Will ‘France’s Hillary Clinton’ become their first female president?
By: Rachel Marsden
Presidential candidate Valérie Pécresse might compare herself to Angela Merkel and Margaret Thatcher, but the unappealing truth is she is more like Clinton – a figure completely entrenched in the establishment.
The sands are shifting rapidly in the run-up to the French presidential
election, set for April 10 and 24 next year. The big question right now is which
two candidates will make the run-off round. And then who can then rally the most
voters of other parties in that final round. Within this context, a new
contender has emerged.
Barring unforeseen circumstances, President Emmanuel Macron seems like a
shoe-in, running at 24% support in the latest Opinionway survey. But the next
most popular contender now is long-time political fixture and former minister,
Valérie Pécresse, of the center-right The Republicans. At 17%, Pécresse is
running ahead of harder-right rivals Marine Le Pen of the National Rally party
(16%), and Eric Zemmour of the Reconquest movement (12%).
At 54 years old, Pécresse’s political career dates back to the 1990s, when she
was an advisor to President Jacques Chirac before being elected to the National
Assembly and then appointed Minister of Higher Education and Research during
Nicolas Sarkozy’s presidency.
Pécresse is arguably the most entrenched establishment candidate currently
running for the presidency – and that includes Macron himself. This at a time
when citizens worldwide are fed-up with the mess that the globalist
establishment elites have created.
Not being completely tone-deaf, Pécresse understands that the current appetite
is for greater national independence. To even emerge as the candidate for her
own party, she had to defeat hard-right National Assemblyman, Eric Ciotti. And
now, to make it to the second round of presidential voting, Pécresse will have
to beat two candidates markedly further right than she is. Beyond that, if she
wants to win the presidency and topple Macron, she will then need to be
preferred over Macron by those two candidates’ voters.
So, over the course of her party’s candidate selection process, Pécresse echoed
opponents further to the right of her – like Zemmour and Le Pen – in singling
out the United States for special criticism, saying that she doesn’t want France
to become a vassal of Uncle Sam. She also said that she wants to “break the
ghettos” and “stop uncontrolled immigration.”
Her appeals to the non-establishment right would also explain why, despite
having been an opponent of Brexit or Frexit, or of entertaining the notion of
any nations reclaiming their full independence from the European Union
straitjacket, Pécresse nonetheless has started calling for greater independence
of member states within the European Union.
Pécresse has described herself as “one-third Thatcher, two-thirds Merkel,”
referring to the former female British Prime Minister and German Chancellor.
Except that both of those leaders were global agenda-setters. Pécresse is more
like Hillary Clinton: a global agenda fixture.
Pécresse also can’t seem to pry herself away from establishment groupthink with
respect to Covid-19. During her party’s televised primary debates, she said,
“The French who have been vaccinated have assumed their responsibilities, I
would consider re-containment only of the unvaccinated.”
Clearly a supporter of Macron’s health pass, the tool’s uselessness has
apparently escaped Pécresse as infections surge among the vaccinated
contaminating each other in health pass venues. This should be the kind of
massive red flag that warrants disqualification from serious consideration.
If Pécresse, as she suggests herself, is more interested in rewarding those
who adhere to the establishment narrative in the case of Covid – and overtly
punishing those who choose to dissent in the interests of their own individual
freedoms and personal health circumstances – then how can she ever be trusted to
defend the interests of the average French citizen on other matters whereby
they’re bulldozed by globalist thinking?
It’s hardly because of some kind of record of critical thought and willingness
to depart from the status quo that Pécresse has enjoyed such a long
establishment career.
And although it would be unfair to hold Pécresse responsible for her husband
Jerome’s career, it’s nonetheless interesting to note that when General Electric
purchased the power and grid business of France’s energy giant, Alstom, in 2014
(completed in November 2015) – an acquisition that placed France’s prized
nuclear knowhow directly into the hands of one of the U.S. government’s largest
defense contractors – he went from being Executive Vice President of Alstom and
President of Alstom Renewable Power to President and CEO of GE Renewable Energy.
He was the only top French executive not fired after the acquisition.
With GE being one of the key multinational jewels in the American industrial
crown, it’s not hard to imagine how, if French and American interests end up
clashing at some point, a potential President Pécresse and First Monsieur Jerome
might have some rather uncomfortable choices to make.
This election represents nothing less than a crossroads for France, a critical
juncture between sovereign independence and globalist dependence. It’s not hard
to look at Pécresse’s background and institutional demeanor and take a guess at
which path she might choose.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN