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« Created by: corporate_whitey on: Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:17pm »

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Sarkozy Wisely Moves To Protect French Industries. (Read 536 times)
corporate_whitey
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Sarkozy Wisely Moves To Protect French Industries.
Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:13pm
 
French President Nicolas Sarkozy is wisely moving swiftly to Protect French Industries, Jobs and Products first and pushing for a more rationalist wider European protection of its economic borders citing Free Trade and unrestrained migration as threats to the nation and regions future prosperity.  Cheep imports and  driving down labour costs = economic decline, stagnation, and wealth inequality.  It makes no sense for any nation to cut its own throat.

Quote:
Sarkozy defies Europe with protectionist push


President Nicolas Sarkozy, recasting himself as France's saviour from low-cost competition and high immigration, threatened to disregard European limitations on protectionism as he sought to give his re-election campaign a second wind on Sunday.
Going out on a limb that risks angering France's European partners, Sarkozy said it was time to support local companies and stop the uncontrolled influx of immigrants and cheap imports that demonstrate Europe's lack of protectionist controls. Smiley
Addressing some 30,000 people at a vast conference centre just outside Paris, Sarkozy vowed to pull France out of the European Union's open-borders Schengen zone unless there was progress over the year ahead in fortifying Europe's borders. Wink

He also proposed a European law similar to the "Buy American Act" which would require governments to favour European-made products in their purchases, and said that without advances in that area, France would start applying the rule unilaterally. Smiley
"I want a Europe that protects its citizens. I no longer want this savage competition," Sarkozy said to roars of support.
"I say no to a Europe that opens up its markets when others don't. Such behaviour does not mean accepting free trade, it means accepting being a Europe that is a sieve." Sad
Sarkozy's main rival and poll favourite, Socialist leader Francois Hollande, hit back by saying the speech was hypocritical given the conservative incumbent's frequent criticism of Hollande's desire to renegotiate the European fiscal pact if he is elected.
"He has accused me for months of wanting to renegotiate the European treaty on budgetary discipline and austerity to be applied in each country...Now Sarkozy, unable to present other ideas to the French, is using Europe as a scapegoat," Hollande said on television channel M6.
Sarkozy's speech lacked the economic policy ideas many observers had expected following hints he would unveil his full programme at Villepinte for the April/May election.
Opponents say the lack of a complete manifesto makes Sarkozy's campaign look haphazard and ill-prepared.
Instead, his targeting of Europe as a scapegoat for France's economic problems seemed clearly geared towards the far-right voters whose support he sorely needs if he is to close the gap with Socialist frontrunner Francois Hollande.
"Today he is clearly addressing the France that voted no, speaking both about immigration, which is normal, and protectionism, which is becoming a popular issue in France," said Jerome Sainte-Marie of polling firm CSA, referring to those who voted against key European treaties on sovereignty concerns.
Sarkozy is running for re-election with the double handicap of some of the worst popularity ratings of any French president and the same deep-rooted public anger over the sickly economy that has felled leaders across Europe.
He managed to narrow Hollande's poll lead by a few points when he launched his campaign in mid-February with his trademark oratory verve, but has since slipped back in voter surveys. Heckling by left-wing militants has also created bad publicity.
Stronger at the podium than Hollande, who is a bland public speaker, Sarkozy is hoping to stay in the headlines and make his rival's weeks-old campaign manifesto look stale by drip-feeding his policy proposals week-by-week.
His protectionist push on Sunday follows a pledge to hold regular referendums on policy and toughen up unemployment benefit rules so jobseekers must undergo training to get their pay. He has also vowed to halve annual immigration flows.
"Europe must not be a threat, it must protect," Sarkozy said in Villepinte. "Europe cannot be the only region in the world with such badly respected borders, which so little defends its interests, which so ignores the anxiety of its citizens." Roll Eyes
His threat to act unilaterally if necessary to protect the French economy marked a turnaround from his 2007 promise that on his watch, France's commitment to EU treaties would never again be thrown into question, and risks friction with Brussels.
"Rather than saying that France can only work in Europe, it's almost saying the contrary, that Europe must do what France tells it to, otherwise France will do so anyway," said political analyst Roland Cayrol. "This kind of ultimatum is something that could cause problems in the working of the European Union."
Nervous about a gaping trade deficit in France, Sarkozy has in the past criticised perceived US protectionism, pointing to specific contracts such as a $US50 billion refuelling plane contract in 2010 that he said favoured Boeing.
He has also previously floated the idea of suspending the EU's 25-member Schengen treaty on open-border travel, prompting the European Commission to unveil proposals that could see border checks reinstated if member states persistently fail to protect the bloc's external frontiers.
The topic is sensitive given the free movement of people is one of the cornerstones of European integration.
Sarkozy, who is around 2 points behind Hollande in polls for the April 22 first round and 10-12 points behind in polls for a May 6 runoff, was backed on Sunday by such characters as former first lady Bernadette Chirac and actor Gerard Depardieu, who both made speeches in his support.
He suffered a setback, however, when two popular ex-ministers, both of them centrists that were part of a diverse cabinet early in his term, declined to support him at the rally.
Former environment minister Jean-Louis Borloo said Sarkozy had only his "cautious" support, and former sports minister Rama Yade said she could not support such a right-wing campaign.
http://www.smh.com.au/business/world-business/sarkozy-defies-europe-with-protectionist-push-20120312-1utge.html
Smiley
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corporate_whitey
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Re: Sarkozy Wisely Moves To Protect French Industries.
Reply #1 - Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:17pm
 
