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POLITICS

Paris mayor Hidalgo announces French presidential bid

Anne Hidalgo, the Socialist mayor of Paris, has sought to transform the French capital with a crusade against cars but now faces an even tougher challenge of expanding her profile nationally to become France's first female president.

Paris mayor Hidalgo announces French presidential bid
The mayor of Paris, member of the French Socialist Party (Parti Socialiste - PS) Anne Hidalgo speaks in Rouen, western France, on September 12, 2021 as she announced that she plans to stand as a PS candidate in next year's presidential elections. Photo: Thomas SAMSON / AFP

Hidalgo, 62, was a virtual unknown seven years ago when she succeeded her former mentor and boss, Bertrand Delanoë, as mayor of Paris — a position seen as a stepping stone to the presidency.

The reserved former labour inspector, dismissed by critics as an “apparatchik”, struggled to emerge from his shadow.

But Hidalgo, who grew up in a housing estate near Lyon in a family of Spanish immigrants that fled dictator Francisco Franco’s rule when she was two, is used to being underestimated.

Responding to polls that show her winning only between seven and nine percent of the vote for president, she told Paris Match magazine last month: “All my life I’ve proved the polls wrong.”

“As the daughter of a labourer and a seamstress who did not attend an elite school, I had no chance of becoming mayor of Paris,” she said.

Attacks, floods, fire

Since winning the mayor’s office in 2014, she has had to steer the city through a multitude of crises, from a string of terror attacks to the “yellow vest” revolt of 2018 and 2019 and the fire that nearly destroyed Notre-Dame cathedral.

In an interview in March 2020 with The Guardian newspaper, she described her experience “like piloting a catamaran in an almost permanent force 7-9 wind”.

Yet her first term as Paris supremo — Hidalgo handily won re-election in 2020 — will probably best be remembered for the battle over her decision to pedestrianise a busy road running along the right bank of the Seine, and the chaotic rollout of a bike-sharing scheme.

READ ALSO: Anne Hidalgo vows to build the ‘Paris of tomorrow’ after being re-elected as mayor

Hidalgo makes no bones about her anti-car stance.

Her naysayers, she said in 2016, were in “complete denial about the climate emergency” that had brought nearly 200 countries together in Paris a year earlier to combat global warming.

But no sooner had one controversy died down than another flared.

Her critics accused her of failing to get tough on petty crime, of letting swarms of rats invade public parks, and generally allowing the world’s most-visited city to become dirty and unsightly.

Residents used the #saccageparis (Trashed Paris) hashtag to post pictures of rubbish piling up on the streets, of dilapidated public benches and scooters discarded on the pavement, among other ills.

Hidalgo has blamed the disorder on a lack of civic spirit and accused her critics of mounting a smear campaign.

Responding to accusations of authoritarianism in her 2018 book “Respirer” (Breathe), the mother-of-three remarked: “What passes for authority in a man becomes authoritarianism in a woman.”

‘Time for a woman’

Among her achievements, she points to a cycling revolution, brought about by the doubling of Paris’s network of cycle lanes since 2015.

READ ALSO: ‘It’s not yet Amsterdam’: What Paris must do to be a world-leading cycling capital

Despite her disputed legacy Hidalgo has emerged as one of the few figures capable of uniting the fractured left around an environmentalist platform.

“Through her diligence and the way she has managed France’s biggest city she has shown that she could be the one,” Socialist party leader Olivier Faure said in June.

“And maybe the time for a woman has also come.”

Hidalgo has also argued the case for having a woman as president.

She is not the only woman eyeing the Elysee Palace — far-right leader Marine Le Pen and centre-right politician, Valerie Pecresse, have also thrown their hats into the ring.

Alluding to record low levels of voter turnout in recent elections, Hidalgo says: “A woman can change the relationship (of the French) with people in power.”

Member comments

  1. Please no. She has managed to ruin Paris so now sets her sights on ruining France. So if she wins it’s back to horse and carts but at least the gardeners will be delighted.😛

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POLITICS

Why is France accusing Azerbaijan of stirring tensions in New Caledonia?

