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Sarkozy makes U-turn on ECB ahead of April 22 vote

AFP

PARIS FRANCE’S President Nicolas Sarkozy launched himself into the last week of an increasingly unlikely reelection bid on Monday with a surprise jab at the independence of the European Central Bank.

With just six days before the first round of voting, and with the right-wing incumbent trailing Socialist challenger Francois Hollande in the polls, Sarkozy reignited debate on an EU economic strategy he signed only last month.

The French leader had begun his campaign by criticising Hollande over his vow to renegotiate the European Union fiscal growth pact, which Sarkozy said would undermine France’s credibility with markets and its EU partners.

But, in a speech on Sunday to tens of thousands of supporters in Paris’s iconic Place de la Concorde, Sarkozy called into question another key plank in the EU strategy, the independence of the ECB, a red line for Germany.

“On the role of the Central Bank in supporting growth, we are also going to open a debate and we will push Europe forward,” he declared. “If the Central Bank does not support growth, then we will not have enough growth.” The idea of expanding the ECB’s role from simply ensuring price stability to one of boosting growth is anathema in Berlin and for Chancellor Angela Merkel, who had previously expressed support for Sarkozy’s re-election campaign. Sarkozy also took a swipe at the 1993 Maastricht Treaty, which enshrined the ECB’s conservative role as an inflation watchdog on the model of Germany’s Bundesbank and has since been the legal basis of European integration. In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis and the subsequent sovereign debt crises among eurozone members, many voices — particularly on the left — have called for the bank to take a more active role in economic policy. But Germany has stood steadfast against calls for euro devaluation, common EU government bonds or increasing the money supply, fearing the return of galloping inflation and of rising interest rates on its own debt. France, under Sarkozy, initially fought this stance in private — while sticking by Germany in public — but Sarkozy came under increasing pressure as the French election campaign took an anti-EU, protectionist turn.Hollande — who is polling neck-and-neck with Sarkozy ahead of the April 22 first round but is the clear favourite to win the May 6 run-off — mocked what he saw as the right-wing incumbent’s late conversion to the left’s view.

“It was about time he began to see clearly, just before the end of his term.

It’s just a shame he forgot about growth for five years.

That’s a long time, especially in a crisis,” Hollande said Monday in a radio interview.

“The outgoing president has just promised to do what he didn’t do. Well, I’m a candidate who will give the question of growth its rightful place on the day after May 6.”


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