SéGOLèNE ROYAL


'Marie-Ségolène Royal' (born 22 September 1953 in Dakar, Senegal, then a French colony), known as , () is a French politician. She is the president of the Poitou-Charentes region, a former member of the National Assembly and a prominent member of the Socialist Party. On 16 November 2006, Socialist Party members elected her as their candidate for the 2007 French presidential election.
In the first round of voting in that election, on April 22, 2007, Royal received 25.87 percent of votes to qualify for the second round to face Nicolas Sarkozy who received 31.18 percent. Both debated on 2 May 2007. Sarkozy was elected on May 6, with 53.06 percent of the votes, and Royal lost the election with 46.94 percent.[1]
She is known for her admiration for some "Third Way" policies, for her controversial insistence on law and order issues and for her support of devolution and participatory democracy.

Contents
Early life
Personal life
Political career
Ministerial career
Elected office
2007 Presidential Candidacy
Rumours over personal issues
Policies
Economics
Environment
Education
Family and social affairs
Women's issues
Television issues
LGBT issues
Foreign policy
Bibliography
References
External links

Early life


Ségolène Royal was born in the military base of Ouakam, Dakar, Senegal on 22 September 1953, the daughter of Hélène Dehaye and Jacques Royal, a former artillery officer and aide to the mayor of Chamagne (Vosges).
Her parents had eight children in nine years: Marie-Odette, Marie-Nicole, Gérard, Marie-Ségolène, Antoine, Paul, Henri and Sigisbert.
After high school, Marie-Ségolène was admitted to Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris, an elite university, popularly called ''Sciences Po''. In summer 1971, she was an au pair in Dublin, Ireland.[2] In 1972, at the age of 19, Royal sued her father because he refused to divorce her mother and pay alimony and child support to finance the children's education. She won the case after many years in court, shortly before Jacques Royal died of lung cancer in 1981. Six of the eight children had refused to see him again at Ségolène Royal's insistence.[3]
Royal is a graduate of the elite École Nationale d'Administration (ENA) along with much of France's political elite, and was in the same class as the prime minister under Chirac, Dominique de Villepin.[4]

Personal life


From the late 1970s, Ségolène Royal was the private-life partner of François Hollande, currently head of the French Socialist Party, whom she met at ENA. The couple had four children: law student Thomas (b. 1984), Clémence (b. 1985), Julien (b. 1987) and Flora (b. 1993). While not married, they were bound by the PACS (pacte civil de solidarité), which provides for a civil union between two adults, regardless of gender. She officially announced their separation in June 2007, on the evening of the legislative election.[5] According to the ''Guardian'', she had asked Hollande "to move out of the house" and pursue his new love interest "which has been detailed in books and newspapers." She also announced her intention to wrest control of the party from Hollande.[1]
Royal's eldest child, Thomas Hollande, served as an adviser to her during her presidential candidacy, working on a website designed to appeal to young voters.[6]
Her brother Antoine named his and Ségolène's brother Gérard Royal as the agent who placed the bomb that sank the Greenpeace ship ''Rainbow Warrior''. [7] [8]. Other sources claims this statement is exaggerated and that Gérard was part of the logistics team.[9]
Royal's cousin Anne-Christine Royal has been a candidate of the far-right Front National party at a local election in Bordeaux.[10]

Political career


She served as a judge (''conseiller'') of an administrative court, an assignment for low-ranking graduates after her graduation in 1980, before she was noticed by President François Mitterrand's special adviser Jacques Attali and recruited in his staff in 1982. She held the junior rank of ''chargée de mission'' from 1982 to 1988.[11]
She first tried to get elected in Normandy but was refused by the local socialist party members who considered it carpetbagging. She is then candidate in the Deux-Sèvres. Her candidacy was an example of the French political tradition of ''parachutage'' (parachuting), appointing promising "Parisian" political staffers as candidates in rural districts. However, hers was second rate: she was up against an entrenched UDF incumbent, and François Mitterrand is said to have told her: "You will not win, but you will next time." She did win against the odds, and remarked: "''Pour un parachutage, l'atterrissage est réussi.''" ("As far as parachuting goes, the landing was a success").[12]
After this election, she served as deputy in the National Assembly for the Deux-Sèvres ''département'' (1988-1992, 1993-1997, 2002-2007).
Ms Royal with Réunionese politician Paul Vergès in 2006