France's government has no doubt that Azerbaijan is stirring tensions in New Caledonia despite the vast geographical and cultural distance between the hydrocarbon-rich Caspian state and the French Pacific territory.

Why is France accusing Azerbaijan of stirring tensions in New Caledonia?

Azerbaijan vehemently rejects the accusation it bears responsibility for the riots that have led to the deaths of five people and rattled the Paris government.

But it is just the latest in a litany of tensions between Paris and Baku and not the first time France has accused Azerbaijan of being behind an alleged disinformation campaign.

The riots in New Caledonia, a French territory lying between Australia and Fiji, were sparked by moves to agree a new voting law that supporters of independence from France say discriminates against the indigenous Kanak population.

Paris points to the sudden emergence of Azerbaijani flags alongside Kanak symbols in the protests, while a group linked to the Baku authorities is openly backing separatists while condemning Paris.

“This isn’t a fantasy. It’s a reality,” interior minister Gérald Darmanin told television channel France 2 when asked if Azerbaijan, China and Russia were interfering in New Caledonia.

“I regret that some of the Caledonian pro-independence leaders have made a deal with Azerbaijan. It’s indisputable,” he alleged.

But he added: “Even if there are attempts at interference… France is sovereign on its own territory, and so much the better”.

“We completely reject the baseless accusations,” Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry spokesman Ayhan Hajizadeh said.

“We refute any connection between the leaders of the struggle for freedom in Caledonia and Azerbaijan.”

In images widely shared on social media, a reportage broadcast Wednesday on the French channel TF1 showed some pro-independence supporters wearing T-shirts adorned with the Azerbaijani flag.

Tensions between Paris and Baku have grown in the wake of the 2020 war and 2023 lightning offensive that Azerbaijan waged to regain control of its breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region from ethnic Armenian separatists.

France is a traditional ally of Christian Armenia, Azerbaijan’s neighbour and historic rival, and is also home to a large Armenian diaspora.

Darmanin said Azerbaijan – led since 2003 by President Ilham Aliyev, who succeeded his father Heydar – was a “dictatorship”.

On Wednesday, the Paris government also banned social network TikTok from operating in New Caledonia.

Tiktok, whose parent company is Chinese, has been widely used by protesters. Critics fear it is being employed to spread disinformation coming from foreign countries.

Azerbaijan invited separatists from the French territories of Martinique, French Guiana, New Caledonia and French Polynesia to Baku for a conference in July 2023.

The meeting saw the creation of the “Baku Initiative Group”, whose stated aim is to support “French liberation and anti-colonialist movements”.

The group published a statement this week condemning the French parliament’s proposed change to New Caledonia’s constitution, which would allow outsiders who moved to the territory at least 10 years ago the right to vote in its elections.

Pro-independence forces say that would dilute the vote of Kanaks, who make up about 40 percent of the population.

“We stand in solidarity with our Kanak friends and support their fair struggle,” the Baku Initiative Group said.

Raphael Glucksmann, the lawmaker heading the list for the French Socialists in June’s European Parliament elections, told Public Senat television that Azerbaijan had made “attempts to interfere… for months”.

He said the underlying problem behind the unrest was a domestic dispute over election reform, not agitation fomented by “foreign actors”.

But he accused Azerbaijan of “seizing on internal problems.”

A French government source, who asked not to be named, said pro-Azerbaijani social media accounts had on Wednesday posted an edited montage purporting to show two white police officers with rifles aimed at dead Kanaks.

“It’s a pretty massive campaign, with around 4,000 posts generated by (these) accounts,” the source told AFP.

“They are reusing techniques already used during a previous smear campaign called Olympia.”

In November, France had already accused actors linked to Azerbaijan of carrying out a disinformation campaign aimed at damaging its reputation over its ability to host the Olympic Games in Paris. Baku also rejected these accusations.

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