Chirac names Iraq invasion critic P.M. (Agencies) Updated: 2005-06-01 09:27
France's President Jacques Chirac fired his prime minister Tuesday and built
a new government around two men — one an unelected loyalist, the other an
ambitious rival — who could one day fight to succeed him as France's leader.
Chirac's unlikely and potentially explosive pairing of Dominique de Villepin
and Nicolas Sarkozy was a measure of the crisis Sunday's humiliating referendum
defeat caused to his 10-year presidency.
 Outgoing Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin
waves as he leaves the premier's office after the handover ceremony in
Paris Tuesday, May 31, 2005. [Reuters] | The reply
from voters — a strong "Non!" — was as much a repudiation of Chirac's domestic
policies as it was a refusal of the proposed European Union constitution.
Villepin and Sarkozy are unnatural allies. Just last week, in thinly veiled
criticism, Sarkozy said only people who have held elected office "have the right
to speak in the name of France."
Villepin, 51, is a long-trusted aide who, as foreign minister from 2002-2004,
passionately made France's case against the Iraq war. His political weakness is
that he has never been elected to office. Chirac named him prime minister,
promoting him from the Interior Ministry to replace the unpopular Jean-Pierre
Raffarin.
 Newly named French Prime Minister Dominique de
Villepin, right, is greeted by National Assembly speaker Jean-Louis Debre
before a luncheon with parliamentarians at the National Assembly in Paris
Tuesday, May 31, 2005.[Reuters] | Sarkozy, 50, is a media-savvy, former minister with a man-of-the-people touch
and presidential ambitions. He gets the title of minister of state — a kind of
super minister that makes him Villepin's No.2. A lawmaker who is close to
Sarkozy, Yves Jego, said his portfolio is expected to be the Interior Ministry.
Acknowledging popular dissatisfaction with his economic policies in a
televised address to the nation, Chirac said he asked Sarkozy to join the
government "in a spirit of rallying together."
Chirac said Sunday's vote represented a demand for "determined, immediate
action" on domestic problems — persistently high unemployment and stagnant
wages.
"This vote does not signify the rejection of the European ideal," said
Chirac. "It's a demand for listening; it's a demand for action; it's a demand
for results."
The new government's priority will be creating jobs, Chirac said.
Unemployment is running at 10 percent, rising to 23.3 percent among the
under-25s. The 55 percent "no" vote to the EU treaty drew heavily on unemployed,
blue-collar workers and farmers.
In tapping Villepin as prime minister, Chirac opted for a trusted aide rather
than a radical change in direction.
The two men have long been close. Villepin — a senator's son, writer and poet
with excellent English — was Chirac's voice at the U.N. Security Council in the
crisis over Iraq in 2003.
The French foreign minister faced down Secretary of State Colin Powell in
pressing for more U.N. weapons inspections. U.N. delegates broke protocol to
applaud Villepin after his impassioned appeal to make war a last resort.
During the crisis over Iraq, Villepin frequently chided Washington for acting
unilaterally. "A country alone cannot bring peace. We see that in Iraq," he said
in 2003.
Villepin also defended a central role for the United Nations in international
affairs and Chirac's vision of a "multipolar" world — where powers like Europe,
China and others balance out dominance of the United States.
Although French prime ministers handle domestic policy, Villepin's
international experience could prove useful as France seeks to limit damage from
its rejection of the EU constitution — the first among the bloc's 25 nations.
Villepin spent 15 years in the foreign service in the 1980s and '90s,
including five at the French Embassy in Washington from 1984-89.
Sarkozy brings his popularity, energy and experience of government and —
crucially — the legitimacy of having run in and won elections.
The son of a Hungarian immigrant, trained as attorney, Sarkozy became
France's youngest mayor at age 28.
As interior minister from 2002-2004, Sarkozy cracked down on drunk driving
and launched a zero tolerance policy that sent crime plummeting. He also served
briefly as finance minister before becoming head of Chirac's governing-center
right party.
Being back in government — but not in the prime ministerial hotseat — gives
Sarkozy power and a platform ahead of presidential elections in 2007.
If Chirac, 72, does not seek a third term, Sarkozy and Villepin may end up
fighting each other to be the center-right candidate.
Chirac's "bet is being able to transform Villepin into a credible
presidential candidate, either for the next election or the one after that,"
said Nicolas Fauger, a political researcher at Sciences Po university.
Villepin is expected to work closely with Chirac, unlike the more
freewheeling Sarkozy.
"It will be a two-headed government with Villepin and Chirac on one side and
Sarkozy on the other," said Jean Chiche, another Sciences Po researcher.
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