection by France of tough austerity measures, the voters calling instead for the creation of a new European agreement for jobs and growth.
In his victory speech at the Place de la Capitale in Tulle, he asked the public to judge him on two key issues – “justice and young people”.
President Hollande said:
“I am proud to be capable of giving hope again. I will be the president of all… There is only one France, one nation, reunited for the same destiny…
“Everyone in France with be treated equally, no child of the Republic will be sidelined, abandoned or discriminated against. The first thing the President of the Republic must do is to assemble and bring people together for the challenges we face.”
“Europe is watching us, when this result was announced I am sure that in some countries it was a relief, a hope… Austerity is not inevitable…
“We are are not any old country, we are France!”
• Sarkozy and Hollande chase the disaffected Le Pen vote 30 Apr 2012
• It’s Sarko v Hollande, part deux 23 Apr 2012
• France decides (round 1) 20 Apr 2012
• Sarkozy v Hollande: French presidential race hots up 14 Mar 2012
• Is François Hollande the next president of France? 9 Feb 2012
Hollande’s win has implications for Europe as whole, proving austerity is not the be and end all. The left across Europe have galvanised hope in his win; Labour Party activists in the UK have been tweeting their delight at Hollande’s win, perhaps seeing it as a symbol for the British public rejecting harsh austerity measures in the general elections in 2015.
The Greek elections, more worryingly, have shown the public supporting far-left and far-right parties who reject the austerity regime, against the mainstream centre-right New Democracy and Socialist parties.
Europe is eager to see how the Franco-German relationship will evolve under Hollande’s direction, especially when Angela Merkel backed Sarkozy in his presidential bid. Hollande plans to meet with Merkel before the G8 summit in Washington in an attempt to start to renegotiate the fiscal pact.
All eyes now turn to the parliamentary elections in June, where the Socialists, UMP and Front National will want to win majorities. It is particularly important for the Socialist to win seats so that Hollande can carry through his policies. The campaign continues.
23 Responses to “Vive Hollande! M. Normal wins the day”
Anonymous
Exactly, hidden in the Feral 1%’s cupboards. Time to look into them.
And of course your “soloutions” are to terminate every service for the 99%, pay them no pensions, hold growth down so that the Corporatist takeover can be complete and smash the savings of everyone who hasn’t stashed their cash in tax havens.
An entirely typical attitude. The problem in the UK is *entirely* down to austerity killing off the recovery.
alex himelfarb
"austerity is not inevitable" Vive Hollande! M. Normal wins the day http://t.co/7RwWEsir
Greg Fingas
"austerity is not inevitable" Vive Hollande! M. Normal wins the day http://t.co/7RwWEsir
Blarg1987
How do you know French debt is hidden off the books?
If we had that view in 45 would we have been as succesful in the 60’s?
Anonymous
Make your case. Put some numbers on the table.
Prediction. Not a hope in hell that you would lay out numbers and costings, because the plan is to keep the debt secret.
Labour, Tories and Lib Dems are shitting bricks that the public find out about their cons.
Just one correction. They aren’t my solutions. They are the hard facts about government debts. Either its controlled default, or its Greek Style forced default.
So if you say recovery, you’re implying growth solves the mess. Now the short term government problem is overspending. That means it needs to take more money from people, or find new people to tax.
Care to say who pays how much, and which new people get taxed?