Nicolas
Sarkozy, born Nicolas Paul Stéphane Sarközy de Nagy-Bocsa on 28
January 1955 in Paris, France, is a French politician. He is
leader of the UMP, and was elected President of the French
Republic on 6 May 2007 after defeating Socialist Party contender
Ségolène Royal during the 2007 election, and will take office on
the morning of 16 May.
Sarkozy is known for his conservative stance on law and order
issues and his admiration for a new economic model for France,
suggesting that the country should have a more liberalised
economy, inspired by the American and British examples.Until
26 March 2007, he served as the Minister of the Interior of
France. His nickname Sarko is used by both supporters and
opponents.
Family background
Nicolas
Sarkozy is the son of a Hungarian immigrant father, Pál
Sárközy de Nagy-Bócsa[1] (Hungarian: nagybócsai Sárközy Pál;
some sources spell it Nagy-Bócsay Sárközy Pál; Hungarian
pronunciation (help·info)), and a French mother Andrée Mallah.
Pál Sárközy was born in 1928 in Budapest into a family
belonging to the lower nobility of Hungary. The family
possessed lands and a small castle in the village of Alattyán
(near Szolnok), 92 km (57 miles) east of Budapest.
Pál Sárközy's father and
grandfather held elective offices in the town of Szolnok.
Although the Sárközy de Nagy-Bócsa (nagybócsai Sárközy) family
was Protestant, Pál Sárközy's mother, Katalin Tóth de Csáford
(Hungarian: csáfordi Tóth Katalin), grandmother of Nicolas
Sarkozy, was from a Catholic aristocratic family.
As the Red Army entered Hungary in 1944, the Sárközy family
fled to Germany[2]. They returned in 1945 but all their
possessions had been seized. Pál Sárközy's father died soon
afterwards and his mother, fearing that he would be drafted
into the Hungarian People's Army or sent to Siberia, urged him
to leave the country and promised she would eventually follow
him and meet him in Paris.
Pál Sárközy managed to flee to
Austria and then Germany while his mother reported to
authorities that he had drowned in Lake Balaton. Eventually,
he arrived in Baden Baden, near the French border, where the
headquarters of the French Army in Germany were located, and
there he met a recruiter for the French Foreign Legion.
He signed up for five years,
and was sent for training to Sidi Bel Abbes, in French
Algeria, where the French Foreign Legion's headquarters were
located. He was due to be sent to Indochina at the end of
training, but the doctor who checked him before departure, who
happened to also be Hungarian, sympathised with him and gave
him a medical discharge to save him from possible death at the
hands of the Vietminh.
He returned to civilian life in
Marseille in 1948 and, although he asked for French
citizenship only in the 1970s (his legal status was that of a
stateless person until then), he nonetheless gallicised his
Hungarian name into "Paul Sarközy de Nagy-Bocsa". Paul Sarkozy
moved to Paris where he used his artistic skills to enter the
advertising industry. He met Andrée Mallah, Nicolas Sarkozy's
mother, in 1949.
Andrée Mallah, then a law student, was the daughter of
Benedict Mallah, a wealthy urologist and STD specialist with a
well-established reputation in the mainly bourgeois 17th
arrondissement of Paris. Benedict Mallah, originally called
Aaron Mallah and nicknamed Benico, was born in 1890 in the
Sephardic Jewish community of Thessaloniki (Salonica), Greece,
which at the time had a Jewish majority.
According to Jewish
genealogical societies, the Mallah family of Salonica
anciently came from Spain which they had left in 1492 when the
Catholic Monarchs had expelled the Jews. Resettled in Provence,
southern France, the familly had moved to Salonica a century
later.
Benico Mallah, the son of a
jeweler, left Salonica, then part of the Ottoman Empire, with
his mother in 1904 at the age of 14 to attend the prestigious
Lycée Lakanal boarding school of Sceaux, in the southern
suburbs of Paris. He studied medicine after his baccalaureate
and decided to stay in France and become a French citizen.
