Sarkozy slumps in regional elections
"The economic crisis has cast its vote", La Tribune reports, the day after the first round of regional elections in France, which saw a low 48% turnout and the resurgence of the extreme right Front National (FN) party. With 11.7% of the vote overall, the FN will now stand in half of France's twenty six regions in the second round of run-offs scheduled for March 21. "The FN, which campaigned heavily against Sarkozy's policies, has come close to matching its 2004 performance," La Tribune notes.
Other big winners included the Parti Socialiste with 29.5% of the vote and Europe Ecologie, an environmentalist party, with 12.5%. The mainstream right attracted just 27% of voters. "Deeply unpopular", Sarkozy has announced he will put off reforms in the second half of 2011, "to break with his image as an overreaching president" ahead of the 2012 presidential elections, the paper reports. The socialists expect to use the second round of the regional elections "as an early primary to pick a socialist candidate for president in 2012".
In a time of crisis with high unemployment, young Lithuanians are following in the footsteps of their emigrant ancestors. Tens of thousands have left the country in search of a better life, mainly in the British Isles and Scandinavia. The weekly Veidas reports:
The new Eurogroup meeting on February 9 is not enough to banish the spectre of a Greek bankruptcy. While Athens may largely be responsible for the crisis, the EU and its partners are not blameless themselves. La Stampa argues that their confused messages and the absence of any strategy have transformed a resolvable problem into an explosive chaos.
Two camps, two theories, and two visions of France: 18 years after the massacre of 800,000 Tutsis, the precise role played by Paris is still the subject of heated debate, fueled by the findings of successive criminal investigations.