A Real Nowhere Man

François Hollande might just be boring enough to beat Nicolas Sarkozy.

BY ERIC PAPE | NOVEMBER 2, 2011

PARIS – Based on the headlines, French President Nicolas Sarkozy has had a pretty good few months. He spearheaded the ultimately successful international effort to overthrow Muammar al-Qaddafi, recovering from a flat-footed early response to the Arab Spring. He has been on the barricades pushing for an aggressive response to save the eurozone from debt turmoil. Even his personal life is on the upswing: His wife, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, gave birth to a baby girl, Giulia, on Oct. 19, guaranteeing endless humanizing press coverage six months before the presidential election. 

Unfortunately, nobody seems to have told French voters, who continue to heavily favor Sarkozy's Socialist challenger, François Hollande. The distinction between the two seems to have more to do with style than politics. Hollande has long been known as the Disappearing Man of French politics, best known for fading into the background in support of more dynamic and exciting candidates. Up against the omnipresent, attention-hogging Sarkozy, this has become a serious advantage. If Hollande can make the election into a referendum on the current leader, a sort of Sarkozy-vs.-Sarkozy campaign, the incumbent will join the ranks of France's unemployed.

Like many incumbents these days, Sarkozy is stunningly unpopular -- nearly two voters in three disapprove of him, and those numbers have hardly budged in the last 18 months. Leading in a time of enduring economic crisis that has undermined many policy ambitions doesn't help. But his presidential style is also to blame. Throughout the first four years of his term, Sarkozy's constant media presence tended to highlight that he was the center of France's political universe rather than his efforts to solve the nation's problems.

Beyond that, Sarkozy has failed to offer a coherent and convincing vision of where he is taking France. His communications team has, in recent months, gone to great effort to repaint him in more traditionally presidential colors, limiting his media appearances and highlighting his now extensive political experience.

But the self-effacing, low-key Hollande could be the perfect candidate to quietly lead his party to victory. The 57-year-old center-leftist demonstrates little of the flamboyance, flair, and grandiosity that have characterized recent French presidents. Whereas Sarkozy savored his 2007 presidential election by driving up the Champs-Élysées escorted by flashy police motorcycle outriders and later recovered from the campaign on the Mediterranean-moored yacht of a billionaire industrialist, Hollande recently won  the Socialist candidacy after campaigning via motor scooter.

If ever there were a moment for a "normal president," which is what Hollande promises, it is following Sarkozy's difficult term. The incumbent initiated the "bling-bling" presidency with nouveau riche penchants -- aviator sunglasses, expensive gaudy watches, adulation of rich friends, and his very public courtship of supermodel turned pop singer Carla Bruni. Hollande's Mr. Normal shtick is an implicit slap at Sarkozy's neurotic personality, his desecration of the near-royal French presidency, and his micromanaging style that goes against the traditionally above-it-all head of state's role.

JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images

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Eric Pape is a writer in Paris.

YOGAPORT

10:33 AM ET

November 16, 2011

I think the french people

I think the french people know that there leaders have failed them economically. It hasn't been discussed much, but France is following the same path that Greece, Spain, and Ireland have taken. It is only a matter of time before the house of cards fall in France as well.
Admirals Cove

 

JACKIESTRONGER

10:55 PM ET

November 30, 2011

What's a normal President

That’s funny it’s time for a “normal president” – who would what that job anyway. The country is in financial trouble just like many other European countries. Try a flatshare London
and then you will know what is normal.

 

ELI

2:09 AM ET

December 2, 2011

Unfortunately, nobody seems

Unfortunately, nobody seems to have told French voters, who continue to heavily favor Sarkozy's Socialist challenger, François Hollande. The distinction between the two seems to have more to do with style than politics. Hollande has long been known as the Disappearing Man of French politics, best known for fading into the background in support of more dynamic and exciting candidates. Search for

 

ELI

2:12 AM ET

December 2, 2011

Beyond that, Sarkozy has

Beyond that, Sarkozy has failed to offer a coherent and convincing vision of where he is taking France. His communications team has, in recent months, gone to great effort to repaint him in more traditionally presidential colors, limiting his media appearances and highlighting his now extensive political experience. Search for Great findings

 

LOCOROCO

5:31 PM ET

December 2, 2011

hope he can get us out of this crisis

Well, you can say things are different here than in france. I just think that if they do a good job, that we shouldn't care too much about their private life. the french don't even care if the president has teen sex, like sarkozi does ... We have to look at real issues and figure out how to come out of this economic crisis instead of bashing virile presidential candidates. I suggest people read webster tarpley. He predicted the economic collapse, and he knows how to get out of the crisis.