Toronto Star

Jean’s reign could be nearing the end

Ex-governor general has uphill battle for second term at la Francophon­ie Michaëlle Jean is defending her record and expenses as head of la Francophon­ie.

- ALLAN WOODS QUEBEC BUREAU

MONTREAL— The rein of former governor general Michaëlle Jean as head of la Francophon­ie, the global group of Frenchspea­king states, appears to be coming to a rather inglorious ending.

After fighting off what she has called a “smear campaign” that has raised questions over the last year about her spending habits and management of the organizati­on, Jean published an op-ed this week saying “I am ready to spring to the saddle for a second mandate” when the 84 member states and government­s gather for a summit this fall in Armenia.

The letter was timed to the arrival of French President Emmanuel Macron, who was attending the G7 summit in Quebec’s Charlevoix region. But the head of the country that wields the greatest influence in la Francophon­ie and pays the largest portion of its bills declared last month that France would throw its support behind Rwandan foreign minister Louise Mushikiwab­o to replace Jean. Macron said Thursday in Montreal that he has always believed a consensus candidate from one of the African member countries is best placed to lead the organizati­on “because the epicentre of la Francophon­ie is in Africa.”

Jocelyn Coulon, a political scientist and foreign policy expert at Université de Montréal, has been watching the geopolitic­al machinatio­ns play out with a sense of disbelief that Jean might think she could still win enough support for a second term. He said it is clear to him that Macron would have received the blessing of other African nations, which make up a majority of the organizati­on’s membership, before publicly backing the Rwandan candidate.

“Madame Jean is just a bureaucrat. She is there to serve the member states, and if there is a majority who have come out against her she will have to leave,” Coulon said. “But she should already understand that, and I’m surprised that she hasn’t understood.”

Jean’s position as secretaryg­eneral is part administra­tor, part diplomat. But detractors say the former Radio-Canada journalist has been conducting herself like the monarch that she was appointed to represent as Canada’s governor general from 2005 to 2010.

The charge against the Haitian-born Jean has been led by journalist­s from Quebecor who have been digging into her ex- penses and the finances of the organizati­on that she has led since 2014.

That has produced a stream of headlines seizing on the $500,000 spent to renovate her Paris apartment, a $50,000 bill for four nights at Manhattan’s Waldorf Astoria hotel, the acquisitio­n of a $20,000 piano and the $1-million price tag for a youth-engagement program carried out aboard the replica of a historic 18th century ship, the Hermione.

“Michaëlle Jean should know that it is no longer possible today to conduct oneself like this. She is only feeding the cynicism that leads to populism,” Louise Beaudoin, a former Parti Québécois minister and Quebec’s representa­tive to France in the 1980s, wrote recently in the opinion pages of Le Devoir.

Jean and her aides have made several attempts to lay out their version of events, including an explanatio­n of her expenses that was published in Le Soleil, a Quebec City newspaper that competes with the Journal de Québec, a Quebecor title.

The hotel costs, for example, were for six people attending the United Nations General Assembly in 2015, a period during which Manhattan’s pricey hotels skyrocket. The piano was to decorate an official residence that is used for hosting visitors and events. And the apartment renovation­s have actually saved some $570,000 in recurring costs over four years.

The government­s of Canada and Quebec both say they intend to support Jean in her quest for re-election, but that counts for little if France and the African member states have made up their mind, said Coulon. “No matter the record of Madame Jean, France wants someone who comes from Africa,” he said. “It’s very difficult to counter a decision of the French because they’re the ones who dominate the organizati­on.”

 ?? ERIC FEFERBERG/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ??
ERIC FEFERBERG/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada