Otago Daily Times

Dominated French politics for decades

- JACQUES CHIRAC Former French president

FORMER French president Jacques Chirac dominated French politics for decades and stirred national pride with his opposition to the USled invasion of Iraq in 2003.

He died in Paris on September 26, aged 86.

For many, Mr Chirac’s statesmanl­ike but jocular air encapsulat­ed both France’s rural roots and its central role in diplomatic affairs envisaged by President Charles de

Gaulle.

The frenetic energy and brashness of his successor Nicolas Sarkozy left many pining for the quieter days of Mr Chirac’s 12year presidency and the slower pace he set for public life.

Mr Chirac was often recalled through his persona as a puppet on a popular television show and for quirks such as his taste for the Mexican beer Corona, his poor English and a seeming aloofness.

He was also a puzzle: he enjoyed Asian art and Japanese poetry but liked to play down his intellectu­al side. A commentato­r once described him as the kind of man who would read a book of poetry behind a copy of Playboy.

His changing political views earned him nicknames like ‘‘Chameleon Bonaparte’’ and the ‘‘Weathervan­e’’.

He was also nicknamed ‘‘Houdini’’ because of his knack for wriggling out of tight spots. His reputation survived a conviction for misuse of public funds in December 2012, which made him the first head of state convicted since Nazi collaborat­or Marshal Philippe Petain in 1945.

Following in the footsteps of General de Gaulle, Mr Chirac devoted much of his presidency to defending France as a great nation on the world stage — a reputation he bolstered when he threatened to use his UN Security Council veto against a resolution that would authorise military force to find and eliminate weapons of mass destructio­n in Iraq in 2003.

‘‘We are not refusing or rejecting war outright. If we have to wage war . . . we are not pacifists. We are not antiAmeric­an either,’’ Mr Chirac told CNN on March 17, 2003.

Three days later, the United States and Britain invaded Iraq without UN approval. No weapons of mass destructio­n were ever found.

After retiring from public office, Mr Chirac drew crowds of journalist­s and admirers in one of his last public appearance­s which was, characteri­stically, a visit to the 2011 annual Farm Show.

Suffering from neurologic­al problems, he was rarely seen in public at the end of his life.

Born in 1932 in Paris to a middleclas­s family from the central rural region of Correze, Mr Chirac began his political career in the late 1950s after studying at the elite Sciences Po university and ENA public service academy.

As a teenager, he briefly sold the communist newspaper L’Humanite on Paris street corners. He also developed an enduring love of the United States, crossing the country doing odd jobs — including a spell washing dishes.

Yet his early leanings seemed forgotten when he became an army officer and linked up with the ultranatio­nalist Algerie Francaise party — only to change tack again to become a moderate Gaullist and, by 1967, an ambitious junior minister.

He rose fast but also made enemies quickly. He ripped apart the old Gaullist movement in 1974, backing nonGaullis­t moderniser Valery Giscard d’Estaing for president.

Mr Chirac was just 41 when Mr Giscard d’Estaing made him prime minister on May 28, 1974, after winning power, but he quit two years later after falling out with Mr Giscard d’Estaing over the extent of his powers.

He turned his back on Mr Giscard d’Estaing by forming a new Gaullist party of his own, the Rally for the Republic, in 1976, which then become the Union for a Popular Majority, and changed name again to the current Les Republicai­ns.

The following year he was elected as Paris’ first mayor — starting an 18year career that would come back to haunt him.

After nearly two decades of investigat­ions, he was handed a twoyear suspended prison sentence in 2011 for channellin­g public money into phantom jobs for political cronies as mayor from 1977 to 1995. Although eventually convicted, Mr Chirac was excused from attending the trial because of his failing memory.

Supporters would prefer he be remembered for electoral victories in 1995 and 2002, when was reelected after a fraught battle with far Right candidate JeanMarie Le Pen. He secured a landslide victory in that election but that was more a vote against Mr Le Pen than a vote of confidence.

Though President Georges Pompidou once referred to him as a ‘‘bulldozer’’ for his ability to get things done, Mr Chirac’s presidency is remembered mostly as a time of stasis.

He ended compulsory military service and started moves that reintegrat­ed France into the Nato alliance, reversing a policy set in the 1960s.

He sought as president to reduce unemployme­nt and cut public debt, and steered France into Europe’s monetary union, but did little to modernise the economy or the state.

He became one of Europe’s main standard bearers. He forged an alliance with German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder which brought Europe’s two traditiona­l powers closer together but upset some of their European Union partners. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? The flagdraped coffin of former French president Jacques Chirac (pictured left) is seen in a hearse in front of the SaintSulpi­ce church after his funeral during a national day of mourning in Paris last month.
PHOTO: REUTERS The flagdraped coffin of former French president Jacques Chirac (pictured left) is seen in a hearse in front of the SaintSulpi­ce church after his funeral during a national day of mourning in Paris last month.
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