When she was the minister of Environment under Pierre Bérégovoy from 1992 to 1993, she failed to be elected mayor of Niort against the incumbent Socialist who ran as an Independent when she received the nomination. She first considered a run for President during the Socialist Party's primaries for the 1995 elections but decided against it because only heavyweights were running. When the Left won the 1997 legislative election, she stood for the presidency of the National Assembly; however, the party instead elected Laurent Fabius. In compensation, she was appointed to Lionel Jospin's government as Vice-Minister of Education, then as Vice-Minister of Family and Childhood from 2000 to 2002.
On 28 March 2004, she was elected (with more than 55%) president of the region Poitou-Charentes, notably defeating Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin's protégée, Élisabeth Morin, in his home region. She kept her National Assembly seat until June 2007, when she chose not to run in the legislative election, saying she thought it was inappropriate to be a delegate in the Assembly and the president of a region simultaneously.
Ministerial career


3 April 1992 - 29 March 1993, Minister of the Environment

4 June 1997 - 27 March 2000, Vice-Minister for Education (ministre déléguée à l'Enseignement scolaire auprès du ministre de l'Éducation nationale)

27 March 2000 - 27 March 2001, Vice-Minister for Family and Childhood (ministre déléguée à la Famille et à l'Enfance auprès de la ministre de l'Emploi et de la Solidarité)

28 March 2001 - 5 May 2002, Vice-Minister for Family and Childhood and Handicapped Persons (ministre déléguée à la Famille, à l'Enfance et aux Personnes handicapées auprès de la ministre de l'Emploi et de la Solidarité).
Elected office


★ 1983-1986 - Member of the Trouville-sur-Mer (Calvados) municipal council

13 June 1988 - 2 May 1992 - Deputy for Deux-Sèvres (resigned to become member of the Bérégovoy government)

13 March 1989 - 18 June 1995 - Member of the Melle (Deux-Sèvres) municipal council

23 March - 3 April 1992 - Member of the Poitou-Charentes regional council

2 April 1992 - 23 March 1998 - Member of the Deux-Sèvres General Council

2 April 1993 - 21 April 1997 - Deputy for Deux-Sèvres

18 June 1995 - 18 March 2001 - Member of the Niort (Deux-Sèvres) municipal council

1 June 1997 - 4 July 1997 - Deputy for Deux-Sèvres (resigned to become member of the Jospin government)

★ June 2002 - 17 June 2007, Deputy for Deux-Sèvres (chose not to run for re-election in 2007)

★ March 2004 - present, President of the Poitou-Charentes region

2007 Presidential Candidacy


Main articles: French presidential election, 2007

Royal on the trail
Youthful Royal supporters backed Royal during the campaign
Crowds of Royal supporters wait to hear the results of the election

On 22 September 2005 ''Paris Match'' published an interview in which she declared that she was considering running for the presidency in 2007. [13] In 2006 the CPE (first employment contract) laws were proposed with large protests as a result. The government backed down and stated that the law would be put on the statute book, but that it would not be applied. After this event Royal was tipped as the lead contender in what is dubbed the "Sarko-Sego" race against Nicolas Sarkozy. Until that time, she had not been thought a likely candidate as she had stayed out of the Socialist Party's power struggles.
On 7 April 2006, Royal launched an Internet-led electoral campaign at Désirs d'avenir ("Desires for the future"), publishing the first of ten chapters of her political manifesto. The campaign — which allowed contributions by visitors in order to help "complete" the book — was designed to help Royal produce a document which was to be published in September 2006, two months before the Socialist Party elected her its presidential candidate.
By the beginning of September, her intentions had become quite clear. She has said that only widespread sexism in the Socialist Party had prevented it from rallying around her candidacy as it would have had she been a man. She announced an official team to promote her campaign on 30 August. At this point, polls showed her to be much more popular than her closest competitor, former Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, and other Socialist heavyweights Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Jack Lang, another former Prime Minister Laurent Fabius and François Hollande.
Her status as a presidential candidate became more likely on 28 September 2006, when Lionel Jospin announced that he would not run after all. Jack Lang followed suit. On 16 November, Royal defeated Laurent Fabius and Dominique Strauss-Kahn in the French Socialist Party primary, becoming the party's candidate for the 2007 presidential election. She won in 101 of 104 of the Socialist Party's ''fédérations'', losing only Haute-Corse, Mayotte and Seine-Maritime (the latter being the home region of Laurent Fabius).
On Sunday, 11 February 2007, Ségolène Royal unveiled the policy platform in her campaign to become President of France.[14]
One of her top advisors, Éric Besson, resigned soon afterwards over a disagreement about the costs of this programme, which he believes could reach €35 billion, while others in the campaign team wanted to delay bringing out that figure.[15] This led to an unusually bitter fall-out, and Mr Besson writing a book titled ''Qui connaît Madame Royal ?'' (Who knows Mrs Royal?), published on March 20. In it, Besson accuses Royal of being a populist, an authoritarian and a luddite and says that he will not vote for her and hopes that she is not elected.[16] He then went on to join the Sarkozy campaign and was rewarded with a junior position in the next government on 18 May 2007.
Following the first round of the presidential election, she faced Nicolas Sarkozy in the second round of voting on 6 May in a two-way runoff.
In the final round of voting on Sunday, 6 May, her opponent Nicolas Sarkozy won the presidency with 53% of the vote.1 Royal conceded defeat and wished Sarkozy the best, requesting he keep her supporters in mind.
Rumours over personal issues

