Sarkozy the Savior?

Last May, when Nicolas Sarkozy was running for president of France, I wrote on this page that he was “Europe’s best hope.” Mr Sarkozy won the votes of 53 percent of the record 85 percent of the French electorate that came out to vote in the presidential elections. The French approved of his tough rhetoric against the Islamist “thugs” (his word) who control many no-go neighborhoods in the country, where more than 10 percent of the population already adheres to the Muslim faith.
 
During the presidential campaign his Socialist opponent, Segolene Royal, warned that a Sarkozy victory would lead to violence in the Muslim neighborhoods. The French refused to be intimidated into appeasement and rose to the occasion. French men and women who normally do not vote because they distrust politics turned out en masse to elect “Sarko.” The “thugs” have since begun to ambush police and no longer refrain from shooting at officers, but the Sarkozy government had not clamped down on them.
 
Today, 10 months after his victory, Mr Sarkozy’s approval rate has tumbled from 65 to 38 percent. He has not lived up to his promise to reclaim France’s lost territories from the “thugs.” Moreover, though elected on a conservative program, he has since dramatically moved leftwards, bringing Socialists into his government. He also used his large parliamentary majority to change the French constitution and subsequently ratify a treaty which transfers substantial powers from Paris to the European Union authorities in Brussels, even though the French had rejected such a transfer of sovereignty in a referendum in 2005. Their president deliberately denied the French a referendum on the new treaty because, as he himself admitted openly, they might reject it if given the opportunity.
 
This betrayal of France’s national interest went largely unnoticed because the president was making the headlines with his divorce from his wife and his courtship of and marriage to an Italian-born singer and nude model. France’s new First Lady, Carla Bruni Sarkozy, shows it all in the glossy magazines. She tells the press that she dislikes the French but has a preference for short men. “The French are miserable but Sarkozy’s my Napoleon,” she says, while she also professes not to believe in monogamy.
 
In less than a year, Mr Sarkozy has managed to lose the respect of his compatriots and turn the French presidency into an international laughing stock. Since he began his affair with the sexually insatiable nude model, the German Chancellor Angela Merkel refers to Mr Sarkozy as “President Duracell,” after the long-life battery. Even political allies question Mr Sarkozy’s lack of judgment. The centrist politician François Léotard confessed in a newspaper interview last week: “I voted for Sarkozy, but I have not slept well ever since […] I believe that his ego, his thirst for power – strengthened by the great servility around him – is literally taking up all the space. I have always thought that as a general rule politicians deserved to be psychoanalyzed. His is a very interesting case.”
 
Sunday’s local elections resulted in a snub for Mr Sarkozy. His UMP party polled only 45 percent, compared to the Socialists’ 47 percent. The UMP leaders are relieved because they had expected worse. The party is, however, fortunate that there is no credible alternative to its right. Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the Front National, has all but destroyed his own party with his anti-Semitism, his insistence on having his daughter succeed him at the helm of his party and last year’s embracing of the “thugs” in the suburbs as “branches of the French tree.”
 
The French, however, are stuck with their “Napoleon” for the foreseeable future. Before he meets his Waterloo in the 2012 elections, he can still do a lot of harm, and not just to France. Last week Mr Sarkozy and Mrs Merkel gave a joint press conference announcing the establishment of a “Mediterranean Union,” an international organization that will encompass the 27 EU member states plus all the countries on the southern and eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea. This plan is the first step in merging Europe with the Islamic world. Mr Sarkozy wants France and Algeria, a former French colony where many of the “thugs” in the French no-go zones come from, to form the axis of such a future Mediterranean Union.
 
If such a union comes into existence even more immigrants from the Muslim world will be allowed to enter Europe. Mr Sarkozy, once the best hope of Europe’s conservatives, may turn out to be their nightmare.
 
This piece was originally published in The Washington Times on March 12, 2008 .

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The fact that right now (maybe not for you) there are ads for a muslim dating site says enough. Seems that writing about Sarko is in favour for such links.

Seriously.. he disappoints me too. I expected more from him.
But let's see what GW's movie will do in France and how he acts on it.

Sarko = bogus conservative

I expected Sarko would turn out to be a bogus conservative, although I still hoped he would prove me wrong. But he is clearly not an honest man. Last year, on April 30, he denounced the 1968 leftists in a speech. On May 6, he was elected president. On May 18, he chose Bernard Kouchner (a socialist and 1968 leftist) as his foreign minister !

" The French approved of his tough rhetoric against the Islamist “thugs”

Even before Sarko was elected, he was already Chirac's interior minister and chief of the police during the immigrant riots of November 2005. Basically, he let them burn the cars. There was a big gap between his depiction by the media as a semi-nazi tough guy, and what he did as chief of the police = nothing.
I still don't know if the media described him as a nazi to help him get elected, or if they really disliked him.

" though elected on a conservative program, he has since dramatically moved leftwards, bringing Socialists into his government. He also used his large parliamentary majority to change the French constitution and subsequently ratify a treaty which transfers substantial powers from Paris to the European Union authorities in Brussels"

What is really worrying is that Sarko does not see the population replacement as a bad thing. Unless there is violence from the white population in protest of mass immigration, he will just try to please the media by avoiding any change in policy.

" Le Pen, the leader of the Front National, has all but destroyed his own party"

There is now another polical movement emerging. It calls itself "Les Identitaires". But it is still a young movement.