You can take the teacher out of the classroom but you cannot take the classroom out of the teacher.
The Popular Primary of the Left, just completed, was invented by French academics in an attempt to create a strong and united Left-wing campaign for the French presidential elections in April.
The seven candidates were graded like undergraduates or PhD students with scores ranging from ‘good’ to ‘inadequate’. The winner, Christiane Taubira, a former Socialist justice minister, received a “bien plus” (somewhat better than good). Anne Hidalgo, the official Socialist candidate, came fifth with “passable plus” (slightly more than adequate). The last of the seven candidates, an unknown 24 years old, Anna Agueb-Porterie, was judged “insuffisant” (inadequate).
The popular primary, independent of all political parties or factions, was seen by its promoters as a way to reconnect French politics with the grassroots. It was inspired partly by the bottom-up ideas of the Gilets Jaunes (yellow vest) movement of 2018-9. It was shaped by the near-certainty — now a reality – that the Left would run lots of competing candidates this year and that none would get near the two-candidate second round on 24 April.
Another motive was to weaken the tyranny of opinion polls which play an even bigger role in French elections than elsewhere. France’s two-round system and the weakness of the old political parties or families of centre-Right and centre-Left make French polls almost part of the electoral machinery, not just a commentary on it.
The outcome of the four-day, online primary, was in effect a giant opinion poll, rather than a classic primary, with a computer programme working out the winner. Three of the candidates, those already in the election campaign proper, had rejected the results in advance (while secretly hoping to do well). The winner, Ms Taubira, who is 70 this week, says she wants to unite the Left but will now divide it further.
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SubscribeFrance have “hard-left” and “far-right” candidates, John? We Brits only have shades of New Labour. You make me quite jealous.
By the way, in the interests of pretending you have a fig-leaf of impartiality you need a snappy epithet for Macron that we can spit with equal venom along with the others. How about “Pro-Globo”?
John Lichfield is someone I do not bother to read. I know what he will say on any given topic before even he does.
Agreed. Eminently skippable.
box of frogs politics
To save the bother of asking the voters, why not skip the messy stuff and get the computer program to pick the next president?
Couldn’t do any worse than the French public!