In a blow to French President Jacques Chirac, a court convicted his ally and potential successor, former Prime Minister Alain Juppe, in a party financing scandal on Friday and disqualified him from office, rocking the governing right and the race for the French presidency in 2007.
Pale and close to tears, Juppe rushed out of the packed courtroom by a back door, his illustrious political career in tatters, after the three-judge panel found him guilty of overseeing the systematic use of public funds to pay workers in Chirac's party.
PHOTO: EPA
The court in the western Paris suburb of Nanterre sentenced Juppe, 58, to a suspended 18-month prison sentence for "illegally taking advantages." Its sternly worded verdict could doom any hope for Juppe, one of France's brightest political stars, of ever ascending to the presidency.
"While vested with an elected public mandate, Alain Juppe betrayed the trust of the sovereign people," it said. "The nature of the acts committed is intolerable to society."
Under French election law, the conviction automatically barred the legislator and mayor of Bordeaux from voting for five years and holding office for 10. But the punishment will not take effect until a higher court has judged his appeal.
The higher court's decision could take a year. If it rejects the appeal, Juppe's career would be finished, robbing Chirac of the man many consider his favorite to succeed him.
"It's inconceivable that France be deprived of a leader like Alain Juppe, recognized in France and in the world for his qualities as a statesman," said Jacques Barrot, labor minister when Juppe was Chirac's prime minister from 1995 to 1997.
Barrot said he was "stupefied" and that the consequences of the decision, "seem, as they do to many French people, to be disproportionate to the charges."
While an unpopular prime minister, Juppe is regarded as one of the brightest politicians of his generation, although his fierce intellect and aloof efficiency once drew comparisons with a computer. Chirac once praised him as "the best among us." Their relationship dates back to the 1970s, when Chirac contracted Juppe as his speechwriter.
Juppe's conviction could herald legal problems for Chirac once the president leaves office, because in convicting Juppe, the court condemned a system of political financing in place in the early 1990s when Chirac was Paris' mayor.
Protected by presidential immunity, Chirac is for the moment beyond the reach of investigators who hoped to question him. Investigators focused instead on his underlings -- including his loyal lieutenant Juppe.
Juppe was "a windbreak for the real person responsible, who is Mr. Chirac," said Deputy Paris Mayor Yves Contassot, a member of the leftist Greens Party. But he welcomed the conviction, saying: "At least it is a first step, and it's an excellent thing."
Chirac has not said if he will run again in 2007. But by seemingly knocking Juppe out of contention, the ruling could clear a path for Chirac's high-profile Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, who has made no secret of his presidential ambitions.
The conviction stems from a fake jobs scheme in the 1990s under which Paris City Hall paid the salaries of some personnel of Chirac's political party. Juppe was both the city's finance director under Chirac, who was mayor for 18 years until elected president in 1995, and was secretary-general of Chirac's party, then called the Rally for the Republic, or RPR.
Now, Juppe heads Chirac's Union for a Popular Movement party, or UMP, which replaced the RPR. The court ruling, coming just two months before regional elections in France, is likely to cause chaos in the UMP, the governing party.
Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin said he was surprised by the verdict and expressed hope that it would be overturned.
"The service of France and of the French needs Alain Juppe," said Raffarin, who served in Juppe's government as a minister for commerce. Chirac, speaking from UN offices in Geneva, declined to comment.
Conservative local officials in Bordeaux, where Juppe is mayor, urged him to fight the verdict.
"We need you and we are counting on you," they said in a message.
Should Juppe step down as the UMP's leader and be replaced by Sarkozy, the interior minister would get a platform from which to challenge Chirac in 2007 should the president seek re-election.
Juppe had said earlier this month that he would quit politics if barred from office. But after Friday's verdict, his lawyer said Juppe would make known his decision in the coming days.
The attorney, Francis Szpiner, attacked the judges' ruling as "questionable and unjust" and suggested it was politically motivated.
"The court wanted to throw Mr. Juppe out of politics," Szpiner said.
The punishment was far heavier than the eight-month suspended sentence sought by the prosecution, which had also suggested that the judge omit any conviction from Juppe's record -- a loophole that would have left him free to pursue public life.
The prosecutor said it was up to voters, not a judge, to decide if someone is unelectable.
Juppe was one of 27 people on trial in the case, but his role was limited to the salaries of seven people paid by City Hall between 1990 and 1995. Still, his sentence was the harshest handed down. All but six of the defendants were convicted. Patrick Stefanini, Juppe's top aide at the time, received a 12-month suspended prison sentence, which he was appealing.
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