A doctor in the French Army
during World War I, he met a recent war widow, Adèle Bouvier
(1891–1956), from a bourgeois family of Lyon, whom he married
in 1917.
Adèle Bouvier, Nicolas
Sarkozy's grandmother, was a Catholic like the majority of
French people. Mallah, for whom religion had reportedly never
been a central issue, converted to Catholicism upon marrying
Adèle Bouvier, which had been requested by Adèle's parents,
and changed his name to Benedict.
Although Benedict Mallah
converted to Catholicism, he and his family nonetheless had to
flee Paris and take refuge in a small farm in Corrèze during
World War II to avoid being arrested and delivered to the
Germans.
Paul Sarkozy and Andrée Mallah settled in the 17th
arrondissement in Paris and had three sons: Guillaume, born in
1951, who is an entrepreneur in the textile industry, Nicolas,
born in 1955 and François, born in 1957 (an MBA and manager of
a healthcare consultancy company ). In 1959 Paul Sarkozy left
his wife and his three children. He later remarried twice and
had two more children with his second wife.
Early life
During
Sarkozy's childhood, his father refused to give his former
wife's family any financial help, even though he had founded
his own advertising agency and had become wealthy. The family
lived in a small mansion owned by Sarkozy's grandfather,
Benedict Mallah, in the 17th Arrondissement.
The family later moved to
Neuilly-sur-Seine, one of the wealthiest communes of the
Île-de-France région immediately west of the 17th
Arrondissement just outside of Paris. According to Sarkozy,
his staunchly Gaullist grandfather was more of an influence on
him than his father, whom he rarely saw.
His grandfather, a Sephardi Jew
by birth, was a convert to Catholicism, and Sarkozy was,
accordingly, raised in the Catholic faith of his household.
Nicolas Sarkozy, like his brothers, is a baptised and
professing Catholic. Sarkozy also said recently that one of
his role models was former pope John Paul II.
Sarkozy's father Paul did not teach him or his brothers
Hungarian. There is no evidence suggesting that there was an
attempt to educate the Sarkozy siblings about their paternal
ethnic background.
Sarkozy has said that having been abandoned by his father
shaped much of who he is today. As a young boy and teenager,
he felt inferior in relation to his wealthy classmates.
He suffered from insecurities
(his physical shortness of 1.65 m, 5 feet 5 inches, or his
family's lack of money, at least relatively to their 17th
Arrondissement or Neuilly neighbours), and is said to have
harboured a considerable amount of resentment against his
absent father. "What made me who I am now is the sum of all
the humiliations suffered during childhood", he said later.[4]
Studies
Sarkozy
was enrolled in the Lycée Chaptal, a state-funded (public)
middle and high school in the 8th arrondissement, where he
failed his sixième (equivalent to sixth grade in the US and
Year 7 in England and Wales).
His family then sent him to the
Cours Saint-Louis de Monceau, a private Catholic middle and
high school in the 17th arrondissement, where he was
reportedly a mediocre pupil, but where he nonetheless obtained
his baccalauréat in 1973. Later he obtained a bachelor's
degree in law from the Université Paris X Nanterre.
He attended the Institut
d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (more commonly known as Sciences
Po), but did not graduate because he failed his exam in
English [5]. He enrolled himself at Nanterre University in
law, already run down some years after May '68.
After passing the bar exam, he
became a lawyer specializing in French business law and family
law, skills which he would later put to use in divorcing his
first wife and helping his mother take legal action against
his father in order to raise alimony [6].
Personal wealth
Sarkozy
declared to the Constitutional Council disposing of two
million euros, mostly in life insurances [7].
General traits
Nicolas
Sarkozy speaking at the congress of his partyHe is generally
recognized by the right and left as a highly skilled
politician and striking orator.
Supporters of Sarkozy within
France emphasize his charisma, political innovation and
willingness to "make a dramatic break" amidst mounting
disaffection against "politics as usual"; some see him as
wanting to depart from traditional French social and economic
principles in favor of American-style economic reform.
Overall, he is generally considered to be somewhat more pro-U.S.
than most French politicians.
