Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05PARIS3878
2005-06-03 16:31:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Paris
Cable title:  

FRANCE: NEW GOVERNMENT LINE UP

Tags:  PGOV PINR ELAB FR 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 PARIS 003878 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/03/2015
TAGS: PGOV PINR ELAB FR
SUBJECT: FRANCE: NEW GOVERNMENT LINE UP

REF: PARIS 3813

Classified By: A/POL/MC Paul Mailhot for reasons 1.4 (b/d).

Summary

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 PARIS 003878

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/03/2015
TAGS: PGOV PINR ELAB FR
SUBJECT: FRANCE: NEW GOVERNMENT LINE UP

REF: PARIS 3813

Classified By: A/POL/MC Paul Mailhot for reasons 1.4 (b/d).

Summary


1. (SBU) The new French government led by Prime Minister
Dominique de Villepin, with Nicolas Sarkozy as Minister of
the Interior (reftel) was formally announced by the Elysee
palace the evening of Thursday, June 2. The new government,
significantly smaller than the one it replaces (31 versus 43
members) is largely composed of Chirac loyalists, with the
exception of Sarkozy and two of his long-time aides at
Interior. As Villepin put it, "a tight group, able to move
quickly." The appointment of Philippe Douste-Blazy as
Foreign Minister in place of Michel Barnier puts a committed
Chirac loyalist in charge of executing policies that will
remain largely controlled by Chirac and Villepin and, in all
liklihood, also by long-time Chirac public relations aide and
Villepin associate Christine Colonna at European Affairs.
The social and economic affairs ministers, who will be
responsible for operationalizing Villepin's campaign against
joblessless, have not been changed -- Thierry Breton at
Economy, Finance and Industry; Jean-Louis Borloo at
Employment, Social Cohesion and Housing, and Gerard Larcher
at Employment and Work. Michelle Alliot-Marie remains at
Defense. Eight members of the new government, including
Nicolas Sarkozy, are International Visitor Program (IVP)
alumni. End Summary.


2. (U) Biographic sketches of the key members of the new
government, drawn from post's biographic reporting, follow
below. Further reporting and analysis of new government will
follow septels.

Prime Minister Villepin


3. (SBU) Dominique de Villepin was tapped by President Chirac
to replace beleaguered Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin on
May 31, 2005. As a first priority Villepin must address
France's enduring unemployment problem, a long-simmering
issue that many believe contributed significantly to the
rejection of the EU Constitution on May 29. Villepin has
given himself 100 days to "give the French people back their
confidence" and vowed to make a monthly accounting of his
progress. Without going into details, Villepin has said he
will seek new solutions to the unemployment problem and that

"nothing is taboo." Villepin is expected to announce a new
employment program based mostly on state-funded programs and
tax cuts.


4. (C) Villepin will be initially hard pressed to win support
from skeptical UMP parliamentarians, many of whom have little
patience for his flamboyant public image and take-charge
personality. Nor will Villepin have free rein to formulate
his new employment policy following President Chirac's
request to Nicolas Sarkozy to rejoin the government.
Numerous observers already dubbed the new Villepin-Sarkozy
tandem "a cohabitation between declared rivals," fully
expecting that Villepin's social-Gaullist ideology will
inevitably conflict with Sarkozy's economic liberalism.
Beyond their differing approaches to solving France's
unemployment problem, both men share the same objective:
election to the presidency of the republic in 2007. Sarkozy
has all but declared his candidacy and Chirac likely
appointed Villepin to the prime minister's post as a final
training ground before a Villepin presidential run in 2007.


5. (U) Villepin served in the former Raffarin government as
Minister of Interior, Internal Security and Local Liberties
from March 31, 2004 to May 31, 2005. He was also Foreign
Minister from 2002-04 and Secretary General to the President
from 1995-2002. Villepin began his diplomatic career in 1980
in the Bureau of African and Malagasy Affairs, working on
Horn of Africa issues. He then moved to the Ministry,s
research and analysis section, where he covered a broader
scope of African issues from 1981-84. Villepin,s first
overseas assignment was in the French Embassy in Washington
(1984-89),where he worked as Middle East Watcher and press
spokesman. He next served as minister-counselor at the
French Embassy in New Delhi (1989-92),before becoming deputy
director of the Bureau of African and Malagasy Affairs
(1992-93). Villepin next served as Chief of Staff to
then-Foreign Minister Alain Juppe (1993-95).

