François Hollande won the first round of balloting in the French
presidential election yesterday, and faces incumbent Nicolas
Sarkozy in a runoff Sunday after next. Polling shows that Hollande
is
favored to win:
Three French polls conducted Sunday evening as results came in
predicted Hollande would win the May 6 runoff by 8 to 12 percentage
points. Ipsos, CSA and IFOP said economic worries drove many
voters.
Americans should be rooting for Sarkozy,
explains Pierpaolo Barbieri at The New
Republic:
Hollande… is ultimately hostage to an unreformed Socialist
Party: With France’s powerful and obstinate unions overrepresented
in the party ranks, the Socialists have been consistently against
necessary economic reform. Predictably, Hollande says he is eager
to bring back the 35-hour week and roll back pension changes at a
time when the whole region—and arguably the whole world—is swimming
in the opposite direction. His proposal for a 75 percent marginal
tax rate would be laughable, if it hadn’t been offered in
earnest.
After arguing that Hollande could cause a rift with Germany that
threatens the Eurozone (and by extention the global economy),
Barbieri adds:
In other international affairs, there’s little to look forward
to from a President Hollande. He has hinted at a decreased role in
NATO and a more critical stance toward America. In other words,
Washington can expect an unwelcome return to the Jacques Chirac
years. (It should come as no surprise that Chirac is said to be
casting his vote for the Socialist.)
Not to invoke the “even the liberal New Republic…”
cliché, but it does say something about the state of French
politics that so much of Barbieri’s critique would be as much at
home in a conservative publication as it is in the center-left
TNR.
This item by Brad Plumer gives a flavor of how far left France
tilts; the Gaullist Sarkozy would scarcely be center-right by
American standards, and the “far right” party led by Marine Le Pen
— who made a big splash yesterday by winning nearly 20% of the
vote — is, like most European nationalist parties, bitterly
hostile to the free market.
Barbieri argues that an upset by Sarkozy is not impossible.
Let’s hope so.