Since November 2004, he has been president of the Union pour
un Mouvement Populaire (UMP), France's major right political
party, and he was Minister of the Interior in the government
of Dominique de Villepin, with the honorific title of Minister
of State, making him effectively the number three man in the
French State after President Jacques Chirac and the prime
minister.
His ministerial
responsibilities included law enforcement and working to
co-ordinate relationships between the national and local
governments, as well as Minister of Cults (in this guise he
created the CFCM, French Council of Muslim Faith). Previously,
he was a deputy to the French National Assembly.
He was forced to resign this
position in order to accept his ministerial appointment. He
previously also held several ministerial posts, including
Finance Minister.
Career
Sarkozy's
political career began at the age of 22, when he became a city
councillor in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a wealthy and exclusive
western suburb of Paris (in the Hauts-de-Seine département). A
member of the Neo-Gaullist party RPR, he went on to be elected
mayor of that town, after the death of the incumbent mayor
Achille Peretti.
Sarkozy had been close to
Peretti, as his mother was Peretti's secretary. The senior RPR
politician in the time, Charles Pasqua, wanted to become
mayor, and asked Sarkozy to organise his campaign. Instead
Sarkozy profited from a short illness of Pasqua to propel
himself into the office of mayor.[8] He was the youngest ever
mayor of any town in France with a population of over 50,000.
He served from 1983 to 2002. In
1988, he became a deputy in the National Assembly.
In 1993, Sarkozy was in the national news for personally
negotiating with the “Human Bomb”, a man who had taken small
children hostage in a kindergarten in Neuilly. The “Human
Bomb” was killed after two days of talks by policemen of the
RAID, who entered the school stealthily while the attacker was
resting.
From 1993 to 1995, he was Minister for the Budget and
spokesman for the executive in the cabinet of Prime Minister
Édouard Balladur. Throughout most of his early career, Sarkozy
had been seen as a protégé of Jacques Chirac. However, in 1995
he spurned Chirac and backed Balladur for President of France.
After Chirac won the election,
Sarkozy lost his position as Minister for the Budget and found
himself outside the circles of power. It is widely believed
that ever since 1995 Chirac has considered Sarkozy's siding
with Balladur as a form of treason, and that the two men now
loathe one another.
However, he came back after the right-wing defeat at the 1997
parliamentary election, as number 2 of the RPR. When the party
leader Philippe Séguin resigned, in 1999, he took the lead of
the Neo-Gaullist party. But it obtained its worst result at
the 1999 European Parliament election, winning 12.7% of the
votes, less than the dissident Rally for France of Charles
Pasqua. Sarkozy lost the RPR leadership.
In 2002, however, after his re-election as President of the
French Republic (see French presidential election, 2002),
Chirac appointed Sarkozy as French Minister of the Interior in
the cabinet of Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, despite
the widely acknowledged friction between the two.
Following Jacques Chirac's 14th
of July keynote speech on road safety Sarkozy as interior
minister pushed through new legislation leading to the mass
purchase of speed cameras and a campaign to increase the
awareness of dangers on the roads.
Following the cabinet reshuffle of 31 March 2004, Sarkozy was
moved to the position of Finance Minister. Tensions continued
to build between Sarkozy and Chirac and within the UMP party,
as Sarkozy's intentions of becoming head of the party after
the resignation of Alain Juppé became clear.
It became increasingly apparent
that Sarkozy would go on to seek the presidency in 2007; in an
often-repeated comment made on television channel France 2,
when asked by a journalist whether he thought about the
presidential election when he shaved in the morning, Sarkozy
commented, “not just when I shave”.
In November 2004 after party elections, Sarkozy became leader
of the UMP with 85% of the vote. In accordance with an
agreement with Chirac, he resigned his position as minister.
Sarkozy's ascent was marked by the division of UMP between
sarkozystes, such as Sarkozy's “first lieutenant”, Brice
Hortefeux, and Chirac loyalists, such as Jean-Louis Debré.
