France prepares to vote on EU constitution (Agencies) Updated: 2005-05-28 19:18
France goes to the polls for a historic referendum on the EU constitution,
one that could send shockwaves through the country and the European Union if
voters reject the treaty as predicted.
On the eve of the referendum, final opinion polls gave an edge to the "no"
camp, with the IFOP institute suggesting that up to 56 percent of voters could
oppose the text, which aims to simplify the operating rules in the expanded EU.
But after a campaign that has mesmerized and polarized France, about one in
five voters remains undecided, meaning that a last-minute surge in support for
the "yes" camp led by President Jacques Chirac could turn the tables.
 French Socialist Party's supporters attend a
meeting at the Zenith Arena in Lille, northern France, calling to vote
'yes' on the European constitution referendum. France goes to the polls on
Sunday for a historic referendum on the EU constitution, one that could
send shockwaves through the country and the European Union if voters
reject the treaty as predicted.[AFP] | Should France -- one of the EU's six founding members -- reject the
constitution, it would deal a harsh blow to the 72-year-old Chirac, who just
celebrated 10 years in office, and compromise his political legacy.
It could also leave the treaty dead in its tracks and plunge the EU into a
period of uncertainty, as all 25 member states must approve the constitution for
it to take effect.
"Europe at stake," read the front-page headline of the left-leaning daily
Liberation on Saturday, with two dice spelling out the words "oui" and "non".
Chirac's ruling center-right Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) is
campaigning alongside its junior partner in government, the Union for French
Democracy (UDF), as well as the opposition Socialist party (PS) and the Greens.
They are battling a disparate "no" camp made up of the far-right National
Front of Jean-Marie Le Pen, the Communist and Trotskyist parties, nationalist
Euroskeptics and a smattering of UMP and PS dissidents.
Voting began Saturday in France's overseas territories, with residents of the
tiny archipelago of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, located off the coast of Canada,
the first to cast their ballots from 1000 GMT.
As was the case for last year's regional elections, officials decided to
organize voting in the territories on the eve of the referendum in France
proper, so that residents would not be influenced by results from the mainland.
Official campaigning ended late Friday, with last-minute appeals for a "yes"
vote from two of Europe's most prominent left-wing leaders, German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder and Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.
Schroeder, whose country became the ninth EU member state to ratify the
constitution on Friday, urged the French to "vote 'yes' with all their hearts
and their heads" at a rally in southwest Toulouse.
The German chancellor added in a commentary published Saturday in Le Figaro
newspaper: "A strong and proud Europe is unthinkable without France."
In the northern city of Lille, Zapatero echoed that message, telling a crowd
of 3,000 at a meeting hosted by PS leader Francois Hollande: "Europe cannot go
forward without France."
The two leaders were hoping to win over generally pro-European but skeptical
left-leaning French voters, seen by pollsters as key to the "yes" camp's success
on Sunday.
Also key to Sunday's result is voter turnout, a point emphasized by Le Figaro
newspaper in its Saturday editorial: "Abstention means that a citizen has given
up his power. Nothing justifies it."
Chirac made his make-or-break pitch for the treaty late Thursday in a live
television address to the nation, warning the country's 42 million voters that a
"no" to the constitution would diminish France's influence in Europe.
"On Sunday, each one of you will have in his hands part of the destiny of
France," he said.
Seeking to pre-empt voter temptation to cast a protest vote on Sunday against
his unpopular center-right government, Chirac said he would give his
administration a "new impetus" after May 29, hinting at a cabinet reshuffle.
Commentators have repeatedly suggested that Prime Minister Jean-Pierre
Raffarin, whose popularity rating stands at barely more than 20 percent, will be
dismissed, no matter what the outcome of the referendum.
Despite Chirac's calls not to mix domestic and European issues, mounting
public anger over 10.2 percent unemployment, corporate relocations and declining
spending power is nonetheless likely to be felt at the ballot box.
Socialist party supporters against the constitution, led by former prime
minister Laurent Fabius, fear that France's style of generous social welfare is
under threat and see the treaty as a sell-out to US-style free market
forces.
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