While the details of his conviction focus on fraud and corruption, that a former president was jailed is a reflection of the intensified class struggle in France and how this sharpens the conflict within the pro-capitalist parties vying for office.
Sarkozy’s connections got him a private cell with a TV; since he is a former president (the first French president to be incarcerated), he has two bodyguards, but he still is in prison. His closest supporters claim that French presidents should be above the law. The French Communist Party in an official statement said the law applies to everyone and Sarkozy was treated justly.
Current President Emmanuel Macron is in a weak position to grant Sarkozy clemency. (Sarkozy had endorsed the current banker-president.) Macron’s prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, is just hanging on by the thinnest of margins.
Lecornu had to resign Oct. 6 after losing a vote of no-confidence in Parliament. Macron appointed him for a second time on Oct. 10. Lecornu survived a new no-confidence vote only because the Socialist Party abstained after he promised to suspend the detested pension reforms. (The Socialist Party is socialist in name alone. It has frequently directed the government at the service of the imperialist French ruling class.)
The French parliament is divided into three, nearly equal parts: a popular left called the New People’s Front, a center including Macron’s party Renaissance and the right wing, which includes Marine Le Pen’s party, the National Rally along with Sarkozy’s party, the Republicans.
The government will not survive a vote if the left and right both vote against it.
The Socialists claim its opposition is what forced the government to suspend the very unpopular pension reforms, which are really cuts to pensions. The big union confederations in France — the General Confederation of Labor (CGT) and the French Democratic Confederation of Labor (CFDT) — point instead to the months of general strikes and mass mobilizations that they held against the pension cuts.
The budget [that] Lecornu is proposing funds the suspension of the pension cuts with cuts in other services and higher taxes. The CGT has called for a “mobilization” against his planned 2026 budget starting Nov. 6 and continuing for several days.
CGT Secretary-general Sophie Binet told the media: “This budget is very dangerous. It absolutely must be fundamentally amended.” (connexionfrance.com, Oct. 16)
bloubz - 1mon
The biggest mistake is calling the president's party center. It is right to far-right and constitute the right coalition along with most Social Party members, part of the republicans, and some far-right politicians
AnarchoBolshevik in europe
France: Ex-president’s jailing reflects political turmoil
https://www.workers.org/?p=88744The biggest mistake is calling the president's party center. It is right to far-right and constitute the right coalition along with most Social Party members, part of the republicans, and some far-right politicians