Sarkozy's Surprising Return to Government


6. (SBU) Shortly after confirming the appointment of
Dominique de Villepin as prime minister on May 31, President
Chirac surprised almost everyone by announcing that UMP
President Nicolas Sarkozy would be returning to the
government as Minister of Interior. Sarkozy had served as
Finance Minister from March 2004 to November 2004, but
"voluntarily" resigned his ministerial post in accordance
with Chirac's hastily contrived rule banning simultaneous
service as a minister and party president. Sarkozy was
elected president of Chirac's political party--the Union for
a Popular Movement (UMP)--at a party congress in November

2004. Chirac's about-face on the simultaneous service issue
is a tacit admission of his political vulnerability, and
Sarkozy's growing influence, following the rejection of the
EU Constitution on May 29.


7. (U) Sarkozy will be number two in the official protocol
order, holding the prestigious "Minister of State" title
which enables him to attend government meetings beyond the
scope of his normal ministerial duties. Sarkozy formerly
served as Minister of Interior from 2002-04 and won high
praise for his efforts to reduce crime and delinquency.


8. (C) If President Chirac does not seek reelection in 2007,
then Villepin and Sarkozy are expected to fight it out for
control of the party. The UMP does not have an
American-style primary system where party members vote for
individual candidates, but Sarkozy has been pushing to
establish one. If he does, everyone expects he would win a
face-to-face contest against Villepin, largely owing to
Sarkozy's greater political experience, control of UMP party
resources and his on-going popularity with the French
electorate.


9. (U) At the age of 21, Sarkozy was "discovered" by party
leader Jacques Chirac at a Rally for the Republic (RPR)
meeting in Nice. Two years later, in 1977, Sarkozy was
elected to the municipal council of Neuilly-sur-Seine, a
wealthy suburb west of Paris. A political protege of former
RPR kingpin Charles Pasqua, Sarkozy supported Chirac,s
failed 1981 presidential bid, serving as President of the
RPR,s National Youth Committee. In 1983, Sarkozy defeated
former mentor Pasqua to become Mayor of Neuilly, a position
he held until his appointment as Interior Minister in 2002.
In 1993, he was elected as a National Assembly Deputy
representing roughly the same area, the 6th district in the
Hauts-de-Seine department. In 1993, he resigned his seat to
become both Minister of the Budget and government spokesman
during the administration of Edouard Balladur; Sarkozy again
represented the same district in the National Assembly from
1995-2002.

Douste-Blazy to the MFA


10. (U) Philippe Douste-Blazy, 52, was appointed Minister of
Foreign Affairs in the new Villepin government on June 2,
replacing Michel Barnier. Douste-Blazy is the first medical
doctor to preside over France's foreign ministry, the "Quai
d'Orsay." Douste-Blazy is a fervent Chirac loyalist who is
said to be a favorite of France's First Lady, Bernadette
Chirac. Douste-Blazy is a successful politician from the
southern French city of Toulouse. He does not have extensive
foreign relations experience.


11. (U) Douste-Blazy served in the Raffarin government as
Minister of Health and Social Protection from March through
November 2004; at the latter date, his portfolio was expanded
and his official title changed to Minister of Solidarity,
Health and Families. Douste-Blazy was responsible for
leading a significant reform of the Social Security system
that reduced expenses by 6-7 billion Euros annually.
Douste-Blazy is a founding member of the majority, Union for
a Popular Movement (UMP) and, since 2002, has been a
perennial also-ran candidate for the prime minister's job.


12. (C) U.S. diplomats describe Douste-Blazy as smart and
ambitious. Unlike Prime Minister Villepin, Douste-Blazy does
not project himself as an intellectual and strategic thinker.
Douste-Blazy has maintained good relations with embassy
diplomats over the years and has often sought help arranging
visits to the United States. While cordial, however, he has
been largely unresponsive on specific issues of interest on
which the Embassy has approached him. During his stint as
Health Minister, Douste-Blazy worked closely with former
Health Secretary Tommy Thompson on the Global Health Security
Initiative, an international effort to fight the spread of
the AIDS virus. A relative new-comer to the foreign policy
arena, Douste-Blazy is expected to take his marching orders
directly from President Chirac. He understands English but
prefers to speak through an interpreter for official meetings.


