Sarkozy cabinet reshuffle aims to capture Gaullist fields of French right
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| Paris
Nicolas Sarkozy鈥檚 election in 2007 brought a mixed set of left-wing ministers to his cabinet, including some high-profile female minority figures, a rarity in political life here. It played as a smart move to 鈥渃o-opt鈥 or nullify the left in France.
But a cabinet reshuffle yesterday shows an Elys茅e Palace ready to capture the Gaullist fields of the French right ahead of 2012 elections. Mr. Sarkozy jettisoned his Socialist Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and the Algerian-origin Urban Minister Fadela Amara, and gave the Defense Ministry and No. 2 cabinet spot to Alain Juppe, prime minister under former President Jacques Chirac.
In a surprise, Sarkozy retained Prime Minister Fran莽ois Fillon, which has played here as a presidential nod through clenched teeth, given that Mr. Fillon has higher approval than the president. Sarkozy had been ready to offer the prime minister spot to Jean Louis Borloo, a centrist with ties to the left. But with Sarkozy鈥檚 ratings at a historic low, the palace did not dismiss the current prime minister; 鈥淔illon Keeps Sarkozy鈥 was the cheeky headline in today鈥檚 left-leaning Liberation newspaper.
Sarkozy retained Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, who said today that the reshuffle is 鈥渢otally revolutionary鈥 and marks a 鈥360-degree turn鈥 toward 鈥渟olidity and professionalism."
Long-awaited move
The reshuffle has been long awaited. Sarkozy chose the weekend after the Group of 20 economic meeting in Seoul 鈥 he presides over next year鈥檚 G20 and is expected to propose a set of global financial reforms 鈥 to announce the changes.
The move also appears to shore up a center-right focus and back away from harder-right policies last summer, including police crackdowns on minorities and tougher immigration policies. That political territory, considered the vote bank of the popular Marine Le Pen, daughter of Jean-Marie Le Pen of the National Front, had previously been targeted by Sarkozy鈥檚 political advisers.
Yet the summer shift, including a targeting of Roma or Gypsies that backfired in public opinion, brought a plummet in Sarkozy鈥檚 ratings. Hence, in the reshuffle, the palace has simply 鈥渄isappeared鈥 a new controversial Ministry of Immigration and National Identity, putting its portfolio into the Interior ministry. Reports in the political weekly Canard Enchaine has Sarkozy saying that for every vote he gains from Ms. Le Pen, he loses four from the French mainstream.
Some analysts say the new government reflects a more cautious tenor in contrast with the robust and dynamic plans of Sarkozy in 2007, when France鈥檚 youngest president promised a wide-spread break or 鈥渞upture鈥 with the past.
Former Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin, who plans to challenge Sarkozy from the center-right in 2012, painted the reshuffle as evidence that Sarkozy is out of touch with French sensibilities.
鈥淧olitical continuity is a good thing as long as there is a political vision, and there lies the problem," Mr. Villepin said on French TV Monday morning. "There is no vision, and because of that, one may regret.鈥 the government and the president are distancing themselves from the French. That is for me the main lesson to be drawn from this reshuffle."