France’s Francois Fillon fumbles

France’s Francois Fillon fumbles

February 04, 2017
French rightwing candidate for the upcoming presidential election Francois Fillon (right) flanked by his wife Penelope, looking on during a campaign rally in Paris. Fillon’s campaign has been struggling since it emerged that his Welsh-born wife Penelope was paid 830,000 euros (900,000 USD) as a parliamentary assistant over more than a decade ‑ despite almost no one recalling her on the job. — AFP
French rightwing candidate for the upcoming presidential election Francois Fillon (right) flanked by his wife Penelope, looking on during a campaign rally in Paris. Fillon’s campaign has been struggling since it emerged that his Welsh-born wife Penelope was paid 830,000 euros (900,000 USD) as a parliamentary assistant over more than a decade ‑ despite almost no one recalling her on the job. — AFP



AS upstanding family man, untainted by scandal, a committed Catholic from rural western France — Francois Fillon won the conservative presidential primary and shot to the top of opinion polls in large part on his irreproachable reputation. In just over a week, his chances of winning France’s presidency have nosedived amid a string of allegations that he’s not what he painted himself to be.

Accusations that his wife and children earned nearly $1 million in taxpayer-funded salaries for fake jobs are throwing the entire presidential race into disarray — and threatening to bring a half century of left-right politics down with it. As Fillon stumbles less than three months before France’s election, nationalist Marine Le Pen and maverick independent Emmanuel Macron stand to gain.

Support for Fillon is even faltering in his political fiefdom in western France. His die-hard fans are crying “witchhunt,” but more and more residents of Sable-sur-Sarthe feel betrayed, their dreams dashed.

“He was the incarnation of the kind of politician that we wished to vote for ... anti-bling, serious, keeps his promises,” said retired law professor Jean-Dominique Bunel.

When he volunteered in voting stations for the recent primaries, Bunel said Fillon had 98-99 percent of the vote. “We were even afraid he’d have 100 percent,” he laughed.

Now Bunel says he feels like an “orphan,” with nowhere to turn for political leadership.

No one in Sable-sur-Sarthe denies that Fillon was good to their town and the region, bringing them investment, jobs, a high-speed train line.

Over decades as mayor and then lawmaker representing the Sarthe region, he sat in the town’s central plaza, and wouldn’t accept free coffee. He chatted with shopowners on the cobblestoned main commercial thoroughfare. His Welsh-born wife Penelope sees neighbors at Mass, and occasionally comes to shop in her rubber boots after working in the garden of their manor.

As prime minister from 2007-12 under attention-seeking, unpredictable President Nicolas Sarkozy, Fillon formed a perfect counterpoint — low-key and reliable. Pollsters say that image played a big part in Fillon’s appeal in the conservative primary. He beat out Sarkozy for the nomination, repeatedly targeting his former boss for his legal problems: “It is pointless to speak of authority if you yourself are not irreproachable,” Fillon said during a campaign meeting in August in Sable-sur-Sarthe.

That’s why its residents feel so betrayed.

“We are asking ourselves who is the real Francois Fillon,” said Gerard Fretilliere, a left-wing city councilman who admired Fillon’s contribution to the region despite coming from the other side of the political spectrum.

“He led his whole campaign saying ‘I have nothing to be reproached for. I’m not like the others,’” Fretilliere said. “And then, boom, we discover that he was hiding things. And for him, that’s devastating.”

Equally shocking to many voters is that the running theme in Fillon’s prime ministerial career and presidential campaign has been cutting back on government spending, from raising the retirement age to austerity measures in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. A key campaign promise this year: to slash half a million public-sector jobs. — AFP


February 04, 2017
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