Villepin replaces Raffarin as French PM (Agencies) Updated: 2005-05-31 18:33
French President Jacques Chirac named loyalist Dominique
de Villepin as his new prime minister on Tuesday in a shake-up of the government
following his crushing defeat over the European Union constitution.
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French Interior Minister Dominique de Villepin arrives to attend a
government crisis meeting at Matignon in Paris May 30, 2005.
[Reuters] | Villepin replaces the unpopular
Jean-Pierre Raffarin who quit earlier on Tuesday. He is a former interior and
foreign minister who angered the United States but won French hearts with his
fierce opposition to the U.S.-led war in Iraq.
He now has the task of reshaping government policy after voters showed their
distaste for Raffarin's economic policies and high unemployment in Sunday's vote
on the EU charter.
Chirac and Villepin, 51, did not immediately unveil the new government, which
is expected to be announced on Wednesday. Some political commentators predict a
slimmed-down cabinet.
The president was due to address the nation later on Tuesday and lay out
policy for the new team, which will hope to govern France until presidential and
parliamentary elections in 2007.
Villepin saw off a challenge from Nicolas Sarkozy, a Chirac rival for the
presidency who leads the governing Union for a Popular Majority (UMP) party, who
had all but demanded the prime minister's job for himself on Sunday.
French political commentators said there was persistent speculation that
Sarkozy, 50, could return to the government as interior minister and Villepin's
number two -- as well as remaining the leader of the UMP.
RAFFARIN DEFENDS HIS RECORD
In a short statement, Raffarin defended his record over the past three years
and said Sunday's defeat had not triggered his decision.
"I took this decision independently of the outcome of the referendum on the
European constitution," he said.
Promotion of the loyal Villepin could be a sign Chirac intends to fight back
after the referendum humiliation and keep open his options for seeking a third
term in 2007.
A career diplomat, aristocrat and sometime poet, Villepin won applause at the
United Nations and plaudits at home on the right and the left for opposing the
U.S.-led war in Iraq, but angered and frustrated Washington.
Washington and Paris have since been rebuilding ties.
Villepin's appointment is likely to go down well with European allies.
At home, Villepin's priority will be to create jobs in an economy burdened
with 10.2 percent unemployment, a more than five-year high, to boost growth and
curb public spending.
Although he will have the president's full support, Villepin has little
experience in the rough and tumble of domestic politics. He has never stood for
election and has prickly relations with the parliamentary majority he now relies
on.
In 1997, Villepin was a prime mover behind Chirac's early dissolution of
parliament, which saw a conservative majority blown away by a Socialist-led
coalition.
The disaster earned him the nickname "Nero," a reference to the emperor who
famously left Rome in flames.
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