John Laughland writes:
Paris: Revolutions are often
sparked by an unexpected shock to an already weakened regime. As commentators
in France remark not only on the crisis engulfing François Hollande’s
government but also on the apparent death-rattle of the country’s entire
political system, it could be that his flagship policy of legalising gay
marriage — or rather, the gigantic public reaction against it, unique in Europe
— will be the last straw that breaks the Fifth -Republic’s back.
Opposition to the bill has electrified the middle
classes, the young and much of provincial France. On Sunday 24 March, in the
freezing cold, the 4km stretch from the Arche de la Défense to the Arc de
Triomphe was full of people protesting against the bill. On 13 January, also
chilly, the Champ de Mars was similarly crammed. When Johnny Hallyday or the
World Cup got crowds like that, people talked of two million. But the police,
evidently acting under political orders, have claimed that both demonstrations
— which are without doubt the largest public movements in French history —
garnered a few hundred thousand at most. Credible accusations surfaced in Le
Figaro on Monday night that the film taken from police helicopters on 24
March and released by the Prefecture has been manipulated to reduce the
apparent numbers of demonstrators.
Such lies are the sign of a rotten regime.
Outbursts such as that of Elie Peillon, the son of the Minister of Education,
who on 13 January tweeted that ‘those gits’ demonstrating should be publicly
hanged, make Marie-Antoinette’s seem delicate by comparison. Had the
mobilisation in Paris taken place in Tahrir Square, the world’s media would be
unanimous that a ‘French spring’ was about to sweep away an outdated power
structure, especially since the demonstrations (including the daily ones held
throughout last week, which culminated in a massive impromptu rally of 270,000
people on Sunday afternoon) are attended by an overwhelming number of people in
their late teens and early twenties.
By the same token, had the Moscow security forces
tear-gassed children and mothers — as the CRS did on the Champs Elysées on 24
March — or had they dragged away by their necks youngsters who were peacefully
sitting on the lawn after the demo — as the riot police did on the night of 18
April — then the worldwide moral policemen on CNN would be frantically firing
their rhetorical revolvers. Such repression would be interpreted as a sign that
the regime was desperate. Indeed, had the Ukrainian police removed the ‘tent
village’ which formed in central Kiev at the time of the Orange Revolution in
2004 — as the Paris police bundled more than 60 anti-gay marriage campers into
detention on the night of 14 April — then one suspects that Nato tanks would
have rolled over the Dnieper to their rescue. A dozen people were even booked
by the police for wearing anti-gay-marriage T-shirts in the Luxembourg gardens,
where they were having a picnic, on the grounds that this constituted an
unauthorised political assembly.
The government may have rushed the gay marriage
law through parliament on Tuesday to try to take the wind out of the sails of
this mass movement, but police paranoia of this kind is surely a sign that the
French political system is terminally sick. The historical background certainly
confirms this. For more than 30 years, every French government has lost every
election. With a single exception, you have to be over 50 today to have voted
in the last election, in 1978, when the incumbent majority held on to power:
Nicolas Sarkozy managed to get a conservative majority re-elected in 2007 only
because he profiled himself, dishonestly, as a new broom and as a rebel against
the roi fainéant, his former mentor Jacques Chirac. Add to this the fact
that in 2005 the referendum on the European constitution produced a ‘no ‘vote —
that is, a disavowal of the entire political establishment — and you are
confronted with a bitter reality: the French electorate hates its politicians
and takes every chance to vote against them.
François Hollande’s election last May was
therefore not a victory but only his predecessor’s defeat. He was elected with
48 per cent of the votes, if you include spoilt and invalid ballots, and 39 per
cent of the registered voters. His election was especially unimpressive
considering the widespread revulsion at Sarkozy’s personal bling and at his
betrayal of his own voters. But even so, Hollande’s catastrophic poll rating
has broken all records. When in March he became the most unpopular president
after ten months in office, his rating stood at 31 per cent. Now it is 26 per
cent.
The immediate cause of the crisis lies in the
dramatic alienation of sections of the electorate who voted for Hollande in
May. The overseas populations of the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean, and
regions like Brittany where the left is as deeply entrenched as in Scotland,
are in revolt over gay marriage: the largest French daily, Ouest-France,
based in Rennes, has turned against Hollande on the issue. In addition,
Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the crypto-communist who ensured Hollande’s election by
throwing his support behind him immediately after the first round last May, has
now violently abandoned him, albeit over economic policy.
But the deeper explanation for the strength of
feeling lies in the fact that, in French law, marriage is indissociable from
the right to start a family. There is currently no gay adoption in France and
no access for gays or lesbians to medically assisted procreation. These have
been legalised to general indifference in Britain, but they are regarded as
unacceptable by many in France and as an intolerable attack on the rights of
the child. The marches against gay marriage are therefore really marches in favour
of the traditional family — and in favour of that ‘normality’ which Hollande
promised to bring to presidency but which he has betrayed in favour of the
interests of a tiny minority. (Sunday’s demonstration in favour of gay marriage
at the Bastille garnered but a few thousand militants.) Even Le Monde admits
that normally unpolitical people have been politicised by this issue, to their
own and everyone else’s surprise. The 50 per cent of French people polled
who say they are in favour of gay marriage evidently do not know what is in the
new law, because 56 to 58 per cent say they oppose gay adoption.
The issue, in other words, has touched a nerve in
France, a country divided between a globalist elite and a conservative nation,
part of which still believes in the family and the state. Dominique
Strauss-Kahn’s philandering while head of the IMF revolted many French people
precisely because such behaviour seemed to embody the deep link between
international economic liberalism and moral collapse. Hollande’s economic
orthodoxy (austerity to save the euro) coupled with his support for gay
marriage seems but a softer version of the same phenomenon — as does the recent
and severely damaging revelation that the former Budget Minister had a secret
bank account in Switzerland (and then lied about it).
The disillusionment with Hollande is also acute
because this ‘socialist’ President is such an obvious copy of his
‘conservative’ predecessor (just as all presidents since Giscard have been
carbon copies of him). Hollande, who campaigned against austerity before the
election only to introduce it immediately after, recalls Sarkozy, who was
elected with the votes of the radical right only to appoint prominent leftists
as ministers in his Blairite ‘big tent’ government. The military adventure in
Mali is Hollande’s Libya.
This similarity between the two men throws into
the sharpest possible light the systemic crisis of which the endless changes of
governmental majority are the symptom: France, like the rest of Europe and much
of the industrial world, is governed by one single political superclass which
straddles not only nation-states but also left and right. EU politicians spend
more time seeing each other than their own voters, while the range of policies
actually at stake at any election narrows with each one. This is why voters
systematically reject their leaders, and this is why the young have been so
massively present in the marches. Such a situation cannot last.
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