France’s fast moving leader
By Zafar Masud
TALKING about The Age of Turbulence, the recently published book of memoirs by the Wizard of Fed, former US Federal Reserve Board chief Alan Greenspan, would probably be too much economy-speak for a restful morning. But the point here is Greenspan’s fascination with Ayn Rand and her novel Atlas Shrugged which was published
in 1957 and has never dropped from sales charts since.
Atlas Shrugged is an unabashed ode to individualism, to selfishness not as a vice but as a virtue. In it the American society is suddenly taken over by a surge of trade unions and strikes. So the captains of industry, scholars, inventors, scientists and intellectuals get together and decide to go on a strike of their own …with dire consequences, needless to say, to economic life of course, but more damagingly to collectivist ideology itself.
Unlike the book’s hero, John Galt, France’s newly elected President Nicolas Sarkozy, 52, has never used the word ‘selfishness’ in his utterances but talks regularly about ‘getting up early’ and ‘working more to earn more’. To prove his point, he moves faster than he talks. He is the fastest moving object on the European political scene these days.
Sarko, a nickname expressing affection as well as denigration depending on who you are, uses provocation as his preferred tool to demolish taboos established in France following two decades of Socialist Party rule. Not content with his verbal onslaughts, the president quickly translates them into action.
Hours after his election in May this year, Sarkozy hopped on a flight with wife and children to an unknown destination. A well-deserved rest, he announced, after months of hectic electioneering. As it turned out, he was on the yacht of a billionaire friend docked in the blue seas near Malta. That was his first message to the nation even before swearing in. ‘There is no shame in making money, or in befriending rich people for that matter.’
Hating Americans for whatever they do, but secretly envying them and borrowing their ideas and practices with the passage of time, was another principle inculcated by the Socialists in the psyche of two successive French generations.
Two months after his election the new president decided to go on summer vacation with his family in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. Quelle horreur! Then he had the temerity of revelling in a corn-on-the-cob and barbecue meal with the Bushes at their family estate in Kennebunk Port nearby. He shocked the French Left, but his message hardly lacked clarity. In his own words: ‘I don’t see why I should have given up going to the United States because a small part of the French elite professes an anti-Americanism that in no way corresponds to what the French people think.’ A position with which Alan Greenspan agrees 100 per cent, as he told the French daily Le Figaro in a recent interview.
Political adversary François Bayrou, number three in last May’s presidential race, has likened Sarkozy to a piranha in a goldfish bowl. The extreme reference of course was to the president’s gobbling up one by one stalwarts from the Socialist camp. Bernard Kouchner was appointed foreign minister, Dominique Strass-Kahn was scooped up, right in the midst of his campaign to lead the Socialist Party, to be named the candidate from France to head the International Monetary Fund, a decision applauded by Alan Greenspan and a position confirmed by the IMF governing body on Friday, Sept 28.
Jack Lang, former culture minister, was asked by Sarkozy to draft an important report, as was Hubert Vedrine, once President Mitterrand’s eminence grise. All four have abandoned since then the defeated presidential candidate Segolene Royal in her bid to replace former boyfriend François Holland as secretary-general of the Socialist Party. Sweet revenge!
Not working too hard seemed to have entered the French ethics in the recent past. The Socialists invented the 35-hour work week while the unions pressed for, and got away with, retirement with full benefits at age 50 in certain sectors.
All this has got to change, says the president. He also wants retired people to come back to work if they want to, and is encouraging those still working to earn more by doing overtime. No taxation on these additional incomes, he promises.
Sarkozy has found an enthusiastic aide in Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, another Ayn Rand fan who left a top executive position with the Dutch ING financing group to join his government. She is convinced that the French waste too much time in reveries. ‘Roll up your sleeves and stop thinking!’ she does not fail to remind them now and then. Understandably, the Left Bank intellectuals are quite irked by all this talk of stopping to think.
Sarkozy’s economic programme is much in contradiction with his predecessor Jacques Chirac’s who spent his 12 years in power practically doing nothing despite election promises to do away with state interventionism established by the Socialist Party. Unfettered market forces à l’américaine, Chirac had posited, were as much an anathema to the French psyche as was Soviet totalitarianism. In that sense Sarkozy’s mission now is to pick up the threads where the Socialists had left them more than a decade ago. He has wowed to curtail unions’ powers and make hiring and firing easier in order to reduce unemployment.
France’s mercurial president never stops taking by surprise his own entourage. Encouraged by his rhetoric over Tehran’s nuclear programme that ‘one will have to choose between Iran possessing the bomb and Iran being bombed,’ Foreign Minister Kouchner spoke of preparing for war. A week later Sarkozy told journalists: ‘France’s position is clear. No nuclear weapons for Iran, but an arsenal of sanctions to convince it. Negotiations, discussions, firmness! And I don’t want to hear anything else that would not contribute usefully to the discussion. For my part, I don’t use the word war.’
Probably the biggest obstacle in France’s transatlantic relations and a national sacred cow to boot, in the sense that it was President Charles de Gaulle himself who had pulled the country out of the Alliance in 1966, remains the membership of the integrated military command of Nato. Now Sarkozy is talking of getting a project on returning to the fold in motion too.
No matter which way you look at it, the Sarko locomotive is hurtling on.