13. (SBU) As a rising local politician in the 1990's,
Douste-Blazy was a leading advocate for devolving power to
local governments. Since his ascension to ministerial rank,
he has quietly dropped his support for decentralization. In
recent months, Douste-Blazy has sought every opportunity to
publicly express his loyalty to President Chirac, reportedly
offering to support Chirac's third term candidacy against his
presumed rival Nicolas Sarkozy. During the campaign for the
EU Constitution he allied himself with then Interior Minister
Dominique de Villepin, trumpeting the successes of France's
social model and attacking Nicolas Sarkozy's economic
liberalism.


14. (U) In 1976, Douste-Blazy began his career working as a
medical intern at a major Toulouse hospital; from 1982-86 he
served as the hospital's chief cardiologist. He was elected
mayor of Lourdes, his hometown, in 1989 and served
continuously in that capacity until 2000 when he announced
his intention to run for the top spot at Toulouse's city
hall. Meanwhile, Douste-Blazy served as a Member of the
European Parliament from 1989-93; as Delegate Minister of
Health in the government of Edouard Balladur from 1993-95;
and as Minister of Culture in the government of Alain Juppe
from 1995-97.

Alliot-Marie Stays at Defense


15. (U) Michele Alliot-Marie has been asked to stay on as
Minister of Defense, after serving capably in the last three
years in the Raffarin government. Alliot-Marie is a
long-time Chirac ally and, according to the press, is one of
Chirac's few associates with whom he uses the familiar
"tu-tois" form of address. She was rumored to be a leading
contender for the prime minister's job, but Dominique de
Villepin got the nod instead.


16. (C) Alliot-Marie's continued tenure at Defense is likely
to represent an element of continuity in French defense
policies, both domestically and within the EU. She is
well-liked and respected by the uniformed services and her
staying on sends a message that the French military remains
important to President Chirac. Alliot-Marie has been a
strong defender of a vigorous defense budget. For her
European partners, she supported the necessity for Europe to
develop a strong defense (ESDP). Alliot-Marie is a
well-known quantity at the Pentagon as she has met several
times with Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, with whom she has a
good working relationship although they do not always agree.


17. (U) A political activist since the age of 24,
Alliot-Marie served as Secretary of State for Education
during the first cohabitation under then Prime Minister
Chirac (1986-88),and as Minister for Youth and Sports under
then PM Balladur (1993-95). First elected to the National
Assembly in 1986 representing the Pyrenees-Atlantic (in
southwest France, essentially the Basque country),she always
managed to regain her seat after each ministerial stint.
Alliot-Marie also served as Mayor of St. Jean de Luz (near
Biarritz) from 1995-2002. During 1989-93, she was a Member
of the European Parliament.

Thierry Breton Remains at Finance


18. (SBU) Former France Telecom CEO, Thierry Breton, was
asked to continue as Minister of Finance, Economy and
Industry. He was first appointed to the position in February
2005, replacing Herve Gaymard who was forced to resign in the
wake of a scandal over his misrepresentations regarding
government payment for a luxury apartment. Breton is an
admired and politically astute technocrat who, reportedly,
would like to use his experience at Finance to further his
budding political career.


19. (SBU) As the fourth French Finance Minister in less than
a year, Breton will need all of his political savvy and
management skills. Breton will play a key role in developing
the new government's strategy to reduce unemployment while
not dangerously increasing the budget deficit. Breton is a
political ally of both President Chirac and former PM
Raffarin, having served with the latter on the
Poitou-Charentes Regional Council during the 1990's. The
50-year-old Breton is experienced in international business
circles and speaks excellent English.


20. (SBU) Breton's professional experience has been mostly in
the French corporate sector. He did a stint at the Ministry
of Education, where he served as technical adviser for
information technologies between 1986 and 1988. He is a
political ally of both President Chirac and PM Raffarin, and
served with the latter on the Poitou-Charentes Regional
Council during the 1990's. Prior to assuming leadership of
France Telecom (FT) in October 2002, he was Chairman of the
Board of Directors of ORANGE, FT's mobile unit. At FT, he
took over what was then regarded as the most indebted telecom
firm in the world. He undertook aggressive steps, selling
off non-essential assets, negotiating a deal with the GOF to
help pay off the debt, and shedding 7,500 jobs in FT's
domestic operations, after difficult negotiations with the
unions.

