PARIS: Lagging in the polls, President Nicolas Sarkozy is preparing to defend his record in office this week after a first tumultuous year disappointed French voters. A new poll published on Sunday showed 79 per cent feel their lives have not improved in the past year since Sarkozy took over while only 36 per cent separately said they approved of his performance. Struggling to seize back momentum, Sarkozy is to give a prime-time 90-minute interview on Thursday on French television that is billed as a key opportunity for the president to turn the tide in public opinion. Oddly enough, many of Sarkozy's woes have recently come from within his own camp, with ministers engaging in public bickering and forced to backtrack on a highly unpopular plan to scrap subsidised discounts on train tickets for large families. Along with much of Europe, France is facing a gloomy economic outlook that significantly reduces Sarkozy's room to manoeuvre as he seeks to bring in the sweeping reforms he promised in his election campaign last year. Former prime minister Edouard Balladur, a member of Sarkozy's governing party, said much had been done in a year but that the government needed to set clear priorities, which in turn would be better understood by French voters.
Along with much of Europe, France is facing a gloomy economic outlook
Scribbled down with nary a word of he said, she said counter-argument. It's already fact.
Well, that's nothing new, is it?
Now let's guess who's not part of "much of Europe"...
Hey, it must be true, everybody's saying it! In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes