Canadians Are Now Looting Mexican Stores. Here's Why. Also, What the Hell People?
Republicans Kick Off State of the Union Night With Roundtable Showcasing Conservative Gove...
FedEx Wants a Refund for Trump's Tariffs – an International Court Will Decide
Watch Zohran Mamdani Fall Apart When Asked About Voter ID
Just When You Thought Anti-Gunners Couldn't Get Any Dumber, Virginia Democrats Just Said...
Nancy Mace Demands Records That the Swamp Don't Want You To See
Jeanine Pirro Drops Prosecution Against Democratic Lawmakers for Video About Military
Dana Bash Pulls No Punches in Her Interview With Gavin Newsom
NYT Op-Ed Admits What We've Known All Along: 'Gender Medicine' Was Never About...
CNN Contributor Shows Our Media Has Nothing but Contempt for Angel Families
Truth, Not Trash
Ralston Delivers Gold With His Reid Biography
West Virginia Bill Would Authorize Government to Sell Machine Guns to Citizens
Government Subsidies Killed the EV Industry
Steve Hilton Slams Newsom As a Costal Elite, Says He Is the 'Most...
Tipsheet

Sarkozy Makes Presidential Run Official

Sarkozy Makes Presidential Run Official

Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy has made the announcement that he will seek to regain his old job back. He lost his reelection in 2012 to current President Francois Hollande, a socialist with amazingly low poll numbers.

Advertisement

The announcement comes as no surprise to anyone attune to French politics. Sarkozy returned to the limelight in 2014 when he took the lead of Les Republicans, France’s main center-right party. Many then viewed him as being capable of mounting a come-back campaign to Elysee Palace.

Sarkozy’s return comes at a time when his presidential successor, Francois Hollande, is facing voter backlash as terrorism continues to plague the nation. Hollande has been accused of not doing enough to protect French citizens from radical Islam and slow to respond to terrorist threats. His job approval ratings have reached historically low numbers and a multitude of candidates have lined up to oppose him in 2017 – including politicians from the right and left. Hollande’s fellow socialists believe he betrayed them when he embraced market-friendly reforms.

Sarkozy has along the way been hammering the current president to get tough on immigration and buckle down on Islamist militancy. As the attacks have continued, the French have overwhelmingly embraced this sentiment. So much so, Sarkozy may face stiffer opposition to his right.

Advertisement

Related:

FRANCE

Marie Le Pen’s National Front party has gone from political oblivion to national prominence. Considered a “far-right” party – a term used to define certain political parties in Europe - National Front has seen its popularity rise significantly on a nationalist message of anti-immigration and zero tolerance on radical Islam.

The French presidential showdown in 2017 may end up being between Sarkozy, Le Pen, and Hollande (assuming he survives his own socialist intra-party fight).

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement