Why France Elected A Socialist President
By: Rachel Marsden
France has elected only the second Socialist president in its history -- the
first being Francois Mitterrand, who spent 14 years in the driver's seat back
when French presidential terms lasted seven years rather than five, and who made
a hard-right turn away from economic socialism and toward spending cuts after
his first two years in office. The best France can hope for now is that the
newly elected Francois Hollande takes a similar plunge into a pothole of
pragmatism and douses any budding socialist ideas.
France is deeply in debt, so it's really not the time to experiment with an
ideology that has a poor track record outside of countries that are
comparatively small and/or limited in freedoms. And it would be a mistake for
those viewing France's elections from the outside to presume that Hollande
doesn't actually know this himself.
I'd like to give Hollande a generous amount of rope in the wake of this
election, if only to make an amusing yo-yo when he ends up warranting a tug.
It's hard to tell what Hollande will end up doing policy-wise, since there's
little record by which to assess the validity of his campaign promises. Hailing
from Correze -- the same rural south-central department that spawned former
President Jacques Chirac -- Hollande has held a lot of political positions:
mayor of Tulle, federal legislator, first secretary of the Socialist Party.
However, nothing really stands out in his background. The ability to spend three
decades in politics and remain so benign is an accomplishment in itself and
suggests a certain pragmatism. An ideologically driven politician would have
long ago drawn fire. Hollande never really has. He's not flashy, not brash -- he
just is. Period.
The markets appeared to collectively yawn in the wake of Hollande's election.
Perhaps it's a sign that regardless of who's captain of the ship, it's still
considered to be on a crash course with the iceberg. Nonetheless, it's hard to
denounce the "socialism" of a platform that includes raising funds for new
housing construction by raising limits on personal investment amounts from which
the funds are derived, cutting taxes for small and medium-sized businesses,
refusing to increase state-provided daycare, and decentralizing and downloading
power to the regions and away from Paris. But these measures are tempered by
proposals to raise taxes on those making more than 150,000 euros annually and to
stick anyone making more than 1 million euros a year with a 75 percent marginal
rate. "It is patriotic to agree to pay a supplementary tax to get the country
back on its feet," Hollande has said.
As Nicolas Sarkozy said to his challenger during a debate: "Are you aware we are
in an open world?"
Giving the middle class tax breaks while tempting their employers to leave en
masse will hardly improve the current situation. The markets know this, and
apparently don't take Hollande's most Socialist proposals seriously. Perhaps
it's assumed that Hollande understands this and was only throwing Socialists
some class-warfare red meat for campaign purposes, as the French love the idea
of a good aristocratic guillotining. If it turns out that he was actually
serious in his proposals, it can only be hoped that he'll spend most of his
first term on a golf course somewhere, or hiking the Alps.
So what made the French veer left at a time when Europe is largely veering
right? A vote for Hollande was not a vote for socialism, but rather a
manifestation of frustration with the current state of affairs. An Ipsos poll
conducted on election day found that 55 percent of Hollande voters elected him
to "stop Sarkozy from being re-elected," versus 45 percent who "wanted (Hollande)
to be president." Only 46 percent of Sarkozy's voters supported him for the
purpose of keeping Hollande out.
As voter income increased, the likelihood of voting for Hollande decreased,
suggesting that some voters don't understand the trickle-down repercussions of
business owners leaving and taking private-sector jobs with them -- particularly
in a country that really can't afford to increase the state payroll, with 56
percent of the country's GDP already going toward maintain public spending.
Let's hope Hollande is intelligent and self-aware enough to realize that a 3
percent victory margin in the election he just won is primarily due to the fact
that he is not Sarkozy. It's not a resounding mandate in favor of socialism, but
rather a mass plea for thoughtful and pragmatic stewardship. If he understands
this, then may end up doing all right. If not, he can be sure the French will be
ready with the guillotine -- as they always are.
COPYRIGHT 2012 RACHEL MARSDEN