Putting Australias Prosperity Number one by reigning in Free Trade, Economy Crippling Consumption Taxes, Middle Class Welfare and Unchecked Immigration. Smiley
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Re: Sarkozy Wisely Moves To Protect French Industries.
Reply #2 - Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:30pm
 
Another cycnical election-time ploy from Sarkozy the grub.
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corporate_whitey
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Re: Sarkozy Wisely Moves To Protect French Industries.
Reply #3 - Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:37pm
 
... wrote on Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:30pm:
Another cycnical election-time ploy from Sarkozy the grub.

Naturally you being such a big time white supremacist could only see the negative side of any Political momentum swinging towards European countries protectging the economic interests of its citizens...or not since we all know that White Supremacist doctrines are middle class welfare breeding policies by another name.  So you do not actually have any national, cultural  loyalty or loyalty to a community or people, only loyalty to the free welfare of a specific class at all cost and hang the rest.  Bludger. Cool Cool
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Re: Sarkozy Wisely Moves To Protect French Industries.
Reply #4 - Mar 21st, 2012 at 7:59am
 
Protectionism and populist politicians are just some of the reasons Europe's economy is in such a mess.
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Re: Sarkozy Wisely Moves To Protect French Industries.
Reply #5 - Mar 21st, 2012 at 10:15am
 
corporate_whitey wrote on Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:37pm:
... wrote on Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:30pm:
Another cycnical election-time ploy from Sarkozy the grub.

Naturally you being such a big time white supremacist could only see the negative side of any Political momentum swinging towards European countries protectging the economic interests of its citizens...or not since we all know that White Supremacist doctrines are middle class welfare breeding policies by another name.  So you do not actually have any national, cultural  loyalty or loyalty to a community or people, only loyalty to the free welfare of a specific class at all cost and hang the rest.  Bludger. Cool Cool


Wow.  You've been pussified so much that I seem like a "big time white supremacist"?  Grin  Grin  Grin  Grin
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barnaby joe
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Re: Sarkozy Wisely Moves To Protect French Industries.
Reply #6 - Mar 21st, 2012 at 11:46am
 
... wrote on Mar 20th, 2012 at 4:30pm:
Another cycnical election-time ploy from Sarkozy the grub.


exactly.

why would anybody trust these clowns?
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