Sarkozy's Cry For Help
By: Rachel Marsden
French President Nicolas Sarkozy was elected five years ago by promising to
modernize France's societal infrastructure and bring it more into line with
America's: less government reliance, more freedom in life and work. It was a
tall order, but his mandate was overwhelming, with a 6-percentage-point win over
Socialist rival Segolene Royal. Mr. Sarkozy was full of vigor and free-market,
limited-government ideas imported directly from across the Atlantic.
But then something got in the way: France. It's a case of ambition being unable
to surmount the overwhelming power of entrenched history.
The battle of independent-minded men against the French nanny-state mentality
didn't start with Mr. Sarkozy. In 1848, for example, economist Frederic Bastiat
was already comparing the U.S. Constitution to that of France:
"The following is the beginning of the preamble to [the French] Constitution:
'France has constituted itself a Republic for the purpose of raising all the
citizens to an ever-increasing degree of morality, enlightenment, and
well-being.' ... Is it not by yielding to this strange delusion that we are led
to expect everything from an energy not our own? ... The Americans formed
another idea of the relations of the citizens with the Government when they
placed these simple words at the head of their constitution: 'We, the people of
the United States, for the purpose of forming a more perfect union, of
establishing justice, of securing interior tranquility, of providing for our
common defense, of increasing the general well-being, and of securing the
benefits of liberty to ourselves and to our posterity, decree,' etc. Here there
is no chimerical creation, no abstraction, from which the citizens may demand
everything. They expect nothing except from themselves and their own energy."
Now, facing a hard-fought re-election battle that currently predicts a marked
second-round loss to Segolene Royal's former domestic partner, Socialist
Francois Hollande, Mr. Sarkozy is unrecognizable on the campaign trail as the
man of five years ago.
If people didn't already know how exhausting the effort to reform France has
been for Mr. Sarkozy, his wife, Carla Bruni, claimed in a recent interview that
she's worried about him because he gives his all to his job and barely sleeps.
Still, he took to the stage this week in a massive Sark-orgy in front of tens of
thousands of supporters near Paris to announce that he needs the French to "help
me" -- a not-so-subtle reference to President/General Charles de Gaulle's "Help
Me!" speech of April 1961 amid a coup d'état against him by French nationalists
in Algeria (the "Generals' Putsch"), in which he pleaded with the French
military and people to see where the country could be headed as compared with
the positive direction it was headed under his presidency.
Mr. Sarkozy's meaning behind the slogan is clear: I've busted my behind to
change this place, and while it's been harder than expected, please don't vote
for the Socialist who risks taking it in a direction you probably can't even
imagine.
Except that the French can indeed imagine what a socialist implosion looks like
now, because Greece serves as a rather prominent example. Still, I run into
French people every day in Paris who tell me that "Sarkozy is for the rich;
Hollande is for the poor." Mr. Sarkozy is up against that kind of bumper-sticker
stupidity, and it's about as fireproof as anything de Gaulle had to fight back
in the day -- including Nazis. Mr. Sarkozy must feel about as powerless as John
McCain did up against Barack Obama's "Yes, we can!"
"Help me!" sounds about right as a French campaign slogan when up against the
omnipotence of a Socialist bearing promises of freebies and salvation during an
economic crisis. De Gaulle led the minority French resistance; Mr. Sarkozy is
trying to lead the minority French resistance against pervasive stupidity.
Again, I think de Gaulle had it easier.
Mr. Sarkozy is now calling for firewalling France off from Europe to save the
country from the nonsense practiced by other nations with which France shares
uncontrolled borders -- including revising all the Schengen accords he helped to
create or amend.
It sounds like the mea-culpa death rattle of a president as his political career
careens toward the big white light. Here's hoping he gets a grip and finds the
will to live and to martyr himself for another five years. Sarko the Tourniquet
would beat five years of socialist bloodletting.
COPYRIGHT 2012 RACHEL MARSDEN