Is it too much to ask to stop lionizing things like that? Previous presidents were banned by the Constitution to do so, and chose to uphold it.
Sarkozy bought a Constitutional change through threats (to UMP members who, in great numbers, hated the amendments and would have rejected it with secret ballots) and promises (to people like Baillet, who pretty much sold his party's votes), so that he could do so.
It's not being brave, it's being immensely vain, and quite ready to weaken the country's stability so that one can read in some newspaper that "Nicholas Sarkozy yesterday trod where no French president for 161 years has dared, or chosen, to tread when he spoke to parliament." Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed. Gandhi
I know the UK has elaborate rituals around the Queen's yearly address to underscore Parliament's independence from the Sovereign as a result of the English Revolution, but still... A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous
afew is right that this is just about Sarkozy being able to do a "State of the Union" lookalike.
And the most ironic thing is that Monday's speech is widely seen in France (inclduing by all the rightwing people) as extremely mediocre and empty... In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
this is just about Sarkozy being able to do a "State of the Union" lookalike
But I am not asking only about the Constitution of the 5th republic - the rule was introduced in the 3rd Republic. A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds; a man of deeds and not of words is like a garden full of turds — Anonymous