Sarkozy was made Chevalier de la Legion d'honneur (Knight of
the Legion of Honour) by President Chirac in February 2005. He
was re-elected on 13 March 2005 to the National Assembly (as
required by the constitution, he had had to resign as a deputy
when he had become minister in 2002).
On 31 May 2005 the main French news radio station France Info
reported a rumour that Sarkozy was to be reappointed Minister
of the Interior in the government of Dominique de Villepin
without resigning from the UMP leadership. This was confirmed
on 2 June 2005, when the members of the government were
officially announced.
Raffarin government
First
term as Minister of the Interior
Nicolas Sarkozy, here with then prime minister Jean-Pierre
Raffarin, meeting with bicycle-mounted officers of the French
National Police.Towards the end of his first term as Minister
of the Interior, in 2004, Sarkozy was the most popular and
also the most unpopular conservative politician in France,
according to polls conducted at the beginning of 2004.
His “tough on crime” policies,
which included increasing the police presence on the streets
and introducing monthly crime performance ratings, were
popular with many and unpopular for many others.
However, he was criticized for
putting forward legislation which can be questioned as an
infringement on civil rights, and adversely affected
disadvantaged sections of the population.
Sarkozy has sought to ease the sometimes tense relationships
between the general French population and the Muslim
community. Unlike the Catholic Church in France with their
official leaders or Protestants with their umbrella
organisations, the French Muslim community had a lack of
structure with no group that could legitimately deal with the
French government on their behalf.
Sarkozy felt that the
foundation of such an organisation was desirable. He supported
the foundation in May 2003 of the private non-profit Conseil
français du culte musulman (“French Council of Muslim
Worship”), an organisation meant to be representative of
French Muslims.
In addition, Sarkozy has
suggested amending the 1905 law on the separation of Church
and State, mostly in order to be able to finance mosques and
other Muslim institutions with public funds so that they are
less reliant on money from outside of France.
Minister of Finance
During
his short appointment as Minister of Finance, Sarkozy was
responsible for introducing a number of policies. The degree
to which this reflected libéralisme (a hands-off approach to
running the economy) or more traditional French state
dirigisme (intervention) is controversial. He resigned the day
following his election as president of the UMP.
In September 2004, Sarkozy oversaw the reduction of the
government ownership stake in France Télécom from 50.4% to
41%.
Sarkozy backed a partial
nationalisation of the engineering company Alstom decided by
his predecessor when the company was exposed to bankruptcy in
2003.
Sarkozy reached an agreement
with the major retail chains in France to concertedly lower
prices on household goods by an average of 2%; the success of
this measure is disputed, with studies suggesting that the
decrease was closer to 1%.
Taxes: Sarkozy avoided taking a
position on the ISF (solidarity tax on wealth). This is
considered an ideological symbol by many on the Left and
Right. Some in the business world and on the Liberal Right,
such as Alain Madelin, wanted it abolished.
For Sarkozy, that would have
risked being categorised by the Left as a gift to the richest
classes of society at a time of economic difficulties. So
Sarkozy preferred reducing the ISF with the bouclier fiscal.
Villepin government
Second
term as Minister of the Interior
Sarkozy as Minister of the Interior with American Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice, after their bilateral meeting in
Washington D.C.
During his second term at the
Ministry of the Interior, Sarkozy was initially more discreet
about his ministerial activities: instead of focusing on his
own topic of law and order, many of his declarations addressed
wider issues, since he was expressing his opinions as head of
the UMP party.
Main article: Response to the 2005 civil unrest in France
However, the civil unrest in autumn 2005 put law enforcement
in the spotlight again. Sarkozy was accused of having provoked
the unrest by calling young delinquents from housing projects
"rifraff" ("racaille") in Argenteuil near Paris.
After the accidental death of
two youths, which sparked the riots, Sarkozy first blamed it
on "hoodlums" and gangsters. These remarks were sharply
criticised by many on the left wing and by a member of his own
government, Delegate Minister for Equal Opportunities Azouz
Begag.
After the rioting, he made a number of announcements on future
policy: selection of immigrants, greater tracking of
immigrants, and a reform on the 1945 ordinance government
justice measures for young delinquents.
