http://www.washtimes.com/upi-breaking/20050322-020021-4706r.htm


Walker's World: France's Turkish problem
By Martin Walker
UPI Editor


Washington, DC, Mar. 22 (UPI) -- One swallow may not make a summer, but two
opinion polls make a trend. And French voters have now twice in a week
recorded a small majority against the new European Union constitution, which
faces a referendum in France on May 29. 

Only a month ago, the opinion pills were recording a solid 60:40 "Yes" vote.
The French Socialists had gone through a tough internal debate and narrowly
voted to support the constitution even though its member were worried about
its economic clauses being too "liberal" (by which the French mean
Anglo-Saxon, Reagan and Thatcher-style raw capitalism).

But suddenly the mood has soured, and opinion has shifted. There seem to be
three main reasons for this. The first is irritation with President Jacques
Chirac and with Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin. The government last
week caved in to massed demonstrations by 600,000 railway and postal workers
and teachers protesting for higher wages and against labor market reforms.
Widespread strikes crippled air and rail traffic, just as the International
Olympics Committee was in Paris to assess the city's bid for the 2012
Olympics.

The second reason is a broader disgust with the French political class after
yet another round of corruption trials. Gerard Longuet, a former industry
minister and leader of Chirac's old party is charged with sharing in a $40
million kickback scheme after the award of a $2 billion school building
contract. The case splatters yet more mud over Chirac, who remains immune
from criminal charges while serving as president. But a lot of old mud still
sticks to Chirac from the case of Alain Juppe, his former prime minister.
Juppe was barred from public life for 18 months for his part in a previous
corruption case, concerning illegal campaign contributions while Chirac was
mayor of Paris.

The third reason for the shift in opinion has been the success the "No"
campaign has had in making the referendum on the Constitution a referendum
on Turkey's application to join the EU. The prospect of another 75 million
low-wage Turkish Muslims joining the EU is not popular in a France where
unemployment is over 10 percent, and where an estimated 7 million Muslim
immigrants from North Africa have heightened ethnic tensions.

The latest poll was published in Monday's Figaro and showed 52 percent of
French voters opposed to the European Constitution. In what looks like a
sign of panic, French Socialist leader François Hollande has threatened
sanctions against members of his party campaigning for a "No" vote. Other
political figures are insisting that President Chirac start campaigning more
strongly for a "Yes" vote - although some fear that Chirac's unpopularity
could provoke a backlash.

A French "No" to the EU's draft new constitution would be devastating. A
"No" by a new member state like Poland could be met by demanding the Poles
vote again, as the Danes and Irish were told they must after voting "No" in
previous EU referendums. And a "No" by a known Euroskeptic country like
Britain would be serious but not necessarily lethal for the new
Constitution.

But France is different. France is one of the original six founding members
of the European Community at the 1957 treaty of Rome, and the whole European
project stemmed from an original vision by Frenchmen Jean Monnet and Robert
Schuman. But with the economies of both Germany and Britain significantly
larger than that of France, and with an enlarged EU of 25 nations refusing
the traditional French claim on Europe's leadership, the EU is no longer
working quite so well for France. And with the latest figures for youth
unemployment showing 23 percent of those under 25 out of work, France is not
working so well either.

Hence the doubts among the French public, and also the increasing demands by
French leaders for "concessions" from the EU Commission in Brussels. France
this week managed to get the rules on budget deficits relaxed for members of
the euro currency, and last week blocked a new agreement for a single EU
market in services - defensive measures spurred by French fears of being
undercut by low-paid workers from new EU members like Poland, or from Turkey
in the future.

Angered by such French demands, usually linked to the need for a "Yes" vote
in the referendum, the president of the European Commission Jose Manuel
Barroso has now launched a scathing attack on the French political classes
as a whole for allowing public opinion to become skeptical of Europe. It was
not Europe's fault, Barroso said, that French voters had been sidetracked by
issues like Turkey.

"If there is confusion in French public opinion, it is not our fault," Mr.
Barroso said. "I cannot accept the idea that because there is a referendum
in one country, the commission cannot continue with our own work program.
The French public has its concerns, but at the same time there are other
states in the EU. We are not only having a French referendum, there is going
to be a Dutch referendum, a Danish referendum, and next year one in
England."

The constitution was drafted by a team led by former French President Valery
Giscrad d'Estaing, and has now been agreed upon by all the 25 EU member
governments. But the ratification by referendum is proving tricky. The
constitution is supposedly required to streamline decision-making in the
enlarged EU of 25, but critics say its commitment to a single EU foreign and
security policy, and the EU's creeping erosion of national sovereignty in
economic and social affairs, is leading to a federal superstate. 

Until this week, most EU-watchers reckoned that the most likely "No" vote
would probably come from Britain, with some doubts whether the Danes, Dutch,
Czechs and Poles might join them. But the evidence of French disaffection,
with just 50 days before the French referendum, has underlined the degree to
which the once purely British disease of Euro-skepticism has now spread more
widely through mainland Europe.

And lurking behind that prospect of a French rejection is the planned
campaign of France's "No" camp, to put the face of Turkey's new Premier
Reccip Erdogan onto their posters as the symbol of their opposition to
Turkish membership in the EU. A French "No" would be a very serious setback
for Europe. Making Turks and Muslims the scapegoat of France's disaffection
could have far more serious consequences for an EU with a growing Islamic
population at home, and the whole Middle East just across the Mediterranean.
  
 
 



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