President Nicolas Sarkozy formally declared his candidacy for a second term on Wednesday seeking to overturn a wide poll lag with promises to get the unemployed back to work and use referendums to consult the French people on reforms.
The conservative president who trails Socialist challenger Francois Hollande in opinion polls ended weeks of speculation over the timing of his bid by saying that like a sea captain in a storm, he could not abandon my post.
Yes I am a candidate for the presidential election, he told TF1 channel's evening news program, saying a strong France would protect people from global economic turmoil.
Dozens of polls show Hollande would beat Sarkozy by up to 15 points in a May 6 runoff, but the president's allies hope his dynamic campaigning style will allow him to narrow the gap before the April 22 first round.
Despite a disapproval rating of 68%, Sarkozy hopes to present himself as an experienced leader who can drag France out of an economic slump and overcome the Euro zone crisis.
If you want to make me say I haven't achieved everything that is for sure. I don't know anyone who has succeeded in everything, Sarkozy said. It was the nearest he came to apologising for the unfulfilled promises of his five-year term.
What sort of campaign will I run? I will try to tell the truth. To ask the right questions and to offer strong ideas and say to the French 'choose now'.
With unemployment stuck at a 12-year high of 9.3% and a stream of news about companies closing or relocating production abroad, Sarkozy -- who took office in 2007 pledging a return to full employment -- said he would focus on retraining the unemployed to get them back to work.
After being accused of not listening to popular discontent over pension reforms and tax measures during his five years in power, Sarkozy pledged to consult voters on his reform programme if re-elected.
The central idea of my program is to give power back to the French people via the referendum, Sarkozy said. He added that economic data released on Wednesday showed his reforms were starting to work.
Preliminary data from the INSEE statistics office showed that French GDP eked 0.2% growth in the fourth quarter, the first time since the beginning of 2009 that French quarterly growth outperformed neighbouring Germany.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesWill he go or will he stay,
Feb 16th, 2012 - 02:03 pm 0The Frenchman lee Penn is catching up fast,
Now he wants to talk to the British, the same country not so long ago, he was ridiculing,
Poor Sarkozy, so many problems and no one cares,
That’s what happens when you get to cocky and look down on other people .
1
Feb 16th, 2012 - 03:00 pm 0Short Arse Sarkosy has great difficulty looking down on anybody.
ha ha
Feb 16th, 2012 - 07:03 pm 0Commenting for this story is now closed.
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