Ségolène Royal and François Hollande at a rally for the parliamentary election, 29 May 2007

In January 2007 a persistent rumour circulated on the Internet that Royal and Hollande avoided paying solidarity tax on wealth by having their three properties owned by a private real estate company. (This came soon after a tax-dodging controversy about singer and tax exile Johnny Hallyday, whom Royal and others criticised.)[17] After UMP deputy Jacques Godfrain relayed the accusations, Royal and Hollande disclosed the exact state of their wealth, and showed that they do indeed pay the tax. Other major candidates followed suit, and Hollande announced that he was suing Godfrain and a newspaper over the allegations.[18]
On January 18 2007 Royal suspended her spokesman Arnaud Montebourg for a month, after he quipped on a television show that "Ségolène Royal has only one flaw: her partner".[19] This came amidst speculation of a growing rift between Royal and Hollande. In June 2007, she announced their separation.

Policies


Royal has been widely criticized for being stronger on rhetoric than policies, and being part of a trend in French politics to focus on the personality and lifestyles of politicians rather than their ideas.
She has also tended to campaign on family and other socially-oriented issues, rather than on economic or foreign policy issues. For instance, she has mounted campaigns against the exposure of children to violent television shows, including cartoons (see her 1989 book, listed below, ''Le Ras-le-bol des bébés zappeurs'', roughly translated as "The Channel-Surfing Kids Are Fed Up"), and more generally has taken a stand on several issues regarding family values and the protection of children.
Economics

Royal stated as part of her 100-point platform that if elected, she would raise the lowest state pensions by five percent, increase the monthly minimum wage to €1,500 ($2,000), raise benefits of handicapped citizens, implement state-paid rental deposits for the poorest citizens, and guarantee a job or job training to every student within six months of graduation. She pledged to abolish a flexible work contract for small companies. She pledged free contraception for all young women and a €10,000 interest-free loan for all young people.[20] She did not directly address whether additional taxes would need to be raised to fund these programs, stating that they can be paid for by cutting waste in government.[21]
Environment

During her tenure as ''Minister for the Environment'', 1992-1993, Royal campaigned actively and successfully for the ''Law on the treatment and recycling of refuse'' (La loi sur le traitement et le recyclage des déchets), the ''Law to preserve the countryside'' (La loi sur la reconquête des paysages), a ''Save our countrysides, savour their products'' campaign to provide proper labelling for the products of 100 local areas (opération «Sauvons nos paysages, savourons leurs produits»), and the ''Law against noise pollution'' (La loi de lutte contre le bruit). She provided compensation for people adversely affected by airport noise.
Education