Action as UMP's leader
Sarkozy
currently is the president of UMP, the French conservative
party, elected with 85% of the vote. During his presidency,
the number of members has significantly increased. In 2005, he
supported a "yes" vote in the French referendum on the
European Constitution.
Throughout 2005, Sarkozy became increasingly vocal in calling
for radical changes in France's economic and social policies.
These calls culminated in an interview with Le Monde on 8
September 2005, during which he claimed that the French had
been misled for 30 years by false promises, and denounced what
he considers to be unrealistic policies.
Among other issues:
he called for a simplified and “fairer” taxation system,
with fewer loopholes and a maximum taxation rate (all direct
taxes combined) at 50% of revenue;
he approved measures reducing or denying social support to
unemployed workers who refuse work offered to them;
he pressed for a reduction in the budget deficit, claiming
that the French state has been living off credit for some
time.
Such policies are what are called in France libéral (that is,
in favour of laissez-faire economic policies, although this
judgment is made by French standards) or, with a pejorative
undertone, ultra-libéral. Sarkozy rejects this label of
libéral and prefers to call himself a pragmatist instead.
Sarkozy opened another avenue of controversy by declaring that
he wanted a reform of the immigration system, with quotas
designed to admit the skilled workers needed by the French
economy.
He also wants to reform the
current French system for foreign students, saying that it
enables foreign students to take open-ended curricula in order
to obtain residency in France; instead, he wants to select the
best students to the best curricula in France.
In early 2006, the French parliament adopted a controversial
bill known as DADVSI, which reforms French copyright law.
Since his party was divided on the issue, Sarkozy stepped in
and organised meetings between various parties involved.
Later, groups such as the Odebi
League and EUCD.info alleged that Sarkozy personally and
unofficially supported certain amendments to the law, which
enacted strong penalties against designers of peer-to-peer
systems.
Generally
speaking, Sarkozy is a bête noire of the left (see below), and
is also criticized by some on the right, most vocally by the
supporters of Jacques Chirac and Dominique de Villepin, such
as Jean-Louis Debré, but also by social Catholics such as
Christine Boutin; Boutin however, in the end, gave up her
presidential bid and became a political advisor to Sarkozy.
Critics have accused him of being an authoritarian demagogue,
ready to trade away civil liberties for political gains.[19]
Some of these accusations are echoed by French civil rights
organisations.[citation needed] He is also accused by the Left
of being a populist who favours far-right ideas.
Kärcher remark
Since his famous Kärcher remark, Nicolas Sarkozy has been
lampooned about his fondness for cleaning out the riff-raff;
here, electoral posters of Sarkozy were posted on a Kärcher
car wash.
In the midst of a tense period and following a shooting
that killed an 11-year-old boy in the banlieue of La Courneuve
in June 2005, he quoted a local resident and vowed to clean
the area out “with a Kärcher” (nettoyer la cité au Kärcher,
Kärcher being a well-known brand of pressure cleaning
equipment), and two days before the 2005 Paris riots he
referred to the rioters as voyous (thugs) and racaille, a
slang term which can be translated into English as dregs or
riff-raff, this being criticised as being too hard on the
rioters.
Separation of powers
As Minister of the Interior, Sarkozy has made bold statements
following heinous crimes reported in the media. As a
consequence, he has been accused in certain cases of failing
to respect the separation of powers between the executive and
the judiciary by trying to apply pressure in certain cases.
Most famously, he was criticised, not only by the left-wing
Syndicat de la magistrature judges' union, but also by the
centrist Union syndicale des magistrats for attacks on the
independence of the judiciary.
In September 2005 some youths were acquitted of an arson
attack on a police station in Pau for lack of proof and
Sarkozy was accused of having pushed for a hasty inquiry—Sarkozy
had vowed that the perpetrators would be arrested within three
months.
On 22 June 2005, he announced to law enforcement officials
that he had questioned the Minister of Justice about the
future of “the judge” who had freed a man on parole, enabling
him to commit a murder. These comments were criticised by both
moderate and left-wing magistrates since the decision had been
made by three judges.
