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Hollande To Challenge Sarkozy In 2012 Presidential Vote

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  • Hollande To Challenge Sarkozy In 2012 Presidential Vote

    HOLLANDE TO CHALLENGE SARKOZY IN 2012 PRESIDENTIAL VOTE

    Tert.am
    09:55 17.10.11

    Francois Hollande has been elected the French Socialist Party's
    candidate for the 2012 presidential vote when he is expected to
    challenge Nicolas Sarkozy, BBC news reportedd.

    His rival, Martine Aubry, conceded victory in Sunday's primary run-off
    before final results were known.

    In his victory speech, Hollande said he would champion those who could
    "no longer bear" Mr Sarkozy's policies.

    Opinion polls suggest he could beat President Nicolas Sarkozy, who
    has not formally declared his own bid.

    Mr Hollande had a lead of 56% to 44% over his rival in the count.

    It is the first time voters have taken part in a US-style primary race,
    and some 2.7 million voters took part in the run-off.

    One of Mr Sarkozy's top allies dismissed Mr Hollande's election result
    as weak.

    Francois Hollande has been lucky. He was lucky because the man tipped
    to win the Socialist primary - Dominique Strauss-Kahn - disqualified
    himself in a sexual escapade in a Manhattan hotel. And he was lucky
    because his eventual rival - former minister Martine Aubry - is hardly
    the most charismatic of politicians.

    But Francois Hollande also worked hard for this victory. More
    than a year ago he started planning for the leadership race. He has
    criss-crossed the country building up networks of support. And he has
    staked out a careful position that manages to look both left-wards
    (to the party's official programme and its commitments to the public
    sector) and centre-wards (with promises of fiscal responsibility to
    get France through the debt crisis).

    Now comes the hard part. Francois Hollande has shown that he is a
    consensual figure, with a genial character that makes him hard to
    dislike. But does he really have what it takes to go through months
    of brutal campaigning against Nicolas Sarkozy - and then lead France
    through the difficult years that surely lie ahead?

    Remember: this is a man who has never once in his life held ministerial
    office, even at a junior level. But then, as his supporters say,
    nor had Barack Obama.

    Speaking at Socialist headquarters in Paris, Mr Hollande said:
    "I have heard the anger and concerns of a great number of people,
    unemployment, job insecurity, high rents, healthcare which is becoming
    more and more inaccessible.

    "I have noticed the concerns about our common future, the failures
    of globalisation, the failings of Europe, the environment."

    "France must find a plan again which will give it back all of its
    meaning," Mr Hollande said, adding that he would "show a different
    vision of the presidency".

    He would, he said, be "the candidate of respect and dialogue".

    "I want to offer France's youth a better life than ours: I want to
    put the magic back in the French dream," he said.

    In her concession speech, Ms Aubry, who leads the Socialist Party,
    said she welcomed Mr Hollande's victory and would invest all her
    "strength and energy to ensure that he is the president of France
    seven months from now".

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