Perspectives

November 14, 2008
Sarkozy thinks global, should look local

 

French President Nicolas Sarkozy stands with other European leaders at a press conference about the global economy in January 2008.

Nicolas Sarkozy is one of many world leaders who will play a role at the G20 summit on the global financial crisis this weekend. The French president has called for a more internationally coordinated response to the crisis.

Patrice de Beer is a former London and Washington correspondent for Le Monde and writes at OpenDemocracy about Sarkozy’s desire to play a larger role on the world stage. He argues that the French leader is bound to discover that all politics is local.

Nicolas Sarkozy: world leader, local problem

France’s president is a man who relishes crises. As he hops from one to another, from the Russian invasion of Georgia to the financial hurricane, Nicolas Sarkozy thrives in the self-image of “crisis-manager-in-chief” - and strives to make others perceive the halo. It helps that he can - at least until the last day of 2008 - include the “presidency” of the European Union in his portfolio.

The characteristic image of “Sarko” is of a figure popping up, rushing onto or off his plane, seizing an initiative or propelling himself to the frontline and frontpage. There is hardly a European or global issue where the president does not want to interpolate himself (and if it is just too intractable or time-consuming - as in the Democratic Republic of Congo - he can deploy his foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner). And indeed, the bigger the issue the larger the claim. It is no wonder that Sarko now presents himself as a great friend of president-elect Barack Obama, drawing on the capital he gained when he hosted the United States’s next leader at the Elysée palace during the election campaign (while disdaining to find time to welcome Obama’s Republican rival, John McCain).

To achieve this pre-eminence and sustain the profile that accompanies it, he is shameless in borrowing ideas from other leaders (such as Britain’s prime minister Gordon Brown on financial reforms), overshadowing once-friendly rivals (such as Germany and its chancellor Angela Merkel), or pushing himself into the limelight (such as claiming credit for convincing Moscow to sign a ceasefire with Georgia, and Washington over the convening of the G20 summit on 15 November 2008).

[...]But if Nicolas Sarkozy knocks repeatedly at the world’s door, his restlessness extends too to an impatient desire to find urgent solutions (and often merely populist non-solutions) to the many domestic concerns that have come under his voracious inspection. Among the near-limitless reform agenda, the very institutional map of France itself has been redrawn several times even since May 2007. The national structures of the judiciary, military, universities and health services have been shaken to the core - in part to revamp overlapping and often obsolete networks, but also in part to save money in a country Sarkozy himself has called “broke”.

To read more, see the original post.

The views expressed by contributing bloggers do not reflect the views of Worldfocus or its partners.

Photo courtesy of Flickr user Foreign and Commonwealth Office under a Creative Commons license.

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1 comment

#1

Thank you, but sorry,I am not a she, but a he!
patrice de beer

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