Sarkozy has personal friendships with some of the most
powerful figures in the French business world; for example,
Martin Bouygues (from the Bouygues group, owner of the TF1
channel, as well as telecommunications and public works
companies) and Bernard Arnault (from LVMH) were his marriage
witnesses.
His brother, Guillaume, is a senior executive of the MEDEF,
the foremost business union in France; in 2005, he renounced
running for the top position of that union because he said he
did not want to hinder his brother's political career.
Religion and state
Sarkozy, a Catholic, has caused controversy because of his
views on the relationship between religion and state. In 2004,
he published a book called La République, les religions,
l'espérance (“The Republic, Religions, and Hope”), in which he
argued that the young should not be brought up solely on
secular or republican values.
He also advocated reducing the separation of church and
state, arguing for the government subsidy of mosques in order
to encourage Islamic integration into French society. He
flatly opposes financing of religious institutions with funds
from outside France.
After meeting with Tom Cruise, Sarkozy was criticised by
some for meeting with a member of the Church of Scientology,
which is classified as a dangerous sect in France.
War in Iraq
Nicolas Sarkozy, like almost all French politicians,
disapproved of the US-led invasion of Iraq, but was
nonetheless critical of the way Jacques Chirac and his foreign
minister Dominique de Villepin expressed France's opposition
to the war.
Talking at the French-American Foundation in Washington,
D.C. on 12 September 2006, he denounced what he called the
"French arrogance" and said: "It is bad manners to embarrass
one's allies or sound like one is taking delight in their
troubles." He also added: "We must never again turn our
disagreements into a crisis."
This speech, given without the assent of the French
president by a member of the French government traveling
abroad (Sarkozy was still Minister of the Interior), was
criticized by many in France. Jacques Chirac reportedly said
in private that Sarkozy's speech was "appalling" and "a
shameful act".
Regularisation of immigrant families
Sarkozy issued a memorandum (the 'circulaire Sarkozy') on
13 June 2006. In this decision sent to all prefects of France
(his representatives in the provinces), he proposed to hand
some immigration papers to immigrant families with children
integrated in French schools.
A strict series of conditions were listed in order to
accept the regularisation of the situation of these families
(proofs of integration in the country, proof of job, etc.).
This offer attracted a large number of applications (around
25,000) handed to police services, usually under the advice of
charities of specialised social associations.
Most of the files were refused because the minister had
fixed, beforehand, a number of "about 6000" files to be
accepted, whatever happened.
The remaining 20,000 or so people have however been
carefully registered in police files, including their personal
address and child's school (one of the criteria was providing
school certificates). Some consider the situation to be a
possible 'trap' for integrated immigrants.
View on genetic predispositions
A few weeks before the first round of the 2007 presidential
elections, Nicolas Sarkozy said during an interview with
philosopher Michel Onfray that he thinks disorders such as
paedophilia and depression have a genetic as well as social
basis, famously stating "I don't agree with you,
I'd be inclined to think that one is born a paedophile, and
it is actually a problem that we do not know how to cure this
disease"; he also claimed that suicides among youth was linked
to genetic predispositions by stating, "I don't want to give
parents a complex.
It's not exclusively the parents' fault every time a
youngster commits suicide." These claims were criticized by a
few scientists, including geneticist Axel Kahn.
Marriages, divorce and separation
On 23 September 1982 he married Corsican-born
Marie-Dominique Culioli, daughter of a pharmacist from Vico (a
village north of Ajaccio, Corsica). They have two sons, Pierre
(born in 1985) and Jean (born in 1987).
Sarkozy's marriage witness was the prominent right wing
politician Charles Pasqua, later to become a political
opponent. Sarkozy divorced Culioli in 1996, although they had
already been separated for some years. Culioli continues to be
a practicing Catholic and a charismatic and affirms that she
still prays fervently for Sarkozy.
