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  • French 'No' camp aims to consolidate lead

    French 'No' camp aims to consolidate lead
    By John Thornhill in Paris

    FT
    May 22 2005 16:12

    The No camp in France's referendum on Europe's constitutional treaty
    stepped up its campaign over the weekend targeting every shade of
    the political spectrum in an attempt to consolidate its lead in the
    opinion polls.

    The latest poll, published on Sunday by the Ifop institute, showed
    52 per cent of people who have decided how to vote oppose the treaty.
    But the outcome of the vote on May 29 is still up in the air and much
    will depend on the final week of campaigning.

    At a rally of 5,000 supporters in Paris on Saturday, Philippe de
    Villiers, the leader of the nationalist Movement for France, said
    that the adoption of the constitution would strip Europe's nations
    of their sovereignty and transfer too much power to Brussels. "To
    have 450m people run by 18 technocrats is a totalitarian idea from
    the last century," he said.

    Mr de Villiers, who has been one of the most energetic No campaigners
    drawing support from conservative Catholic, Gaullist and sovereigntist
    traditions, said that France had a "special mission" in the world,
    thanks to its historical, geographic, and linguistic links, which
    should never be abandoned.

    "It is impossible to imagine Europe without France. But France is
    also an extra-European power, a world power," he said to wild applause.

    Flanked by anti-constitution MEPs from several European countries,
    including the UK, Sweden, Denmark, and Poland, Mr de Villiers said he
    believed in a Europe of "free peoples." "Ours is a No of the people,
    not of the elite," he said, explaining that it reflected France's
    gut rather than its brains.

    Mr de Villiers stoked the audience's evident antipathy towards
    President Jacques Chirac and his unpopular government, led by prime
    minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin. Every mention of the two politicians'
    names was met with boos. But the audience roared with laughter when
    an artfully edited video was shown contrasting some of Mr Chirac's
    old speeches denouncing the "Brussels bureaucracy" with a more recent
    interview in which he stated he had always been a convinced European.

    Mr de Villiers said one of the most positive consequences of rejecting
    the treaty would be that it would help block Turkey's entry into
    the EU. He attacked Ankara for failing to acknowledge its role in
    the Armenian genocide of 1915 and summoned a flag-waving Armenian
    representative on to the stage. "The people who say there is no link
    between Turkey and the constitution are liars," Mr de Villiers said.

    On the other side of Paris, a slightly smaller number of leftwing
    opponents of the treaty gathered at Place de la Republique, where
    they heard speeches from communist and socialist politicians as well
    as anti-globalisation and environmental campaigners.

    "To vote for this constitution is to shoot yourself in the head, to
    renounce your citizenship," said Jose Bove, the anti-globalisation
    protester. "This constitution is going to lock up Europe in an
    economically liberal model for 50 years."

    France's extreme right parties have also been conducting an active,
    but largely subterranean, campaign against the European constitution.
    But on Saturday morning, a cavalcade of white vans plastered with
    stickers for France's National Front circled Paris's ringroad before
    congregating at a rally in the centre of the city. Campaigners
    handed out leaflets condemning the loss of French jobs to lower cost
    countries abroad.

    The Yes campaign appears to have been startled by the strength of
    this grassroots movement against the constitution. But government
    ministers and pro-constitution campaigners are planning a series of
    high-profile events this week to try to recover momentum. They are
    also hoping that a forthcoming blizzard of appeals on the radio and
    television will help swing voters their way.
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