Latest update: 20/11/2012 

- François Fillon - French politics - Jean-Francois Copé - National Front party (France) - Nicolas Sarkozy - UMP


UMP leadership battle: 'Copé en deux'

The French papers lead on just one story: the narrow win for Jean-François Copé in a harrowing UMP leadership battle. He got just 98 votes more than rival François Fillon to succeed Nicolas Sarkozy as UMP chairman. The press concludes the fiasco on the right plays into the hands of the ruling Socialists and the far-right National Front. That's the focus for this look at the French press on Tuesday 20th November, 2012.

By Nicholas RUSHWORTH

The left-wing daily Libération leads with a photo of a smiling Jean-François Copé, now chairman of the opposition UMP after a messy and nasty leadership battle.

It argues the fiasco undermines the party’s constant battle cry that the Socialists are not able to govern.
 
The far-left daily L'Humanité headlines: "L'UMP Copé en deux". A pun on the name Copé and the word 'coupé' (i.e. 'cut'). The message is that the party is split down the middle.  
 
The main right-wing paper Le Figaro says that Jean-Francois Copé won by a whisker, just 98 votes out of 300,000 party faithful who were eligible to vote.
 
That paper’s editorial argues the international community can only wonder at what is going on in France when the two main parties, the Socialists four years ago and the UMP now, cannot organise their leadership battles without getting mired in accusations of fraud and insults.
 
The Catholic daily La Croix says the UMP has entered a crisis period after what was a battle of wills.

And one of the main dailies, Le Parisien-Aujourd’hui-en-France, is saying the battle will leave scars. It points to a court appearance later this week for Copé's predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy. 

The Woes of the Current President and the Worries of his Predecessor
22/03/2013 - IN THE FRENCH PAPERS

The Woes of the Current President and the Worries of his Predecessor

Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy is now under formal investigation for his alleged role in the "Bettencourt Affair". The French papers would have been wall-to-wall Sarkozy if the news hadn’t broken before bedtime last night. Some found space, though, for the woes of current president François Hollande, who has been forced to lower his flagship 75% tax on the rich.
Could a rat be responsible for a dangerous power outage at Fukushima?
21/03/2013 - IN THE WORLD PAPERS

Could a rat be responsible for a dangerous power outage at Fukushima?

IN THE PAPERS INTERNATIONAL - 21/03/13: International papers react to Obama's visit to Israel and are less than enthusiastic. In the UK, George Osborne's 2013 budget gets a chilly response from both the left and the right. And a rat could be responsible for a dangerous power outage at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. Finally, could the new pope be a pragmatist when it comes to same-sex unions?
Hollande's series of catastrophes
21/03/2013 - IN THE FRENCH PAPERS

Hollande's series of catastrophes

IN THE PAPERS NATIONAL - 21/03/13: French papers focus on how the government is reacting to the resignation of Budget Minister Jérôme Cahuzac. Le Figaro says ministers have "the blues". Meanwhile, Libération says François Hollande has changed France's strategy with respect to hostage takers: the government will no longer negotiate.
'Why Obama’s trip to Israel is one big mistake'
20/03/2013 - IN THE WORLD PAPERS

'Why Obama’s trip to Israel is one big mistake'

INTERNATIONAL PAPERS, Weds. 20/03/13: International papers react to the ongoing economic crisis in Cyprus as well as Barack Obama’s visit to Israel. Few papers are enthusiastic about the latter and Slate goes so far as to say it’s "one big mistake". Meanwhile, Gulf News wonders if the United States has learned the lessons from the Iraq war on the 10-year anniversary of the beginning of the US-led invasion.
Jérôme Cahuzac knocked out
20/03/2013 - IN THE FRENCH PAPERS

Jérôme Cahuzac knocked out

FRENCH PAPERS, Weds. 20/03/13: French papers react to the resignation of Budget Minister Jérôme Cahuzac after a formal investigation was launched to see if he had an illegal bank account in Switzerland. Le Figaro says it would have been impossible for him to stay in the government given that he is in charge of cracking down on tax evaders. Libération says it’s important to remember he’s presumed innocent. And Les Echos applauds François Hollande’s swift action on the matter.

React to the article
Comment this article typing your message in the above text zone. Please note that this is limited to 1500 characters or less.
(0) Reactions
Read more
Close