The race to lead France’s conservative opposition was in chaos yesterday after both contenders claimed to be winning a vote that has highlighted a deep split between hardliners and moderates since the party lost power in May.
Jean-Francois Cope, a hardline disciple of former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, said he was 1,000 votes in front of Sarkozy’s former prime minister Francois Fillon, who declared 20 minutes later that he was in fact winning.
Ballot-counting resumed at 10am after a pause caused by allegations of fraud, but the chaos has already undermined a contest that was meant to give the right a fresh start after it lost its 17-year hold on the presidency.
Photo: Reuters
“It’s a catastrophe. The Socialists must be pleased with this,” lamented a member of Fillon’s team privately. “Nicolas Sarkozy must be happy too. He must be saying to himself that things are not going well without him.”
“This is known as ballot-stuffing. It’s pretty pathetic,” Cope told BFM television.
While the contest would normally decide the Union for a Popular Movement’s (UMP) candidate for the presidential election in 2017, surveys show that two-thirds of party members see Sarkozy better placed to wrest power back from the ruling Socialists.
Sarkozy has told aides he would feel obliged to stage a comeback if Socialist French President Francois Hollande fails to revive France’s sickly economy.
“Even without knowing who the winner is, we can state that the true victor of this vote is called Nicolas Sarkozy,” the business daily Les Echos wrote in an editorial.
Cope told BFM television that more votes had been counted than there were voter signatures, proving there had been fraud.
Fillon, who said that he had a lead of more than 200 votes, also complained of irregularities in the voting process.
“We don’t have the right to proclaim results before those whose responsibility it is have even done so,” Fillon said.
The UMP, founded by former conservative president Jacques Chirac in 2002 to group together various center-right parties, is reeling from the loss of the presidency, parliament and most French regions.
Conservative daily Le Figaro talked on its front page of an open crisis at the UMP, whose leadership contest was meant to determine whether it cleaves to the centre under Fillon or moves right under the combative Cope in a quest to regain power.
Christophe Barbier, editor of the weekly L’Express, noted that even if Sarkozy ended up being the best-placed candidate to run for the party in 2017, he could not return to a party torn by divisions and infighting.
“The entire kingdom of the right is in ruins,” Barbier said. “Whoever the winner is today, his legitimacy will be weak. Sarkozy can only make a comeback if the party is in good health.”
Fillon, an urbane 58-year-old, has targeted those center-ground voters who abandoned Sarkozy to support Hollande in the May election, put off by Sarkozy’s aggressive manner and hardline stance on issues such as immigration.
Cope, 48, a more polarizing figure, has stirred up criticism in recent weeks by complaining that “anti-white” racism is rife in city suburbs, a stand that appeals to the one in five people who voted far-right in the first round of May’s election.
Cope has said he will follow in Sarkozy’s path but would stand aside in 2017 if Sarkozy wanted to make a comeback.
‘TERRORIST ATTACK’: The convoy of Brigadier General Hamdi Shukri resulted in the ‘martyrdom of five of our armed forces,’ the Presidential Leadership Council said A blast targeting the convoy of a Saudi Arabian-backed armed group killed five in Yemen’s southern city of Aden and injured the commander of the government-allied unit, officials said on Wednesday. “The treacherous terrorist attack targeting the convoy of Brigadier General Hamdi Shukri, commander of the Second Giants Brigade, resulted in the martyrdom of five of our armed forces heroes and the injury of three others,” Yemen’s Saudi Arabia-backed Presidential Leadership Council said in a statement published by Yemeni news agency Saba. A security source told reporters that a car bomb on the side of the road in the Ja’awla area in
‘SHOCK TACTIC’: The dismissal of Yang mirrors past cases such as Jang Song-thaek, Kim’s uncle, who was executed after being accused of plotting to overthrow his nephew North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has fired his vice premier, compared him to a goat and railed against “incompetent” officials, state media reported yesterday, in a rare and very public broadside against apparatchiks at the opening of a critical factory. Vice Premier Yang Sung-ho was sacked “on the spot,” the state-run Korean Central News Agency said, in a speech in which Kim attacked “irresponsible, rude and incompetent leading officials.” “Please, comrade vice premier, resign by yourself when you can do it on your own before it is too late,” Kim reportedly said. “He is ineligible for an important duty. Put simply, it was
Yemen’s separatist leader has vowed to keep working for an independent state in the country’s south, in his first social media post since he disappeared earlier this month after his group briefly seized swathes of territory. Aidarous al-Zubaidi’s United Arab Emirates (UAE)-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) forces last month captured two Yemeni provinces in an offensive that was rolled back by Saudi strikes and Riyadh’s allied forces on the ground. Al-Zubaidi then disappeared after he failed to board a flight to Riyadh for talks earlier this month, with Saudi Arabia accusing him of fleeing to Abu Dhabi, while supporters insisted he was
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa on Sunday announced a deal with the chief of Kurdish-led forces that includes a ceasefire, after government troops advanced across Kurdish-held areas of the country’s north and east. Syrian Kurdish leader Mazloum Abdi said he had agreed to the deal to avoid a broader war. He made the decision after deadly clashes in the Syrian city of Raqa on Sunday between Kurdish-led forces and local fighters loyal to Damascus, and fighting this month between the Kurds and government forces. The agreement would also see the Kurdish administration and forces integrate into the state after months of stalled negotiations on