Page 2 of 2   <      

Bayrou Shakes Up French Race

French presidential candidate François Bayrou acknowledges supporters at the end of a rally in Paris on Wednesday.
French presidential candidate François Bayrou acknowledges supporters at the end of a rally in Paris on Wednesday. (By Francois Mori -- Associated Press)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Parodi and other pollsters say that despite a political ideology that is more closely linked to the ruling party than the Socialists, Bayrou is siphoning more voters from Royal than Sarkozy.

"In my family everybody votes for the left, and I used to support the Socialists. But this year I'll vote for Bayrou," said Emilie Montessuit, 28, an education adviser from the northeastern Paris suburb of La Courneuve. "I can't choose Royal. I can't be represented by someone who doesn't have any charisma and whose platform is not realistic at all. I believe Bayrou is more honest. He's from the country, he's a real person and someone you can identify with."

Bayrou, who speaks in a folksy southern France drawl, describes himself as the man in the middle. He says he wants to improve education and give French Arab and African minorities greater opportunities to succeed, but he also wants to boost small businesses and make France a louder voice in the European Union.

He says he doesn't want to spend as much money on social programs as the Socialists and doesn't want to be quite as draconian on immigration matters and security issues as the ruling party, the Union for a Popular Movement.

"I am a centrist," Bayrou said in an interview. "Left and right is not the only reference for people anymore."

Bayrou said he believes coalitions made up of ministers from several parties are "the way to govern modern societies."

His opponents argue that model could lead France into the same political disarray as Italy and could make it difficult, if not impossible, for Bayrou to win support for his policies in Parliament, where his party holds a small number of seats.

"Bayrou is rising in the polls, but he doesn't have anyone behind him to back him up," Claude Haut, the Socialist president of the Vaucluse region in southern France, said in an interview during a recent visit to Paris. "He doesn't have a party machine to support him."

But to many potential voters, that is his attraction.

"Bayrou has never been in power," said Mohammed Hamidi, a high school teacher who edits a popular blog based in Paris's immigrant suburbs. "He's pure. He doesn't have a past. It's easier for him to talk about change. Sarkozy has spoken out negatively about us; Royal's a Socialist, and the Socialists never did anything for us; so Bayrou's in the middle and a good man."

Bayrou has projected himself as a political outsider even though he has spent most of his adult life in politics, beginning as an adviser to an agriculture minister in 1981. He has been a member of his local city council, president of a region and a member of both the French National Assembly and the European Parliament. He has served as education minister to two prime ministers.

But it is Bayrou's personal style that most separates him from his rivals. He wades into crowds and works street markets with far greater ease and composure than his two main rivals.

A former classics teacher who raises thoroughbred racehorses as a hobby, he appeals to audiences with accounts of how he helped his mother run the family farm when his father was killed in a hay wagon accident and brags that he is not a product of the elite schools that have produced France's political leadership for decades. He ridicules Sarkozy for hanging out with "billionaires" and "showbiz celebrities."

Bayrou's biggest electoral problem is mushy support, according to pollsters. Opinion surveys show that a larger percentage of Bayrou supporters admit they might change their minds by election day than do voters who favor Sarkozy or Royal.

"Out of all the candidates, only one has worked in his life: Bayrou," said Laurent Jouve, 45, a business executive turned cheese producer from central France.

"He was a farmer from a rural family. The other ones have never really worked. They remained in ministries. They don't know what our lives are like," he said.

But, Jouve added, "I don't know if I'll vote."

Correspondent John Ward Anderson and researcher Corinne Gavard contributed to this report.


<       2


More in World

woman's world

A Woman's World

Multimedia reports on the struggle for equality around the globe.

facebook

Connect Online

Share and comment on Post world news on Facebook and Twitter.

Green Page

Green: Science. Policy. Living.

Full coverage of energy and environment news.

© 2007 The Washington Post Company