/ 12 March 2007

Chirac says farewell to 40 years in politics

French President Jacques Chirac was on Sunday night preparing to bid farewell to an uncertain and divided France, which his critics accuse him of tipping into decline.

But after 40 years in politics, the president once described as a ”bulldozer” and ”killer” of rivals was leaving France in suspense as to whether he would express his support for his party opponent, Nicolas Sarkozy, who hopes to take over his job.

Chirac (74) who boasts one of the longest continuous political careers in Europe — twice president, twice prime minister and 18 years mayor of Paris — was hoping to set out his solemn vision of ”France’s place in the world” as voters prepare to replace him with a president from a new generation in six weeks.

Styling himself as an affable rogue, Chirac for decades charmed the public with his handshaking, patting of cows and shaking of dogs’ paws on his tours round France — a man of the people who was able to eat five lunches in one afternoon on the election trail through kitchens.

Nicknamed the ”weathervane” for his ability to shift as it suited him — he went from championing state control in the 1970s to then United States president Ronald Reagan’s free-market liberalism in the 1980s, from nuclear testing to eco-champion, eurosceptic to euro-defender. He was dogged by the sleaze scandals from his days at Paris city hall, which saw some of his closest associates convicted of corruption. He claimed immunity as president, but even after he leaves the Élysée palace, he is unlikely ever to see serious sanctions.

Chirac’s popularity rose over his opposition to the war in Iraq and he will be remembered for his quest to reconcile France with its history, the first French head of state to recognise the Vichy regime’s collaboration in the Holocaust and to apologise to the Jewish people.

But over the past year, the country has seen a series of brutal appraisals of what critics term his dithering, broken promises and wasted 12 years as president. When he came to power in 1995, after two failed attempts, he promised to heal the ”social fracture”, crippling unemployment and inequality, but many suggest he is leaving France worse off, with social unrest on impoverished housing estates and a large public debt. Chirac is most criticised for failing to steward change in France and for calling a referendum on the EU Constitution in 2005, then failing to sell the idea to the electorate, who voted no.

In the past year, ”Chiracophobia” on cinema screens and bestseller lists appeared to have became a national sport.

In the regional newspaper L’Union, Hervé Chabaud wrote: ”We can accuse him of being contradictory, a master of clientelism, a manipulator, an opportunist, but he’s basically a summary of the French, whom he resembles enormously. If not, he would never have been elected head of state.” But, he concluded, it was ”time to turn the page”.

Highs and lows

2003 Opinion polls showed that approval for Jacques Chirac’s anti- war in Iraq policy reached 90%

2002 Chirac agreed common agricultural policy payments with Germany, securing his popularity

1995 Chirac apologised for Vichy collaboration in the deportation of Jews

1997 In May his austerity programme cost the centre-right its majority

2005 France voted no to the EU Constitution. In November he was accused of weak leadership following riots over high unemployment – Guardian Unlimited Â