As mayor of Neuilly, Sarkozy met Cécilia Ciganer-Albeniz
(great-granddaughter of composer Isaac Albéniz and of a
Russian father)[36] At the time, she was then married to TV
host Jacques Martin. In 1989, Ciganer-Albeniz left Martin for
Sarkozy.
After a divorce lasting four months, Sarkozy married her in
October 1996 (with witnesses Martin Bouygues and Bernard
Arnault). They have one son, Louis, born in 1997.
Between 2002 and 2005, the couple often appeared together on
public occasions, with Ciganer-Albeniz acting as a sort of
chief aide for her husband. On 25 May 2005, however, the Swiss
newspaper Le Matin revealed that Ciganer-Albeniz had left
Sarkozy for French-Moroccan national Richard Attias, head of
Publicis in New York.
There were other accusations of a private nature in Le
Matin. This led Sarkozy to sue the paper.
In late 2005, the press reported that Sarkozy was in a
relationship with Anne Fulda, a journalist from Le Figaro.
Finally, in January 2006, a reconciliation with
Ciganer-Albeniz took place.
Ciganer-Albeniz and Sarkozy are currently believed to be
living together. In early 2006, Sarkozy suggested to the press
that he had welcomed Ciganer-Albeniz back from the USA,
although the exact circumstances of the reconciliation are not
known.
On
14 January 2007, Nicolas Sarkozy was chosen by the UMP to be
its candidate in the 2007 presidential election. Sarkozy, who
was running unopposed, won 98% of the votes. Of the 327,000
UMP members who could vote, 69% participated in the online
ballot.
In February 2007 Sarkozy appeared on a televised debate on TF1
where he expressed his support for affirmative action for
minorities and the freedom to work overtime, but his
opposition to homosexual marriage.
On 7 February, Nicolas Sarkozy finally decided in favour of a
projected second, non-nuclear, aircraft carrier for the
national Navy (adding to the nuclear Charles de Gaulle),
during an official visit in Toulon with Defence Minister
Michèle Alliot-Marie. "This would allow permanently having an
operational ship, taking into account the constraints of
maintenance", he explained.
This new view on the second
aircraft carrier issue comes in conflict with a January
report, where he was against a second carrier.
On 21 March President Jacques Chirac announced his support for
Sarkozy, adding that he had his vote. Chirac pointed out that
Sarkozy had been chosen as presidential candidate for the
ruling UMP party, and said: "So it is totally natural that I
give him my vote and my support." To focus on his campaign,
Sarkozy stepped down as interior minister on 26 March.
During the campaign, rival candidates had accused Sarkozy of
being a "candidate for brutality" and of presenting overly
hardline views about France's future.[44] He was also
criticized by opponents for allegedly courting conservative
voters in policy-making in a bid to capitalise on right-wing
sentiments among some communities.
However, his popularity was
sufficient to see him polling as the frontrunner throughout
the later campaign period, consistently ahead of rival
Socialist candidate Ségolène Royal.
The first round of the presidential election was held on 22
April 2007. Nicolas Sarkozy came in first with 31.18% of the
votes, ahead of Ségolène Royal of the Socialists with 25.87%.
In the second round, Sarkozy came out on top to win the
election with 53.06% of the votes ahead of Ségolène Royal with
46.94%.
In his speech immediately
following the announcement of the election results, Sarkozy
stressed the need for France's modernisation, but also called
for national unity, mentioning that Royal was in his thoughts.
In that speech, he claimed “The French have chosen to break
with the ideas, habits and behaviour of the past. I will
restore the value of work, authority, merit and respect for
the nation.”
First term
as President (2007- )

On
6th May, Nicolas Sarkozy become the 23rd Président of French
Republic.
The power transfer from Jacques Chirac is scheduled for the
morning of 16 May at the Élysée Palace, where he will be given
the nuclear codes of the Force de frappe and be presented the
Grand Master's Collar, symbol of his new function of Grand
Master of the Legion of Honour.
At that point he will become President. A public ceremony
in Paris is also planned. The same day, Prime Minister
Dominique de Villepin will resign. Sarkozy will appoint his
first Prime Minister on May 17.

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