Pascal Clement at Justice


21. (SBU) Jurist and National Assembly Deputy Pascal Clement,
60, was appointed Minister of Justice in the new Villepin
government on June 2. Clement was secretary general at the
now-defunct Liberal Democracy (DL) political party and
currently sits on the UMP's political bureau, an influential
policy steering committee. Earlier in his career Clement was
allied with centrists and economic liberals including Valery
Giscard d'Estaing, Raymond Barre and Alain Madelin. Until
his ministerial appointment, Clement was president of the
Assembly's Constitutional Law Committee and was responsible
for shepherding Raffarin's decentralization law through
parliament in 2002.


22. (SBU) Clement has represented the 6th district of the
Loire department in the National Assembly from 1978-93, and
again from 1995 until his appointment to the Villepin
government. He has maintained cordial relations with US
diplomats over the years and is described as honest, warm and
engaging. He was a 1984 IVP grantee and speaks English. A
former Xerox executive early in his career, he has made
several business trips to the United States. In the mid
1980's he led a parliamentary delegation to the US, seeking
to sell France's high-speed train, the TGV, to local and
state governments.


23. (U) Clement was a Junior Minister for Relations with
Parliament during the Balladur government from 1993-95. He
was secretary general to the now-defunct Liberal Democracy
(DL) party from 1995-98. (Note: Liberal Democracy championed
American style labor market and tax reforms; in 2002, the
party merged with the Chirac's neo-Gaullist RPR to create the
Union for a Popular Movement (UMP).) At the local level, he
served as mayor of Saint-Marcel-de-Felines from 1977-2001.


24. (SBU) Clement was born on May 12, 1945 in
Boulogne-Billancourt on the western outskirts of Paris. He
attended the Institute for Political Studies in Paris and
holds a degree in law. He is also a practicing attorney. He
has written one book: "The Minority Political Parties of the
United States" (2000). Clement is married to the former
Laure Choiseul-Praslin, a practicing judge. The couple has
four children.

Jean-Louis Borloo Continues at Social Cohesion


25. (U) Jean-Louis Borloo, 54, was appointed Minister for
Employment, Labor and Social Cohesion following a government
reshuffle on March 31, 2004; he was reconfirmed in the same
position in the new Villepin government announced June 2.
Borloo (pronounced Boar-loh) previously served in the former
Raffarin government as Junior Minister for Towns and Urban
Renewal from 2002-04.


26. (SBU) Borloo's appointment symbolizes President Chirac's
desire to put the accent on social affairs following the
rejection of the EU Constitution on May 29. Borloo is
expected to work closely with Finance Minister Breton to
develop an effective--and affordable--package of labor market
and other reforms in order to significantly reduce France's
unemployment rate. Self-assured, frank, quick-to-action,
Borloo believes himself to be a viable future candidate for
the Prime Minister's slot, according to press reports.


27. (U) Borloo gained his initial political fame as the
activist mayor of Valenciennes, a decaying industrial town
near the Belgian border. Valenciennes underwent a turnaround
under Borloo's 1989-2002 stewardship. Borloo was reportedly
approached by the Socialists and Greens, but decided to join
the centrist UDF political party. Borloo served in the
National Assembly from 1993 until his ministerial appointment
in 2002. He is now a member of the UMP.


28. (SBU) Borloo was born in Paris on April 7, 1951. He
graduated from the Institute of Higher Business Affairs (ISA)
in 1976, and worked several years as a commercial and
business lawyer in Paris.

Gilles de Robien to Education


29. (SBU) Gilles de Robien, 64, was appointed Minister of
Education in the new Villepin government on June 2. Robien
served in the former Raffarin government as Minister for
Equipment, Transport, Housing, Tourism, and Oceans from
2002-2005. Robien worked effectively with US government
officials to upgrade airline and maritime security following
the terrorist attacks in September 2001. He was also
involved in initial steps to privatize Air France and
successfully implemented new regulations guaranteeing a
"minimum level of service" during strikes on France's
national rail transportation network.


