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Corbyn comparison seen as praise and insult in French Socialist race | Corbyn comparison seen as praise and insult in French Socialist race |
(35 minutes later) | |
As the divided French Socialist party this week chooses between a radical leftwing outsider and a centre-left former prime minister trying to defend the status quo, it hasn’t taken long for a C-word to be bandied around both as praise and insult: Corbyn. | As the divided French Socialist party this week chooses between a radical leftwing outsider and a centre-left former prime minister trying to defend the status quo, it hasn’t taken long for a C-word to be bandied around both as praise and insult: Corbyn. |
Benoît Hamon, the dark horse leftist who wants to introduce a universal wage, tax robots and legalise cannabis, is seen as having a chance of winning the final round of the primary race to become the Socialist party’s presidential candidate on Sunday. When he topped the first round with 36%, he was quick to namecheck the UK Labour party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, as an example of how voters, particularly young ones, want a return to a new form of solidarity politics and the spiritual fundamentals of the left. | Benoît Hamon, the dark horse leftist who wants to introduce a universal wage, tax robots and legalise cannabis, is seen as having a chance of winning the final round of the primary race to become the Socialist party’s presidential candidate on Sunday. When he topped the first round with 36%, he was quick to namecheck the UK Labour party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, as an example of how voters, particularly young ones, want a return to a new form of solidarity politics and the spiritual fundamentals of the left. |
Hamon’s campaign is about moving the party firmly to the left after what many Socialist voters feel has been a muddled and disastrous five-year term under François Hollande. | |
Manuel Valls, who took 31% in the first round and who represents the pro-business Socialist party of government, aspiring to New Labour-style politics, has angrily warned that pursuing what he considers to be idealist, costly and pie-in-the-sky notions that cannot be put into practise risks relegating the party to decades in opposition and “certain failure”. | Manuel Valls, who took 31% in the first round and who represents the pro-business Socialist party of government, aspiring to New Labour-style politics, has angrily warned that pursuing what he considers to be idealist, costly and pie-in-the-sky notions that cannot be put into practise risks relegating the party to decades in opposition and “certain failure”. |
This is the painful showdown that the warring French Socialists have been postponing for decades: whether to decisively commit to a neoliberal stance in order to be in government, or whether to create a new, firmly leftwing identity. | |
The high stakes of the presidential election in May have added to the sense of panic. The French electorate as a whole has shifted firmly to the right. Currently, the favourites to make it to the final round of the presidential race are the far-right Front National’s Marine Le Pen and the staunchly rightwing, socially conservative François Fillon of the Republicans. | The high stakes of the presidential election in May have added to the sense of panic. The French electorate as a whole has shifted firmly to the right. Currently, the favourites to make it to the final round of the presidential race are the far-right Front National’s Marine Le Pen and the staunchly rightwing, socially conservative François Fillon of the Republicans. |
Breathing down their neck in third place in polls is Hollande’s rebellious former economy minister Emmanuel Macron, running a maverick “neither left nor right” campaign. Then comes the hard-left firebrand Jean-Luc Mélenchon. The Socialists seem set to be relegated to a demoralising fifth place, no matter who they choose as their candidate. | Breathing down their neck in third place in polls is Hollande’s rebellious former economy minister Emmanuel Macron, running a maverick “neither left nor right” campaign. Then comes the hard-left firebrand Jean-Luc Mélenchon. The Socialists seem set to be relegated to a demoralising fifth place, no matter who they choose as their candidate. |
Valls was outraged by Hamon’s reference to Corbyn, who he felt had “made the choice to stay in opposition” when the left should aspire to be in government. Hamon, on a radio show, argued that the left needed new “imaginative and powerful policy” if it was to counter the right. | Valls was outraged by Hamon’s reference to Corbyn, who he felt had “made the choice to stay in opposition” when the left should aspire to be in government. Hamon, on a radio show, argued that the left needed new “imaginative and powerful policy” if it was to counter the right. |
The Corbyn comparisons do not totally fit the French race: the Socialists are choosing a presidential candidate in an open primary race, not a party leader (although the party’s long-term future is in question). The pro-Europe Hamon is 20 years younger than Corbyn, he has served in government as minister, was an MEP and part of the party apparatus as a former party spokesman. But Hamon is a rebel MP who was kicked out of government as education minister in 2014 after opposing Hollande and Valls’s pro-business economic policy. | The Corbyn comparisons do not totally fit the French race: the Socialists are choosing a presidential candidate in an open primary race, not a party leader (although the party’s long-term future is in question). The pro-Europe Hamon is 20 years younger than Corbyn, he has served in government as minister, was an MEP and part of the party apparatus as a former party spokesman. But Hamon is a rebel MP who was kicked out of government as education minister in 2014 after opposing Hollande and Valls’s pro-business economic policy. |
Florence Faucher, a professor of political science at Sciences Po University in Paris, said that as individuals Hamon and Corbyn did not compare, but “there are similarities in the circumstances – in which a leftwing party in government ends up trapped by its own contradictions.” | Florence Faucher, a professor of political science at Sciences Po University in Paris, said that as individuals Hamon and Corbyn did not compare, but “there are similarities in the circumstances – in which a leftwing party in government ends up trapped by its own contradictions.” |
She said the backing for staunchly leftwing candidates in the first round of the primary race – another leftist, Arnaud Montebourg, placed third – showed voters’ anger at the rightward shift of the Socialists in government. | She said the backing for staunchly leftwing candidates in the first round of the primary race – another leftist, Arnaud Montebourg, placed third – showed voters’ anger at the rightward shift of the Socialists in government. |
Hamon has a strong slant on environmental policy and fighting climate change, and he argues that a universal basic income paid by the government to all adults and a tax on robots are ways of facing up to a changing world with a radically different labour market. He says he is driven only by his young daughters’ future and does not seek to “denigrate” anyone. | |
But Valls is relishing a fight, calling Hamon’s ideas “ruinous”, “unachievable promises” and electoral suicide. A TV debate between the two on Wednesday is likely to be a bruising match, as a divided party acknowledges it can no longer sweep its differences under the mat. | But Valls is relishing a fight, calling Hamon’s ideas “ruinous”, “unachievable promises” and electoral suicide. A TV debate between the two on Wednesday is likely to be a bruising match, as a divided party acknowledges it can no longer sweep its differences under the mat. |
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