Jacques Chirac, former French president, dies aged 86
The former French president Jacques Chirac, a
self-styled affable rogue who had one of the longest political careers in
Europe, has died aged 86.
For several years he had suffered from memory loss
said to be linked to a form of Alzheimer’s disease or to the minor stroke that
he had while in office.
Chirac, who was head of state from 1995 to 2007,
boasted one of the longest continuous political careers in Europe – twice
president, twice prime minister and 18 years as mayor of Paris.
Although his time as president was marked by
inaction and political stagnation, and despite having left France just as
divided and struggling with mounting debt, inequalities and unemployment as he
had found it, his debonair persona meant that in retirement he was embraced as
one of France’s favourite politicians.
Chirac will be remembered internationally for
leading France’s strong opposition to the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, when
approval ratings for his anti-war stance in France soared to 90%. “War is
always a last resort. It is always proof of failure. It is always the worst of
solutions, because it brings death and misery,” he said a week before the
US-led coalition forces invaded Iraq. He warned that any occupation of Iraq
would prove a “nightmare”.
One of Chirac’s greatest gestures at home was to
reconcile the nation with its history by acknowledging that France as a whole
was responsible for the roundup of some 76,000 Jews sent to Nazi death camps
during the second world war. His vow that the “criminal folly” of the German
occupation was “assisted by the French people, by the French state” lifted the
last taboo of the occupation and the collaborationist Vichy regime. His apology
was the first time a postwar French head of state had fully acknowledged
France’s role.
Chirac will be remembered above all as a master in
the art of political seduction. For decades he charmed the public with his
endless handshaking, patting of cows’ backsides and shaking of dogs’ paws on
his tours round France – a beer-drinking, Gitanes-smoking man of the people who
was able to eat five lunches in one afternoon on the election trail.
He shook so many hands while criss-crossing France
that he used to plunge his fingers into a bucket of ice at the end of the day
or wear plasters to protect from the blisters he got from his powerful grip on
pensioners and farmers. He had a visceral need to reach out and touch people –
whether it was hugging an elderly voter or flamboyantly kissing the hand of the
German chancellor, Angela Merkel.
Chirac was much mocked, often satirised and once
nicknamed “Superliar”. After a historic trial in 2011, he became the first
former president to be convicted of corruption following embezzlement charges
in a party funding scandal when he was mayor of Paris. Yet he was seen to
embody the French president’s role as republican monarch with a kind of panache
that Nicolas Sarkozy and François Hollande would later be found by the public
to be lacking.
Politically he was known as the “weathervane”, for
his ability to shift as it suited him. He went from championing state control in
the 1970s to Ronald Reagan’s free-market liberalism in the 1980s. When he was
elected president in 1995, he shocked the world by resuming nuclear testing in
atoll explosions in the South Pacific, then took to the stage as an
eco-champion at the 2002 Earth summit, warning: “Our house is burning while we
look elsewhere.” He went from virulent eurosceptic in the late 1970s to staunch
euro-defender 10 years later.
During more than 43 years in politics, Chirac was
described as a “bulldozer” and “killer” of rivals. Born to well-off but
progressive parents in Paris, what really marked him was his military service
on the frontline during the Algerian war – he was the last French president to
have direct experience of combat and it left him both a fan of military
strategy and cautious about war.
He was a figure in French political life from the
early 1960s, starting as an adviser to the prime minister George Pompidou,
becoming an MP in rural Corrèze and then a minister. Before he finally became
president in 1995, he founded a political party, the Gaullist Rally for the
Republic, served twice as prime minister and failed twice at a presidential
election. It was his ability to take knocks and get up again that proved part
of his charm.
When Chirac became president in 1995, he promised to
heal the “social fracture”, the crippling unemployment, division and
inequalities that plagued France. But instead, his government’s contested
pension reform and planned austerity package of social security cuts prompted
up to 2 million people to take to the streets, paralysing France in the worst
strikes since May 1968. His term was then hamstrung by his disastrous decision
to call parliamentary elections in 1997 in a bid to boost his support. The
Socialists won, forcing Chirac into uncomfortable power-sharing.
In 2002, he was re-elected president with 82% of the
vote after the Front National’s Jean-Marie Le Pen shocked the nation by getting
into the final round run-off. Chirac won because much of the leftwing
electorate voting for him in order to stop the far-right leader. He later said
one of his biggest regrets was not having formed a mixed national-unity
government with ministers from all political sides. Instead, he stuck to his
own brand of centre-right politics. In 2002 he agreed common agricultural
policy payments with Germany, securing his popularity.
At home, he was most criticised for failing to
steward change in France, avoiding reforms, and allowing inequalities to
fester, symbolised by the 2005 urban riots on housing estates across France.
The same year he called a referendum on approving the proposed EU constitution
but then failed to sell the idea to the electorate, who voted no. It was a
devastating blow. His popularity ratings near the end of his term were the
lowest of any president since the war.
Among his success stories in office was his fight to
improve road safety which was calculated to have saved 8,500 lives in four
years. He ended compulsory military service and reduced the presidential term
from seven years to five.
He was a lifelong source of barbed quotes and digs,
famously asking in reference to Margaret Thatcher: “What more does the bag
want, my balls on a platter?” He once said of Britain: “You can’t trust people
who cook as badly as that.” But he also made comments he would regret. “Africa
is not ready for democracy,” he told a group of African leaders in the early
1990s. When mayor of Paris in 1991, he made a controversial speech about
immigration and talked of French people being disturbed by “the noise and the
smell”, sparking outrage.
Like François Mitterrand before him, Chirac wanted
to leave behind a great cultural project and created Paris’s Quai Branly
museum, a riverside monument to himself as the “great defender” of African,
Asian, American and other indigenous cultures.
Throughout his presidency, he was dogged by the
sleaze scandals from his days as mayor at Paris city hall. He claimed immunity
as president, but when he left office he swiftly became the first former
president convicted of a crime. Aged 79, he was handed a two-year suspended
prison sentence after being found guilty of embezzling public funds as Paris
mayor in order to illegally finance the rightwing party he led.
His lawyer, Georges Kiejman, said at the time: “What
I hope is that this ruling doesn’t change in any way the deep affection the
French feel legitimately for Jacques Chirac.”
It was a mark of Chirac’s extraordinary life and
luck that it didn’t.