The Borneo Post

French left seeks candidate after Hollande bows out

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PARIS: French President Francois Hollande’s dramatic decision not to seek a second term next year leaves the leftwing field open in an election that is proving increasing­ly unpredicta­ble.

Hollande announced Thursday he would not seek re- election next April, bowing to historic low approval ratings.

“I have decided that I will not be a candidate,” the 62-year old Hollande said in a solemn televised address from the Elysee Palace in Paris.

Manuel Valls, who had been a loyal prime minister to Hollande until recently but hinted at the weekend he might run against his boss in planned primaries, is expected to throw his hat in the ring.

The president conceded he had failed to rally his deeply divided Socialist Party behind his candidacy and keep a promise to slash unemployme­nt, which hovers at around one in 10 of the workforce.

“In the months to come, my only duty will be to continue to lead my country,” he said.

The Socialist leader has some of the lowest approval ratings for a French president since World War II.

His term has been marked by U-turns on major policies, terror attacks, a sickly economy and embarrassi­ng revelation­s about his private life.

A new poll on Wednesday predicted he would win just seven percent of votes in the first round of next year’s election — strengthen­ing Socialist Party

I have decided that I will not be a candidate.

critics who view him as a lame duck.

Voter surveys currently tip rightwing Republican­s party candidate Francois Fillon to win the election, with the far- right National Front ( FN) candidate Marine Le Pen seen as the closest challenger.

But the full range of candidates remains unknown and the role of independen­ts such as 38-year- old ex- economy minister Emmanuel Macron are difficult to predict.

The emergence of Fillon threw up a surprise in itself. At the start of the rightwing primary, he was considered a distant third, only to roar through the field and win comfortabl­y.

Hollande’s decision flings open the door to others vying to be the Socialists’ champion.

The party began accepting candidates on Thursday for its primaries, due on Jan 22 and 29. The presidenti­al elections are due on April 23, with a runoff on May 7.

Arnaud Montebourg, a leftist former economy minister, has already submitted his name.

Valls spoke out against Hollande in October after the publicatio­n of a devastatin­g book called “A President Shouldn’t Say That” featuring interviews with the president.

The best- seller was the last straw for many loyalists, for Hollande was seen as sniping at judges, the national football team and even his own government’s policies.

But the prime minister praised Hollande’s Thursday announceme­nt as “the choice of a true statesman”, while Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said it was a “dignified and courageous decision”.

The press was less forgiving, with front page headlines proclaimin­g ‘ The end’, ‘Goodbye, president’and “Hollande gives up”. — AFP

Francois Hollande, French President

 ??  ?? This file photo shows Francois Hollande, then one of the two remaining candidates of the Socialist party’s (PS) 2011 primary vote for France’s 2012 presidenti­al election, deliver a speech during a rally in Paris. — AFP photo
This file photo shows Francois Hollande, then one of the two remaining candidates of the Socialist party’s (PS) 2011 primary vote for France’s 2012 presidenti­al election, deliver a speech during a rally in Paris. — AFP photo

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