Strauss-Kahn keeps France guessing on presidency
Thursday 26th November 2009
If Dominique Strauss-Kahn is tempted to make an early exit from the
International Monetary Fund to run for president of France, he will
have found plenty of encouraging signs during a stay in Paris this
week.
The next election is not until 2012 and Strauss-Kahn
would have many hurdles to overcome before even getting his name on a
ballot paper, but a spate of favourable opinion polls put him at the
centre of political attention during his flying visit.
"It's
always nice to find that your compatriots are fond of you, but that is
not my focus today," Strauss-Kahn said in an interview published by the
newspaper Le Figaro on Wednesday, declining to comment on a possible
presidential bid.
Conveniently for Strauss-Kahn, IMF rules
prevent him from speaking about French politics. This makes it easy for
him to play a waiting game, biding his time to see what the other
players do before deciding whether to take a dangerous gamble.
A
CSA poll published on Nov. 6 suggested that the Socialist Strauss-Kahn
could beat right-wing President Nicolas Sarkozy in a run-off in 2012 by
51 percent to 49 percent. He was the only opposition figure who stood a
chance, according to the poll.
But his term as managing
director of the IMF runs until October 2012, several months after the
election, so he would have to quit his job early -- a plan that could
go horribly wrong if he failed to clinch the Socialist Party ticket.
It
is a very real fear for Strauss-Kahn, who was trounced by Segolene
Royal in Socialist primaries in 2006. She went on to lose to Sarkozy in
the May 2007 presidential election, and in November that year
Strauss-Kahn went to the IMF.
It was a risky career move for
the former economy minister, as the Fund was abhorred by many French
voters who saw it as a bastion of American-style free market orthodoxy.
Good crisis
But the
global financial crisis changed all that. By steering the IMF through
the turmoil of 2008 and 2009, advocating fiscal stimulus rather than
budget cuts, Strauss-Kahn gained not only worldwide prestige but
credibility at home.
"Faced with a crisis that the French
public feels on a daily basis, Strauss-Kahn's competence on economic
matters is more and more appreciated," said Francois Miquet-Marty, head
of the Viavoice polling firm that has charted his rising popularity.
Strauss-Kahn has also benefitted from being removed from the daily hustle and bustle of French political life.
"Maybe they like me so much because I am far away," he acknowledged on Canal+ television on Wednesday.
While
he has been flying around the world for face-time with the likes of
U.S. President Barack Obama or Chinese President Hu Jintao, Royal and
other Socialist rivals have been bogged down in an interminable series
of internal party squabbles.
Their disputes have exasperated
many voters and by staying out of the fray, Strauss-Kahn has come to
appear as a potential saviour who could jet in from Washington and take
on Sarkozy.
The danger for Sarkozy, whose popularity ratings
have been hit by disputed reforms and scandals in his own camp, is that
a certain category of moderate centre-right voters who are disappointed
with him could switch allegiance to Strauss-Kahn.
A typical
example is retired secretary Francoise Moreau, who voted for Sarkozy in
2007 but has been put off by what she sees as his confrontational style
and exaggerated boasts.
"If Strauss-Kahn is a candidate in
2012, I will definitely vote for him. I don't like any of the other
Socialists, but he is an intelligent and competent man," she said.
Crash test
Before competing with Sarkozy, Strauss-Kahn would have to face the
Socialist primaries and there is no guarantee that he would win as
parts of the Socialist electorate, especially young people, see him as
not far enough to the left.
"The primaries will be a major crash test for him," said pollster Miquet-Marty.
"If
he decides to go for it, he will have to get down into the ring with
the others, thus losing his unique status and exposing himself to
criticism. A return to French politics could turn out to be extremely
bruising," he said.
He has a fearsome reputation as a ladies'
man, exacerbated by a high profile affair with an IMF colleague, that
rivals might try to exploit. He may also struggle to persuade grassroot
Socialists that his heart is still anchored to the left.
For now, he is saying little, leaving others to promote him.
Newspapers
Le Monde and Liberation put him on their front pages this week and ran
lengthy articles analysing his every move. Liberation called him "the
incognito candidate" and some Socialist heavyweights also made
encouraging noises.
"I think Dominique Strauss-Kahn is one of
the few people who have the stature to be president," former Prime
Minister Laurent Fabius told Canal+.
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