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ELECTION 2012

HOLLANDE

Confident Hollande heads for final straight

 

Socialist Francois Hollande was on track to defeat right-wing incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy as France saw the final day of campaigning Friday before its presidential election run-off.

 

Confident Hollande heads for final straight

Boosted by an endorsement from centrist Francois Bayrou, Hollande urged voters to hand him an “ample victory” on Sunday so he would have a strong mandate to implement his left-wing programme and fight EU-driven austerity.

Polls showed Sarkozy, who insisted the race was still close, narrowing the gap slightly but still five to seven points behind the frontrunner.

“I want an ample victory,” Hollande told RTL radio. “If the French people must make a choice, they should do so clearly, overwhelmingly, so the winner has the capacity and means to act.”

Increasingly confident, Hollande said he would get to work straight away.

“I will have no grace period,” he said. “The country’s problems will not disappear with the eventual departure of Nicolas Sarkozy. He won’t take the public debt, unemployment and social problems with him.”

Sarkozy, the first incumbent to ever lose a first-round vote, said the race was not over and urged the “silent majority” to back him at the polls.  

“I want to convince you of one thing: every vote will count,” Sarkozy told supporters in the western coastal town of Sables d’Olonnes. “You cannot imagine at what point things will play on a razor’s edge on Sunday.”

Earlier Sarkozy, who has said Hollande’s tax-and-spend programme will spark financial chaos, raised the spectre of France’s struggling southern neighbours in a last-minute bid to woo voters.

“I don’t think anyone wants France to be in the situation that Spain is in today, after seven years of Socialist government,” he told Europe 1 radio.  

“Look at Spain,” Sarkozy said. “Do you want the same situation? The issue isn’t to frighten. The issue is to look across our border” where unemployment recently hit 24.44 percent, the highest in the industrialised world.  

Hollande was to hold a final rally later Friday in the southwestern city of Perigueux, before the campaign officially ended at 2200 GMT, with no political speeches or opinion polls allowed until voting stations close on Sunday. 

The last week of the campaign was marked by fierce exchanges and a dramatic television debate that saw the contenders trade insults without either landing a knock-out blow.

The French left has not won a presidential election in a quarter of a century, but fears over low economic growth, rising joblessness and European Union-imposed austerity have given the Socialists a boost.

Many voters also disapprove of Sarkozy’s flashy style during his five-year term and have welcomed Hollande’s vows to be a “normal president.”

Bayrou late Thursday announced he would be voting for Hollande, despite concerns about the Socialist’s commitment to deficit reduction.

While Bayrou said he would not instruct the nine percent of the electorate who voted for him in the first round to vote one way or another, he said he had been offended by Sarkozy’s lurch to the right since the first round.

“I, personally, will vote for Francois Hollande,” he said, expressing regret that the incumbent was pursuing the support of the 18 percent of the electorate that backed the far-right’s Marine Le Pen.

Sarkozy has moved increasingly to the right ahead of the second round, vowing to “defend French values,” limit immigration and strengthen France’s borders.

The latest polls released Thursday and Friday showed Hollande ahead with 52.5 to 53.5 percent of the vote, with Sarkozy gaining between 0.5 and 1.5 points in the last days of the campaign.

Hollande’s confident campaign team said Friday it was already preparing for a transition.

“As in other countries, a transitional phase will take place. It will last more or less a week as Nicolas Sarkozy’s mandate ends on May 16. It could be a little before,” campaign chief Pierre Moscovici said.

“During this transitional phase the teams and first measures will be prepared,” he said.

He also said Hollande would take part in an informal EU summit at the end of May or early June if elected, to prepare for a full summit on June 28-29 that is expected to focus on economic growth.

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MEDIA

French president’s ex girlfriend says she has been sacked by magazine

Valerie Trierweiler, the ex-girlfriend of former French president François Hollande, said on Thursday that she had been sacked by Paris Match magazine.

French president's ex girlfriend says she has been sacked by magazine
Valerie Trierweiler wrote a tell-all book about the former president's affair. Photo: AFP

The journalist took revenge on Hollande for spurning her for actress Julie Gayet with a sensational 2014 kiss-and-tell memoir called Thank You for This Moment, which all but sank Hollande's presidency.

The book became an instant bestseller, and Hollande, a Socialist, never lived down his alleged references to the “toothless” poor.

Trierweiler, 55, had worked for the glossy weekly as a political correspondent, interviewer and columnist for three decades.

 

“I discovered in the middle of my summer holidays in an extremely brutal way that I have been sacked from Paris Match after 30 years,” Trierweiler said on Twitter.

“This sacking was for no reason and has left me shocked and astonished,” she added.

Trierweiler was famously admitted to hospital after Hollande's affair was revealed by paparazzi images of his nightly visits by scooter to Gayet's apartment.

The politician had tried to portray himself as a safe pair of hands “Mr Normal” in contrast to his mercurial predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy.

As well as spending most of her career at Paris Match, Trierweiler also interviews politicians for the French television channel Direct 8.

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