Bayrou Shakes Up French Race
Presidential Hopeful's Fast Rise Seen as a Gauge of Voter Unrest
French presidential candidate François Bayrou acknowledges supporters at the end of a rally in Paris on Wednesday.
(By Francois Mori -- Associated Press)
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Sunday, March 25, 2007
PARIS -- Paris's Zénith concert hall is usually reserved for the likes of Public Enemy, the Beastie Boys and B.B. King. On Wednesday night, French presidential candidate François Bayrou bounded on stage, basking in the kind of adulation that rock stars expect but most politicians only dream of.
The overflow crowd cheered, clapped and stomped feet for a candidate who gets toy tractors as welcome gifts from supporters (he grew up on a farm), whose name many French mispronounce and who was polling in the single digits only a few months ago.
In recent weeks, Bayrou (pronounced bye-roo) has scaled the public opinion surveys to become a formidable challenger to the two front-runners -- ruling party candidate Nicolas Sarkozy and Socialist Ségolène Royal. With the election only four weeks away and with as many as half of potential French voters undecided, Bayrou of the small Union for French Democracy has transformed what was a two-person presidential campaign into an unpredictable three-way sprint for the Élysée Palace.
Though all three main candidates -- each a member of the first post-World War II generation to lead France -- are advocating change, Bayrou's swift rise as an alternative candidate is a barometer of voter dissatisfaction with the country's main political parties.
"What France needs is for these two parties in power for 25 years to be thrown out of power -- out of the comfort of power and the comfort of the opposition," Bayrou told his audience Wednesday night. "France needs a peaceful revolution!"
"Bayrou, president! Bayrou, president!" the crowd shouted.
Bayrou, 55, is casting himself as a tractor-driving country boy who can lift France out of a lingering national malaise brought on by a floundering economy and the growing fear that globalization will erode the cultural and gastronomic arenas where the French still excel.
"With one candidate who would like France to be America and one who would like it to be Scandinavia, it is time to show France wants to be France!" Bayrou said Wednesday night. Sarkozy has stressed his U.S. ties, while Royal wants to strengthen the welfare state.
The audience exploded: "Bayrou, president!"
Two weeks ago, Bayrou pulled even in the polls with Royal, who is attempting to become France's first female president. In the past few days, she has edged a few points ahead of him. In a poll published by the daily newspaper Le Parisien on Friday, Sarkozy and Royal each received the support of 26 percent of respondents, and Bayrou was favored by 21 percent.
But nearly every voter survey in the past two weeks indicates that if Bayrou can win enough votes April 22 to get into a top-two runoff election May 6, he will beat his opponent, whether it is Sarkozy or Royal.
"He's an old leader from the right, but he's having success because the right's candidate, Nicolas Sarkozy, is a little too right, and the Socialist candidate sometimes seems incompetent," said Jean-Luc Parodi, research director at the Center for the Study of French Political Life.





