If Obama Pulled Sarkozy's Stunts...
By: Rachel Marsden
Paris is buzzing this week about a tale in a French magazine editor’s new
book suggesting that French President Nicolas Sarkozy chewed him out over a
humorous article referring to the first lady’s man-eating reputation. Sarkozy
reportedly called the editor to say: “This article is filth, and I should smash
your face in.”
In France as in America, such thuggery is normally outsourced to aides and
assorted hired muscle—the Karl Roves and Rahm Emanuels. One can hardly imagine
Barack Obama, for example, calling up Rush Limbaugh and threatening kick his ass
for calling Michelle Obama “Mooshelle” for the zillionth time.
Coming right out and verbally knifing someone directly in the face is considered
vulgar and unpresidential, and arguably one of the reasons for Sarkozy’s
plummeting popularity. The French are used to politicians who suavely slip in
the blade while administering a pat on the back. Emotional transparency isn’t
taken as a sign of confidence when expressed by someone a mere twitch away from
the potential to trigger nuclear annihilation. It’s interpreted as a sign of
instability and lack of discipline.
World leaders in general are expected to focus on their higher calling and
deflect any silliness that may distract them from the task. It’s one thing to
respond to attacks of substance and policy, but quite another to get bogged down
in personal trifles.
There are a few other things Sarkozy has attempted with varying degrees of
success that would be amusing to imagine Obama imitating, however politically
controversial:
—According to journalist Jonathan Alter’s book, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy told
Michelle Obama that the Sarkozys kept the Queen waiting during an official visit
while they got their sex on.
—When encountering a man who refused to shake his hand in a public crowd, rather
than just ignoring the guy’s existence or trying to win him over with charisma
and a smile, Sarkozy yelled, “Screw off, poor idiot!”
—When Sarkozy saw an opening for the titular head of Europe’s largest business
district, he figured his fresh-faced, barely 20-something son, newly elected to
his local council, would be the best bet for leading the way to economic
prosperity. It would be a bit like putting Sasha and Malia in a position of
symbolic responsibility at the Federal Reserve.
—During an informal media scrum earlier this year at a NATO summit, Sarkozy
responded to a journalist’s question about the nature of his former role as
budget minister in approving arms deals by accusing him of propagating rumor,
and saying: “You are a pedophile, I’m convinced of it. I’ve talked with the
secret services, but I won’t tell you which ones. I’ve met with someone, but I
won’t tell you who, and we didn’t record it. But I have the intimate conviction
that you are a pedophile.” I would pay good money to hear any U.S. President
pull a stunt like this in a face-to-face sit-down with Brian Williams. Viewers
would think they accidentally stumbled onto the latest incarnation of “To Catch
A Predator."
—In reference to his tanking popularity, Sarkozy once said that the French
people are just jealous that he has a great wife.
—When Sarkozy heard that caravans of gypsies from the East were beginning their
usual summer foray into France, he had them rounded up and sent back to their
home countries on private flights with a few extra Euros shoved into their
pockets. Imagine the reaction if Obama had a regular shuttle in place for
illegal immigrants jumping the border from Mexico?
—During a nationwide strike this year over retirement reform, resulting in gas
stations running dry, Sarkozy took off with his ex-supermodel wife on his newly
blinged-out, taxpayer-funded Airbus for a personal vacation to the palace of his
friend, autocrat King Mohammed of Morocco. And people are complaining about
Obama’s holidays.
—Imagine if American Vice President Joe Biden had rung in the 2011 New Year with
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and accepted free flights, lodging, and tourism
for his entire family at the height of the Arab revolutions. Sarkozy’s No. 2,
Prime Minister Francois Fillon, did exactly this—and is still well-entrenched in
his position in Sarkozy’s government. Perhaps that’s just too dangerous a
floodgate to open by calling for a resignation. There might not be anyone left
to run the country if every minister guilty of similar acts were forced to walk
the moral high plank.
Only time will tell whether the French people consider it all too much. This
will ultimately depend on two things: Sarkozy’s ability to balance any perceived
“vulgarity” with meaningful reform on issues of utmost importance to voters, and
also the relative strength or lameness of any opposition candidate. Somewhere in
Italy, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi resembles that remark—as he fine-tunes
the guest list for his next “bunga bunga” sex orgy.
COPYRIGHT 2011 RACHEL MARSDEN