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Foreign press: Hollande win is ‘turning point’

The European and international press has described the victory of Socialist Francois Hollande in the French presidential election as a turning point for Europe, but warned of major challenges ahead.

“Au revoir President Bling Bling!” headlined Britain’s conservative tabloid Daily Mail, while German papers wondered what the defeat of Nicolas Sarkozy would spell for Germany’s ties with France.

Hollande’s victory was “a turning point, especially for Angela Merkel,” Financial Times Deutschland said.

“Francois Hollande, whom the chancellor wanted to avoid at all costs, has become president in place of her favourite. 

“How unpleasant for Merkel. Not so much because Hollande would threaten the rescue of the euro. But because his demand to complement the EU fiscal pact with growth elements strikes at the chancellor’s supremacy in Europe,” it noted.

Left-leaning Berlin paper Tagesspiegel also viewed the socialist’s victory as a blow for Merkel. It saw France as “symbolically leaving northern Europe in favour of southern Europe –in terms of drifting away from budgetary discipline” and concluded: “This means that Germany has fewer, too few, allies.”

“If the international financial markets begin to lose faith in France, the second-biggest industrial nation in the European Union, it will weaken the euro.

“This country alone (Germany) will not be able to stabilise it.”

Britain’s Independent said Hollande’s victory, and the end of Sarkozy, heralded “a change in how Europe tackles its debt crisis and how France operates around the world.”

London’s Financial Times said: “Sarkozy becomes latest victim of anti-incumbent backlash,” with all eyes now on reaction on the world markets.

In the New York Times, columnist Paul Krugman, the austerity-sceptical Nobel Prize-winning economist, hailed voters in France, and also Greece, for having “turned two thumbs down” on Europe’s current economic strategy.

“It’s far from clear how soon the votes will lead to changes in actual policy, but time is clearly running out for the strategy of recovery through austerity  and that’s a good thing,” Krugman wrote, welcoming the end of the Franco-German axis dubbed ‘Merkozy’.

Austria’s Kurier newspaper ran the headline “Hollande topples Sarkozy from the throne,” but commented in another article “Paris: lots of civic duty, but little fervour” for the new president who faces big challenges.

The largest-selling nationwide Austrian daily Kronen Zeitung added: “Hollande seals the end of Sarkozy” while Vienna’s Die Presse said that “A mammoth task awaits the new guy.”

Spain’s centre-left daily El Pais declared: “The European left was reborn this May 6 in France.

“The anticipated victory of Hollande, a phlegmatic man who has the gift of irony but not the slightest experience of government, opens a new political stage in France as much as Europe,” the paper wrote.

For the centre-right daily El Mundo, the French left had regained the presidency “in elections marked by the biggest economic and social crisis of the past half century.

Japan’s Jiji Press said Hollande’s success and that of the anti-austerity parties in Greece was a warning sign for those pressing for economic reforms in Europe.

“After these severe judgments from voters, the EU will inevitably need to review its course.”

In China, an editorial in the Global Times daily argued that Hollande’s victory alone would not in itself be enough to push through debt reform in France.

“The change has to come from reflection of a wider scope,” it argued.

“But protests against austerity measures from Greece to France have suggested that this much-needed reflection is far from coming. Statesmen are busy pleasing voters, not leading reflection.”

As for Sarkozy, the Dutch paper De Volkskrant paid a sort of compliment to the outgoing leader, saying “with the departure of Super Sarko, France is losing a fascinating phenomenon.”

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US

US primaries: how to vote as an American expat in Italy

As a week of the "Global Primaries" for expat Americans around the world kicks off, we look at how you can cast your ballot from Italy.

US primaries: how to vote as an American expat in Italy
Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images North America/AFP

Even if you’re living thousands of miles away from the US of A, don’t fret – you can still have your voice heard from abroad.

The Local looks at the fairly simple steps involved in getting you to the presidential vote.

Voting absentee with your state

To vote in your state’s primary, presidential and any other election, you first have to register online with the Federal Voting Assistance Program, or VoteFromAbroad.org. The US State Department recommends doing this for those living abroad at the start of each year so you can keep getting ballots sent to you.

Then print, sign and send the resulting form to your state election office. You should get your ballot by mail or electronically (depending on the state) 45 to 30 days before the vote.

What if you don’t have a US address?

Don’t worry! Just register with the last state where you lived most recently before leaving the US.

Plus, 24 states and Washington DC allow American citizens who have never lived in the US to register where a parent is eligible to vote. Find a list of these states here.

Vote in-person at the Global Primary (if you’re a Democrat)

Unlike Republicans, Democrats who live abroad get their own primary to vote until March 8th with the group Democrats Abroad, which is given state-level recognition in the Democratic National Committee.

There are two ways you can do this. First, you can vote from now by postal ballot, email or fax. Download your ballot here:

Second, you can vote in-person at a Democrats Abroad voting centre in either Rome, Florence, Milan or Naples between March 4th and March 7th (details below and here). You must register as a member to vote and can do that online beforehand, or at the centre. Just bring your US passport or driver’s licence along, or an Italian ID.

Voting Centers 2016 Global Primary:

Rome: Friday, March 4th, from 2:30 to 8:00pm

St. Stephen's School, Via Aventina 3,00153 RomeFlorence: Saturday, March 5th, from 3:00 pm to 5:00pm

Florence: Saturday, March 5, from 3:00 pm to 5:00pm

California State University, Via Giacomo Leopardi,50121, Florence

Naples: Saturday, March 5, from 10:00am to 2:00pm

The International School of Naples, Viale della Liberazione 1, 80125 Naples

Milan: Monday, March 7th, from 7:00 pm to 9:00pm

Kaprikorn, Via Ravizza, 6 20149 Milan

For more information, contact Tony Quattrone and Gail Fagen: [email protected]

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