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Dandyman

In London village.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/6630797.stm


EARLY RESULTS (73% OF VOTES COUNTED)
Nicolas Sarkozy: 53.3%
Segolene Royal: 46.7%
Turnout: 84.8%
Spoiled ballots: 3.75%
Source: French Interior Ministry


Sarkozy takes French presidency

Conservative Nicolas Sarkozy has won the hotly-contested French presidential election, according to early results.
With three quarters of votes counted, Mr Sarkozy has 53%, compared with 47% for socialist Segolene Royal, while turnout is put at 85%.

Mr Sarkozy, 52, the son of a Hungarian immigrant, takes over from the 74-year-old Jacques Chirac.

Riot police are reported to have fired tear gas at demonstrators protesting in central Paris at Mr Sarkozy's victory.

According to the French news agency AFP, a few hundred stone-throwing rioters charged the police in the Place de la Bastille, where 5,000 supporters of Segolene Royal had earlier gathered to hear the results.

Mr Sarkozy's supporters have gathered for an open-air concert in the Place de la Concorde, which is expected to continue until the early hours.



In his victory speech, Mr Sarkozy said he would be the president of all the French.

"France has given me everything, and now it is my turn to give back to France what France has given me," he said.

He said the US could count on France's friendship, but urged Washington to take a lead in the fight against climate change.

He also said he believed deeply in European integration, but appealed to France's partners to understand the importance of social protection.

"[Voters] have chosen to break with the habits and the ideals of the past so I will rehabilitate work, authority, morality, respect, merit!" he said.

After he finished speaking at his party headquarters, jubilant supporters sang a rousing rendition of the French national anthem.

Ms Royal is the first woman ever to have made it to the second round of a French presidential election.


Ms Royal was gracious in defeat

Conceding defeat - the third in a row for France's Socialist Party - she thanked 17m French people for their votes, saying she could measure their sadness and their pain.

"I gave it all my energy, and will continue," she told supporters. "Something has risen up that will not stop."

She expressed the hope that "the next president of the Republic" would accomplish his mission at the service of all the French people.

Mr Sarkozy has promised to try to reform France to face the challenges of the 21st century, with putting the nation back to work at the top of his agenda.

He has pledged to bring unemployment down from 8.3% to below 5% by 2012.

He is also expected to bring forward policies to cut taxes and keep trains running during strikes, in the first 100 days after he takes office on 17 May.

But the BBC's Caroline Wyatt in Paris says he will have to work hard to unite the French, and try to win round those who voted against him.

More than 3,000 police have been deployed in Paris and its multi-ethnic suburbs in case Mr Sarkozy's victory sparks a repeat of the riots seen in 2005.

French pundits greeted the strong turnout as a victory for French democracy.

Both candidates worked hard to woo the supporters of the third-placed candidate in round one, centrist Francois Bayrou.

Polls suggest that they each won over 40% of the Bayrou voters, and that 20% did not cast a ballot in round two.
 






Les Biehn

GAME OVER
Aug 14, 2005
20,610
Barrel of Fun said:
Segolene Royal could do a job. :love:

An incredible turnout by the French voters. We could learn a thing or two from them.

My god BoF, I've said it before and I will say it again, you would poke literally anything.
 




Dandyman

In London village.
Les Biehn said:
My god BoF, I've said it before and I will say it again, you would poke literally anything.

:D

(Although I can't help feeling Les Francais are going to have 5 years of the biggest hate f*** possible).
 




SussexSpur

New member
Jan 24, 2004
1,696
Finchley
There's something about the BBC website picture that amuses me.

_42892369_sark_ap_203i.jpg


But that's about all that does.

Merkel, Sarkozy, Brown - interesting new-leader days in Europe, at least.
 




Barrel of Fun

Abort, retry, fail
Les Biehn said:
My god BoF, I've said it before and I will say it again, you would poke literally anything.

:lol:

The mature lady, Lesley, the mature lady. Attractive, clever, sophisticated and beautiful. I would have to ignore to socialist aspect, but noone is perfect.

Sarkozy does seem to have a screw or three loose.
 
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Beach Hut

Brighton Bhuna Boy
Jul 5, 2003
72,032
Living In a Box
Hope France doesn't change much as I was planning to retire there :down:
 








Dandyman

In London village.
coventrygull said:
Even Le Pen was seen as more liberal than Sarkozy:lolol:

:ohmy: :D

Wonder if any FN types did vote for the immigrant candidate. The contradictions must have bought on more than a few minor heart attacks.
 


coventrygull

the right one
Jun 3, 2004
6,752
Bridlington Yorkshire
Dandyman said:
:ohmy: :D

Wonder if any FN types did vote for the immigrant candidate. The contradictions must have bought on more than a few minor heart attacks.

You should of seen the FN poster appealing to the immigrants. I kid you not :lolol:
 


SussexSpur

New member
Jan 24, 2004
1,696
Finchley
If only De Villepin could/would now hand over Prime Ministerial power to Lilian Thuram.
 




Lazy Democracy's have voluntary voting!

It is a conservative ploy to marginalise those they know won't vote for them, but can swing close elections. It is everybody's responsibility to vote to honour those who died for freedom and the right, even when they themselves didn't have a right to.
 






Dandyman

In London village.
Hatterlovesbrighton said:
Sarkozy is just what the French need. Unemployment is at 9%!

Hard to see how a hard-right advocate of US style politics is going to improve the lives of the French unemployed. I can see how he may well make the French elite very wealthy and please the neo-cons in Washington by aping Blair's subservient attitude but other than that it seems like five years of intense political conflict for the French to me.
 




Dandyman said:
:ohmy: :D

Wonder if any FN types did vote for the immigrant candidate. The contradictions must have bought on more than a few minor heart attacks.
Which immigrant are you talking about? The one born in Senegal or the one born in Paris?
 


Dandyman said:
Hard to see how a hard-right advocate of US style politics is going to improve the lives of the French unemployed.

French employment and social policies have hamstrung French businesses on the global stage. Reducing restrictions and red tape should make them more competitive, and profitable. This should enable growth, expansion of the economy and create more jobs.
I've never voted for a right or centre right party before but had I been voting in France I would have gambled on Sarkozy. Sure it's a risk but France is in a mess right now and something needs to change.
 


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