30. (SBU) An influential UDF politician with links to
President Jacques Chirac and UDF President Francois Bayrou,
Robien is the only UDF member in the government. Robien is
seen as an effective minister and seasoned politician whose
participation helps cement the sometimes shaky ties between
the UDF and UMP. Robien understands some English but prefers
to use an interpreter for official meetings.


31. (SBU) Robien will be taking up duties at the Education
Ministry at a delicate moment. Teachers and students went on
strike several times last spring to protest a series of
education reforms introduced by Robien's predecessor,
Francois Fillon. Most of Fillon's proposals were either
watered down or withdrawn in advance of the referendum on the
EU Constitution. Robien will likely be called upon to take
up where Fillon left off. Powerful unions, a large budget,
and a hard-line socialist orthodoxy among educators all
combine to make Education one of the most difficult
portfolios in the French government.


32. (U) Robien represented the 2nd district in the Somme
department in the National Assembly from 1986-2002. He was
president of the fractious UDF parliamentary group from
1995-97, and was also Francois Bayrou's campaign manager
during the 2002 presidential race. He continues to serve as
vice-president of the UDF political party.

Dominique Perben at Transportation


33. (SBU) Dominique Perben, 59, a long time loyalist of
President Jacques Chirac, was appointed Minister of
Transportation, Equipment, Tourism and Oceans on June 2.
Perben served as Justice Minister in the prior Raffarin
government from 2002-05. As Justice Minister, Perben worked
effectively with US government officials to incarcerate and
bring to trial terrorist suspects following the 2001 attacks
in the United States. A civil servant by training, Perben
has no previous experience handling legal or justice-related
issues; he did, however, serve as Minister of Civil Service,
Reform, and Decentralization in the government of Alain Juppe
(1995-97),and as Minister of Overseas Departments in the
government of Edouard Balladur (1993-95).


34. (U) Perben represented the Chalon-sur-Saone department in
the National Assembly from 1986-93, and again from 1997-2002.
He was a founding member of the influential reform-oriented
club "Dialogue and Initiatives," Perben has been in the
forefront of the decentralization movement in France. The
club's objective, Perben has said, is not just to propose
reforms in order to win the 2002 legislative elections, but
to bring about a fundamental change in all French society.


35. (SBU) Born in Lyon on August 11, 1945, Perben has
traveled to the U.S. on numerous occasions, and was an IVP
grantee in 1983. Perben speaks little English, but does have
a familial connection to the U.S. - his sister is married to
an American. Perben is married to the former Annick
Demoustier; the couple has three children.

Other Ministers in the Villepin Government


36. (U) Xavier Bertrand, Minister for Health and Solidarity;
Dominique Bussereau, Minister for Agriculture and Fisheries;
Christian Jacob, Minister of Public Administration; Renaud
Donnedieu de Vabres, Minister of Culture and Communication;
Nelly Olin, Minister for Ecology and Durable Development;
Francois Baroin, Minister for Over-Seas; Renaud Dutreil,
Minister for Small and Medium-sized Businesses; Jean-Francois
Lamour, Minister for Youth and Sports.

Junior Ministers in the Villepin Government


37. (U) Henri Cuq, Junior minister for Relations with
Parliament; Azouz Begag, Junior Minister for Promotion of
Equal Opportunity; Jean-Francois Cope, Junior Minister for
Budget and Government Spokesman; Gerard Larcher, Junior
Minister for Employment, Labor and Professional Insertion of
Youth; Catherine Vautrin, Junior Minister for Social Cohesion
and Equality; Brigitte Girardin, Junior Minister for
Cooperation, Development, and Francophony; Brice Hortefeux,
Junior Minister for Territorial Collectives; Catherine
Colonna, Junior Minister for European Affairs; Francois
Goulard, Junior Minister for Higher Education and Research;
Leon Bertrand, Junior Minister for Tourism; Philippe Bas,
Junior Minister for Social Security, the Elderly and
Handicapped, and Families; Francois Loos, Junior minister for
Industry; Christine Lagarde, junior Minister for Exterior
Commerce; Hamlaoui Mekachera, Junior Minister for Veterans;
Christian Estrosi, Junior Minister for Territorial
Development.
WOLFF