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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Conservatives say no to Sarkozy


Conservative National Front Presidential candidate Marine Le Pen.
There is a huge split in among Conservatives in both France and the U.S.  Those voters who actually believe in something are angry at the "fake" do nothing Conservatives.


"Both the Socialists and France’s mainstream conservatives have progressively destroyed this country over the last 30 years."    - - - - A Conservative Le Pen supporter



Conservative leader Marine Le Pen won 18% of the vote in the first round of the French presidential election.  This solid vote for the conservative National Front sent shockwaves across France.  It was a record-breaking score for the conservative party, beating the 16% that Le Pen’s father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, won to get through to the second round of the 2002 presidential election.
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But in the town of Besseges, most conservative activists and ordinary voters expressed disappointment with Sarkozy’s track record and maintained that the French president had failed them and the country. Speaking to FRANCE 24, an overwhelming majority of Besseges residents said they would not support a president “who had broken all his promises”.

Many Conservative Le Pen voters are angry at the pretend conservative Sarkozy.

The Former Socialist  -  Baptiste Gazancon, 37, turned to the conservative National Front after his construction company collapsed last year.
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He told FRANCE 24 that he believed the work ethic in France had been undermined by a social benefits culture that allowed people to earn without working while penalizing those “that get out of bed every morning and go to work”.
Baptiste Gazancon
 
"I will go to the polling station, but I will put a
blank card in the envelope."
 

“I’ve voted Socialist in every single election until now,” he said. “I still believe in the social model; that there should be a safety net for people who lose their jobs. But it should only be for people who deserve it. You can’t simply move to this country and start claiming benefits at the expense of people who work hard."


“Marine Le Pen has promised to put a stop to this and that’s why I am voting for her. Francois Hollande has not addressed this issue. In fact he has avoided it and even said that benefits should be extended. It breaks my heart.”
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“As for the second round, it is my civic duty to vote. So I will go to the polling station, but I will put a blank card in the envelope. I can’t support either Sarkozy or Hollande.”

Sarkozy will 'not get my vote'  -  Benjamin Tallon is a young National Front activist and a member of the Besseges town council.

The 26-year-old engineer accused Sarkozy of being a hypocrite by taking up National Front issues in his “desperate bid” to secure the conservative vote.
Councilman Benjamin Tallon
"He will not get my vote.”

“Sarkozy has always been after our voters,” he stated. “He promises to reduce immigration in 2007 and he’s doing it all over again. Locally, when there are election battles between the National Front and the Socialists, the UMP always tells people to vote Socialist.

“I am a natural conservative, and I would normally support the conservative candidate in the second round.  But Sarkozy has shown the country that he is a hypocrite. He will not get my vote.”

Dr. Jean-Francois Grillo
France will edge closer to the economic situation we see in Greece and in Spain." 


The Doctor  -  Jean-Francois Grillo, 61, is a radiologist who has supported the National Front all his adult life.

Like many other conservative party supporters, he sees Sarkozy’s UMP and Hollande’s Socialist Party (PS) as two sides of the same coin, and refers to both parties as the “UMPS”.

“Sarkozy’s attempts to get the National Front vote are so obvious and so shallow they are pitiful,” he declared. “I will cast a blank ballot in the second round of the election because both the Socialists and France’s mainstream conservatives have progressively destroyed this country over the last 30 years.
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“But I predict a victory for Francois Hollande. What this means is that France will edge closer to the economic situation we see in Greece and in Spain.  This will be devastating for our country, but it will mean that the National Front will become the only sensible voice of conservative opposition in France.”

Sebastien Bosquet
“They want our votes but as citizens, as people with opinions, they couldn’t care less about us.
 "

The former Legionnaire  -  Sebastien Bosquet is a tough-looking and gruff-talking former French Foreign Legionnaire, the unit that was the alma mater of National Front founder Jean-Marie Le Pen.
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Bosquet said he would not vote in the May 6 second round.
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“I refuse to lend my support to candidates who insult us, and especially not Sarkozy,” he stated. “They want our votes but as citizens, as people with opinions, they couldn’t care less about us.  Both candidates and both parties are the same and whatever the outcome of the election, nothing will change. France will continue on its downward spiral.”



Yves Gailhac
"France will end up like Greece and within two years there will be a revolution.
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The old campaigner  -  Yves Gailhac, 62, has been an ardent supporter of the National Front all his life.
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“Some National Front people are going to vote for Sarkozy because he is the conservative candidate and because he has been talking up issues like immigration."
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“They’ve got it all wrong. He’s a hypocrite. Five years of Sarkozy have been terrible for France.  I predict Hollande will win, and things will continue to be just as terrible.  France will end up like Greece and within two years there will be a revolution. The National Front will come through as the only party with the real answers.”            (France 24)

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