TROUBLES ON THE RIGHT
Former French President
Nicolas Sarkozy has re-appeared on
the political scene in an attempt to mediate a solution to the unrelenting
fight between
François Fillon, his former Prime Minister who represents the
center-right of the UMP opposition party, and
François Copé, winner of the
recent election for party leader who did not hesitate to move toward the
extreme right to obtain the necessary votes to win. Moderate Fillon
−
calling this a political and moral break within the party
− continues to contest the results and
demands new elections within three months, while Copé sticks to the voting
results and considers himself the legitimate
UMP party leader. Amid accusations
of fraud and ballot stuffing, proposals and counter-proposals have been made
and rejected by both candidates. Enter Sarkozy, seen as a potential unifying
force, who was said to be furious at the stalemate that endangers the party.
But after fruitless meetings with each candidate he has declared: "If they
do not reach an agreement by Tuesday December 4th, I consider both of them
unfit to rule".
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Copé - Sarkozy - Fillon |
New elections, with new candidates, could spell the collapse of the UMP, political heir to the party founded by General de Gaulle after World War II. It is important for Sarkozy to try and keep the UMP party together in case he wants to make a come-back presidential bid for 2017.
Meanwhile, Fillon has formed a breakaway faction in the
Parliament, the Rassemblement UMP
(RUMP for short), where 72 députés (out
of 194) have already joined him. If and when he reaches agreement with Copé on
new elections, he will dissolve his breakaway faction.
CARLA BRUNI
Carla Bruni, singer, model, and wife of former president
Nicolas Sarkozy, has been making some news of her own. In an interview with
French
Vogue magazine, which features her on the cover of its December issue,
she talks mainly about the joys of motherhood and family life, but what got
everyone's attention was her remark: "My generation doesn't need feminism.
There are pioneers who opened the breach".
In response to a Twitter storm of protest the former First Lady said that her words were taken out of context.
"My phrase
was clumsy and should have read: I myself have never been an active feminist.
[...] I admire the courage of those women who continue the fight today, but I
have decided to commit myself elsewhere."
This won't be the last we'll be hearing of Carla Bruni since
she has a new record coming out soon.
TROUBLES ON THE LEFT
The infighting in the opposition UMP party can only
benefit the left, but the Socialist party of François Hollande has plenty of problems
of its own. In November, Moody's Investors Service downgraded France's credit
rating from AAA to Aa1, after Standard and Poor had taken France's rating down
a notch in January. Both ratings agencies quoted concerns about France's poor
economic outlook and lack of competitiveness, as well as its connection to
Eurozone problems and the potential risk of a Greek default (French banks have
the highest exposure, ahead of German banks). As long as the outlook remains
negative, said Moody's, we will not change our rating, adding that they did not
think that President Hollande's efforts to reduce the deficit were far-reaching
enough.
Unemployment has reached a thirteen-year high of 10.3% in the
third quarter and industry closings continue, most recently at the
ArcelorMittal plant at Lozange in the industrial Lorraine district where Mittal wants to shut down two blast furnaces that are no longer economically viable.
The issues with ArcelorMittal seemed to be resolved when Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault made a deal with Indian-born owner Lakshmi Mittal to keep the two blast furnaces going and save 630 jobs. But a week later Mittal seemed to retract his offer when he dropped out of the bidding process for a European pilot project at the Lozange site, and soon unions rose up and accused Ayrault of "betrayal".
This may be just a prelude to the problems awaiting in the French auto industry.The country's largest automobile company, PSA (Peugeot Citroen), has announced that it needs to close its plant at Aulnay and lay off 8000 workers by 2014.
The autoworkers' unions have proposed reduced work weeks of 32 hours at several other PSA plants in order to absorb the 3000 jobs lost in Aulnay. Like the auto bailout plan in the United States, then-president Sarkozy had already granted €6.5 billion in 2009 to support the auto industry and keep its jobs in France. It has not been enough. Philippe Varin, head of PSA, who justified the massive layoffs because labor costs "are the highest in Europe" has asked the government to lower taxes on the industry, but this request has been denied. The government and the unions are now studying solutions to this problem which is likely to turn into another severe test for the embattled Hollande-Ayrault team.
GERARD DEPARDIEU
Gérard Depardieu, the well-known French actor, is France's latest tax fugitive. He has bought a house in the small town of Néchin in Belgium, barely one kilometer from the French border, where 25% of the population is already French. Depardieu, who owns a wine chateau in the Loire Valley, three Paris restaurants, a fish shop, a motorcycle concession, and vineyards in various other countries including Argentina, will be joining such other wealthy French tax exiles as the owners of the Auchon and Carrefour supermarket chains.
Daniel Senesael, mayor of Néchin, said on December 9: "Depardieu has already moved in and he's very welcome here. He enjoys our quiet country side and our simple way of life and, of course, our lower taxes." Belgium's top tax rate is 50%.
Ever since President Hollande announced his tax hike on the rich in France (75% on earnings over one million euros), Belgium has become a favorite refuge.
CYPRUS BAILOUT
Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the euro-zone finance
ministers' Eurogroup and Prime Minister of Luxembourg, has announced that an
agreement has been reached between Cyprus and the Troika (European Commission,
European Central Bank, and the IMF) for a bailout, following heavy losses
Cyprus sustained in its dealings with Greece.
|
Jean-Claude Juncker |
The amount of the rescue package
could be as high as
€17.5 billion, nearly the country's entire economy, but the
final amount will be discussed by the European finance ministers on December
13th following the publication of a report with a preliminary assessment of the
Cypriot banks' recapitalization needs. Juncker also announced that he will
retire as president of the Eurogroup at the end of this year.
BOOKS IN FRANCE
|
A bleuet - cornflower |
Amid all the bad news in the Eurozone, here's a spark of
good news. According to a November poll published in Livres Hebdo, the most popular Christmas present in France this
year will be books. Paper books, not the electronic kind. Across all
categories (adult, adolescent, children's literature) book sales are up. Even
though the general economic situation is partly responsible for this, as a book
lover I am delighted and encouraged by this trend because at the very least it
is good for bookstores. The publishing industry may be feeling the effects of
e-books, but the French still buy their books in brick-and-mortar stores, and
there are still many of those around − not only in cities but in villages as
well.
Take the village of Banon in Provence. It counts less than
1100 inhabitants and is widely known for its traditional goat cheese wrapped in chestnut leaves, and a thin dry sausage that is sold by the meter.
But a more recent claim to fame is Banon's bookstore
Le
Bleuet, that since its foundation in 1990 has grown into a huge success
with an estimated turnover this year of
€2.4 million (well over $3
million)! Last month it opened a website for online sales, to be managed from
its own ultra-modern warehouse in the
village, which is expected to bring total sales to
€4.5 million in 2013. Its
visionary founder and owner, Joël Gattefossé, has been nominated to receive the
prestigious Order of
Chevalier des Arts
et Lettres early next year.
|
Joël Gattefossé, Owner of Le Bleuet |
Granted, the success of
Le
Bleuet is an exception and unique in France, where
− like elsewhere
−
many bookstores are living on the edge, squeezed by high rents, and publishers
are reducing their new titles. The government of François Hollande, aware of
the cultural importance of bookstores in communities, has reduced the sales tax
on books from 7% to 5.5% starting in 2013.
Nevertheless, every year some
bookstores close, but others are still opening, which fans my hopes that
booksellers in France may still have some good days ahead of them.
DOMINIQUE STRAUSS-KAHN
A New York judge has announced that Dominique Strauss-Kahn has made a financial settlement in the civil lawsuit brought by the hotel maid who accused him of sexual assault at
the Sofitel hotel in New York last May. The terms of the agreement, signed on December 10th, were not disclosed, but the settlement amount was rumored to be $6 million. This amount was immediately denied by DSK's lawyers. Influential
French daily Le Monde reported that
DSK has told friends that he planned to take out a bank loan for $3 million,
and that his wife Anne Sinclair, from whom he separated this summer, would lend
him the rest.
The settlement of the civil suit will effectively end his 18-month legal saga
in New York, but in France Strauss-Kahn is still awaiting judgment on December
19th on a charge of aggravated pimping in the Carlton Affair.
He has moved out of his wife's home, has opened an international consulting business, and according to the French tabloid press has a new woman in his life. In September he was photographed on a Corsican holiday with Myriam L'Aouffir, 45, a Moroccan-born Frenchwoman who works for a French television station in Paris. Strauss-Kahn has filed complaints for invasion of privacy against three gossip magazines who ran a picture of him and Myriam on their covers. Since then the couple has been seen together in Jerusalem and just last week they were spotted in Venice.
BERLUSCONI COME-BACK?
Italian Premier Mario Monti who since his appointment in November 2011 has managed to bring the country back from the fiscal brink, has announced he will resign as soon as the Parliament passes his budget bill, expected before the end of this year. He said he can no longer govern because he has lost the crucial support of Berlusconi's party, the biggest in Parliament. Monti, former European Commissioner and respected economist, introduced cuts in public spending, higher taxes and pension reform "to avoid the fate of Greece". It is feared that his early departure may lead to a downgrade of Italy's credit rating and to increased instability in the eurozone.
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Silvio Berlusconi and Mario Monti |
Silvio Berlusconi, who was forced to resign in November 2011 after a parliamentary revolt and pressure from financial markets, and who was recently convicted of fraud by a Milan court and sentenced to a four-year prison term and a five-year ban on holding public office, has just announced that he will run again for the premiership in the upcoming election, possibly as early as February 2013. He has appealed this latest conviction, which effectively postpones the application of the sentence through two levels of appeal during which time he is free to return to politics. He has also announced that he disagrees with Monti's austerity measures which he considers to be ineffective.
The contrast between Monti and Berlusconi could not be greater. Monti: professor of economics, sober technocrat, staunch catholic, model of responsibility. Berlusconi: womanizer, aging playboy, populist politician who during three earlier premierships managed to introduce several laws to suit himself in his many legal battles. Even today he is awaiting judgment in his trial for teenage prostitution and abuse of power, and the outcome of appeals in other cases. Yet, when he announced his candidacy for a fourth term, Berlusconi said he is running "out of a sense of responsibility to Italy". Of course, a win would guarantee him immunity from prosecution during his term of office - which seems a more likely, though less lofty, motivation.
VALERIE TRIERWEILER
|
Jakubyszyn and Bouilhayguet |
For the past few months President Hollande's girlfriend Valerie Trierweiler has been holding her peace and staying out of the papers. But recently she has filed a lawsuit against the authors of "
La Frondeuse", the latest Trierweiler biography, written by journalists Christophe Jakubyszyn and Alix Bouilhayguet. The complaint for libel and breach of privacy is to be heard on December 10th by the District Court of Paris. What sets this suit apart from earlier ones is that François Hollande (on non-official stationery) and his Minister of the Interior Manuel Valls (on official stationery) each wrote a letter favorable to Valerie Trierweiler. Hollande states errors of fact on two specific pages and Valls, who had accepted to be interviewed by Jakubyszyn last summer, denies that he made some of the remarks attributed to him while other statements were taken out of context. They cannot interfere with the justice system but they can try to discredit the authors.
CHRISTMAS HERE AND THERE
For all the vaunted quality of life in France, I miss the Anglo-Saxon yuletide magic: Christmas carols, beautiful natural greenery in garlands wrapped around lampposts and strung around store windows, wreaths on every door, stockings by the fireplace, halls decked with boughs of holly... fa la la ... Yes, it's warm and fuzzy and oh so appealing -- as are the smells of Christmas that are lacking here: logs burning, mulled wine, cinnamon, roasted chestnuts, dried oranges studded with cloves, eggnog in a bowl. I miss it.
Southern Europe has its own way of marking Christmas, with all the commercial aspects of the USA but without the coziness. Big Christmas markets like those in Strasbourg and Madrid are popular events that draw huge crowds, and some 50 chalets along the Cours Mirabeau in Aix-en-Provence are a smaller version of same. But it is hard to get into the Christmas mood with the large children's fair that overwhelms the quiet Cours with its bumper cars, choo-choo trains, bungi cords, merry-go-rounds full of bells and whistles, stands of churros and cotton candy, and too many loudspeaker announcements -- for seven long weeks! No respite until Christmas Day when the noise makes way for the deeply sonorous bells ringing from many churches, as people gather around a sumptuous
repas de Noël, and a sense of calm and serenity finally descends on this old city.
Aix's decorations are more tinsel than tannenbaum. Of course, it cannot compete with the splendid Christmas lights of Madrid, or with the opulent decorations of department stores such as Saks Fifth Avenue or Harrods or Galeries Lafayette and their wonderful window displays that cast a spell on young and old as they tell their enchanting stories.
It more than holds its own, however, with the traditional
crèche provençale of hand-carved figurines, called
santons*, representing a village population of baker, miller, innkeeper, mayor with tricolor sash, peasants carrying baskets of fruit or fowl, a shepherd with his dog and a flock of sheep - all in traditional Provençal dress walking through a local landscape on their way to the manger. These local nativity scenes can be quite large and are usually on display in churches. During the holidays a favorite pastime for families with children is to go and see the
crèches provençales.
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Santons with offerings |
Another local tradition is
Les Treize Desserts de Noël, a bounty of thirteen desserts symbolizing Christ and his twelve apostles. They are:
|
Les 13 desserts de Noël |
Gibassié (a dry olive-oil and orange-zest cake to be dipped in sweet wine), black and white nougat, dried figs, raisins, nuts and almonds, white grapes, green winter mellon, quince paste, dates, mandarins, and
calissons, the traditional sweets from Aix-en-Provence.
(*) For more about Santons and Christmas traditions in Provence, see the chapter "Christmas in Provence" in my book Taking Root in Provence. Click here