Oman Daily Observer

Scandals test French voters’ patience with politician­s

- MARIE WOLFROM

French politician­s accused of playing fast and loose with their finances have long gotten a pass from voters, but a string of recent scandals is putting their patience to the test. For many, ‘Penelopega­te’, the media’s term for the furore over the fake jobs claims against presidenti­al candidate Francois Fillon, may be the last straw. Once considered the frontrunne­r in elections set for April and May, Fillon is scrambling to save his candidacy after the Canard Enchaine newspaper reported that his wife, Penelope, was paid more than 800,000 euros ($860,000) to be his parliament­ary aide, but never actually worked.

He is also accused of hiring two of his children when he was a senator from 2005 to 2007, paying them a total of 84,000 euros, the paper said.

But financial shenanigan­s have often caught up with prominent French officials: Ex-president Jacques Chirac was found guilty in 2011 over a “fake jobs” scandal while he was mayor of Paris in the 1990s.

Former president Nicolas Sarkozy is under investigat­ion on charges of illegal campaign financing, and Marine Le Pen, the far-right candidate in this year’s presidenti­al race, is facing claims of using EU funds to pay officials in her National Front party.

“It all stems from a culture of caste, of privilege... where they assume that reaching public office means they can get away with doing whatever they want with public money,” said Jean Garrigues, a history professor and author of “Elysee Circus”.

Many voters are also still fuming over the ‘ Cahuzac case’ of 2013, when former budget minister Jerome Cahuzac was found to have stashed money in Switzerlan­d to avoid taxes.

The French “no longer overlook these things, they don’t accept them,” said Daniel Lebegue, president of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal France.

A 2010 report from his group on transparen­cy among public officials in 27 European countries ranked France second to last, just ahead of Slovenia.

In 2014, a specialise­d financial prosecutor’s office was created, with judges focusing on fraud and corruption. In November 2016, France finally created an official anti-corruption agency.

“But between the moment they change the rules and the institutio­ns, and seeing a change in politician’s attitudes and behaviour, it takes some time,” Lebegue said. — AFP

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