During her tenure as ''Minister-delegate for the Family, Children, and the Handicapped'', 2000-2002, Royal was active in the re-launch of the Priority Education Zones program (ZEP / ), the creation of a government student lunch program, the implementation of language instruction as a priority in primary schools, the creation of a national home-tutoring program, Heures de Soutien Scolaire,[22] and the creation of programs for parental involvement in schools, "la Semaine des parents à l'école", and national campaigns for the elections of parent-representatives. She also campaigned for the creation of local education and citizenship education contracts, the "Initiatives citoyennes" program for teaching children how to live together, the law on ''Defense of children's rights and campaign against violence in the schools'' (Loi de juin 1998 relative à la prévention et à la répression des infractions sexuelles ainsi qu'à la protection des mineurs), the ''Campaign against "hazing" rituals in higher education'' (Loi de juin 1998 contre le ), the ''Campaign against violence and racketeering'' which included implementation of the "SOS Violence" telephone number, and the implementation of mandatory civics instruction in secondary schools.
In January 2006 she criticized secondary school teachers (workers of state public service) who give private lessons outside of school hours, saying that they should spend more time in school. When a bootleg video of the speech surfaced on the internet in November 2006, the teacher's union SNES rebuffed her, requesting that she renounce her proposal.[23]
Family and social affairs

Ségolène Royal speaking to a crowd in Nantes

In 1989, Ségolène Royal authored a book called "The Channel-Surfing Kids Are Fed-Up"[24], where she criticized Japanese animation (then dominant in certain TV programs) as poor quality production detrimental for children.
Royal is in favor of, and has worked for, the ''Parental rights and obligations act'' (loi sur l'autorité parentale), the ''Women's rights reform and anonymous childbirth act'' ("l'accouchement sous X"),[25] the creation of paternity leave, the creation of 40,000 new spaces in French nursery schools, and ''Social housing reform''.[26] She has been active in campaigns providing for ''Parental time-off provisions and financial support for child illness care'', ''Special education support'' ("parents d'enfants handicapés"), ''Benefit allocations for students starting the new school year'' ("Allocation de rentrée scolaire"), and the ''Prostitution of Minors Act'' (Loi contre la prostitution des mineurs) which provides penal measures for clients. Royal has supported the ''Law against child pornography'', the creation of the association "Childhood and the Media" ("Enfance et média") against violence in the media, the creation of the "Plan Handiscole" for the education of handicapped children and adolescents and their integration into life at school, programs for mass and individual transportation, and the creation of the program ''Tourism and the Handicapped'' ("Tourisme et handicap").[27]
Women's issues

When she accepted her nomination as the Socialist presidential candidate, Royal said, "There is a strong correlation between the status of a woman and the state of justice or injustice in a country." According to an article in Ms. magazine, French women currently earn 80 percent of a male counterpart's salary. [28]
Television issues

Royal has been a long-standing critic of violence on television. She has voiced opinions in the past linking youth crime to exposure to pornography and television violence.
She also described the M6 programme "Loft Story", based on the internationally popular Big Brother format, as contrary to principles of human dignity and risking transforming viewers into voyeurs instead of providing quality programming.[29]
LGBT issues

In 2000 Royal, as the then Minister of the Family and Children spoke out against anti-gay bullying in schools, saying,
A law passed in February 2002, introduced by Royal on behalf of the Jospin government, allows some parental authority to be granted to same-sex partners. The law amended Article 377 of the Civil Code in allowing a parent to ask a judge to share his/her parental authority with a partner. Article 377-1, added by the law, ensures that "delegation may provide, for the needs of education of a child, that the father and mother, or one of them, shall share all or part of the exercise of parental authority with the third person delegatee" [2].
In a June 2006 interview with LGBT publication ''Têtu'', Royal said "opening up marriage to same-sex couples is needed in the name of equality, visibility and respect" and said that if her party formed the next government she would introduce a bill to legalise same-sex marriage and adoption.[30]
Foreign policy

Foreign affairs are one of the key responsibilities of the French President. She initially appeared to have few opinions on key subjects, such as the accession of Turkey to the European Union, merely responding, "my opinion is that of the French people."[31] On another crucial issue the subject of the Iranian nuclear program, Royal also appeared insufficiently briefed. She initially took a very hard line in a televised debate, contending that any nuclear power programme in Iran must be prevented since it would inevitably lead to weapons production. When she was criticised by French politicians for not understanding the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty – which gives signatories the right to nuclear power for non-military purposes – Royal softened her position and, through a spokesman, said that a civil nuclear program should be allowed as long as United Nations inspectors were permitted to conduct spot checks.[32]
Since December 2006 Royal has been travelling abroad extensively in order to enhance her international profile and credibility, but her efforts have been set back by a series of blunders, which her political opponents at UMP have been quick to jump on.
In early December 2006 controversy followed a brief tour of the Middle East. Meeting Hezbollah politician Ali Ammar, she took exception to his use of the euphemism "Zionist entity," but failed to take issue with his comparison of the Palestinian territories to the France under German occupation during World War II. This attracted criticism in France and in Israel which Royal visited next. However, the French ambassador to Lebanon, Bernard Emié, backed her explanation that she did not hear "the offending remarks" - the discussion took place via an interpreter supplied by the Lebanese parliament.[33] In the same visit, Royal thanked the minister for being so "frank" when he described US foreign policy in the Middle East as "unlimited American insanity."[34]
Royal visited China in January 2007; after speaking with a lawyer in that country she noted to the press that he had pointed out to her that the Chinese legal system was "faster" than the French one. She was immediately reminded by her opponents at home that the Chinese system orders 10,000 executions each year, and that defence lawyers there must be authorized by the Communist Party.[35]
She however brought up with her hosts the fate of three Chinese journalists recently imprisoned, and criticised the meekness of French entrepreneurs in tackling new markets such as China. Royal was criticised by French and international media by what was called 'mangling the French language' in a soundbite delivered on the Great Wall of China.[36]
In January 2007, during a meeting with Quebec opposition leader and Parti Québécois head André Boisclair, she stirred up more controversy by declaring her support for the Quebec sovereignty movement in its aim to secede from Canada. Royal said Quebec and France share common values, including "sovereignty and Quebec's freedom."[37][38] Soon after, Royal took a phone call from comedian Gérald Dahan passing himself off as Quebec Premier Jean Charest and was tricked into making a quip about Corsica's independence: "Not all French people would be opposed." She then added, "But don't repeat that or we'll have another scandal on our hands."[39][40]
On April 5, 2007, when commenting on the kidnapping of two Frenchmen by the Taliban in Afghanistan, Royal called for sanctions to be imposed by the United Nations against regimes like the Taliban. This comment was widely interpreted as indicating that Royal did not understand that the Taliban no longer formed the Afghan government [41], though she claims that she simply intended to highlight that regime as an example of modern repression.

Bibliography


Royal is the author unless otherwise noted.

★ ''Le Printemps des grands-parents : la nouvelle alliance des âges'' (Paris : Cogite-R. Laffont, 1987) ISBN 2-221-05314-1, (Paris : France Loisirs, 1988) ISBN 2-7242-3948-2, (Paris : Presses pocket, 1989) ISBN 2-266-02730-1.

★ ''Le Ras-le-bol des bébés zappeurs'' (Paris : R. Laffont, 1989) ISBN 2-221-05826-7, cover "Télé-massacre, l'overdose?", subjects): Télévision et enfants, Violence -- A la télévision.

★ ''Pays, paysans, paysages'' (Paris : R. Laffont, 1993) ISBN 2-221-07046-1, subject(s): Environnement -- Protection -- France ; Politique de l'environnement -- France ; Développement rural -- France.

★ France. Ministère de l'environnement (1991-1997) ''Ségolène Royal, une année d'actions pour la planète : avril 1992 - mars 1993'' (Paris : Ministère de l'environnement, ca 1993), subject(s): Politique de l'environnement -- France.

★ France. Assemblée nationale (1958-) Commission des affaires étrangères ''Rapport d'information sur les suites de la Conférence de Rio / présenté par M. Roland Nungesser et Mme Ségolène Royal (Paris : Assemblée nationale, 1994) ISBN 2-11-087788-X, subject(s): Développement durable ; Conférence des Nations unies sur l'environnement et le développement.

★ ''La vérité d'une femme'' (Paris : Stock, 1996) ISBN 2-234-04648-3, subject(s): Pratiques politiques -- France -- 1970-.

★ Laguerre, Christian ''École, informatique et nouveaux comportements'' préf. de Ségolène Royal (Paris ; Montréal (Québec) : Éd. l'Harmattan, 1999) ISBN 2-7384-7453-5, subject(s): Informatique -- Aspect social ; Éducation et informatique ; Ordinateurs et enfants.

★ Sassier, Monique ''Construire la médiation familiale : arguments et propositions'' preface by Ségolène Royal (Paris : Dunod, 2001) ISBN 2-10-005993-9.

★ Amar, Cécile and Hassoux, Didier ''Ségolène et François'' ([Paris] : Privé, impr. 2005) ISBN 2-35076-002-2, subject(s): Royal, Ségolène (1953-) -- Biographies ; Hollande, François (1954-) -- Biographies.

★ Bernard, Daniel ''Madame Royal'' ([Paris] : Jacob-Duvernet, impr. 2005) ISBN 2-84724-091-8, subject(s): Royal, Ségolène (1953-) -- Biographies ; France -- Politique et gouvernement -- 1958-.

★ ''Désir d'avenir'' ([Paris] : Flammarion, [forthcoming, March 2006]) ISBN 2080688057.

★ Malouines-Me ''La Madone et le Culbuto - Ou l'Inlassable Ambition de Ségolène Royal et François Hollande'' ([Paris] : Fayard, [forthcoming, April 5 2006]), series: LITT.GENE, ISBN 2213623546.

References



1. Sarkozy Wins in France and Vows Break With Past
2. When Ségolène came to stay
3. La jeunesse cachée de Ségolène Royal
4. Ségo returns to her 'political laboratory' to savour victory
5. Ségolène Royal et François Hollande se sont séparés
6. A family campaign in France
7. "Presidential hopeful's brother linked to Rainbow Warrior bomb"
8. NZ rules out new Rainbow Warrior probe
9. ''Guerres secrètes à l'Élysée'', by Paul Barril, ed Albin Michel, Paris (1996)
10. La cousine de Ségolène candidate FN
11. Segolene Royal: First female presidential candidate
12. Biographie : Ségolène Royal
13. Ségolène Royal «Que le meilleur gagne»
14. The Presidential Pact
15. New blow for Royal as top adviser quits
16. Diatribe d'un déçu de "Madame Royal"
17. Royal is accused of dodging tax on her wealth
18. Kerviel, Sylvie: "La blogosphère envenime la campagne", ''Le Monde'' (21-22 January 2007) p. 17.
19. Royal suspends a campaign spokesman
20. Ségolène Royal unveils far-left economic campaign platform
21. Ségolène's New Tack: a Hard Left
22. L'annuaire de Soutien Scolaire
23. Le SNES demande à Ségolène Royal de "renoncer" à ses propositions sur le temps de travail des enseignants
24. Ségolène Royal, ''Le ras-le-bol des bébés zappeurs'', Robert Laffont, 1989, ISBN 2221058267
25. Réforme de l’accouchement sous X et la création du Conseil national pour l’accès aux origines personnelles
26. Bilan et perspective des actions en faveur des familles et de l’enfance
27. Le label national Tourisme et Handicap
28. Wachter, Sarah J. "Battle Royal: A French woman compaigns to be Mme. la Presidente." Ms. magazine. Spring 2007. pp 24-26.
29. Ségolène Royal, a woman who always took courageous decisions
30. French Presidential Contender Calls For Gay Marriage
31. Ségolène Royal: The 'gazelle' of French politics bolts ahead of the pack
32. Royal criticised for hard line on Iran's nuclear ambitions Martin Arnold
33. Royal's first foreign tour blighted by blunders
34. Ségolène Royal and the Future of Franco–American Relations
35. L'éloge de la justice chinoise par Royal fait des vagues
36. French Candidate Bashed for 'Bravitude'
37. Harper takes Segolene Royal to task for her comments on Quebec sovereignty
38. Canadian politicians rap Segolene Royal for comments on Quebec sovereignty
39. Royal caught out by hoax caller
40. Royal's campaign wobbles on gaffes and dirty tricks
41. > No defining campaign issue for Sarkozy, Royal and others


External links



Ségolène Royal's official page at the French National Assembly

Ségolène Royal's official campaign site for the 2007 presidential elections

Philippe Alexandre, "Ségolène in a State of Grace," ''Paris Match'' (Oct. 5-11, 2006), pp. 54-55 (translation)

BBC: Profile: Ségolène Royal

Spiegel Ségolène Royal Could Soon Become France's Next President

A left wing comment on Royal's selection

The irresistible rise of Ségolène Royal

Interview with Ms. Royal in French with English translation part 2

French Socialists Put Woman Forward for President. Eleanor Beardsley, ''All Things Considered'', National Public Radio. November 17, 2006.

Letter From Europe- Round 1 Jane Kramer, ''The New Yorker'', April 23, 2007

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