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Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Hollande sworn in as new French president in low key ceremony


Francois Hollande became French president on Tuesday in an official handover ceremony that makes him the country’s first Socialist leader since Francois Mitterrand.

Outgoing President Nicolas Sarkozy greeted Hollande on the steps of the Elysee presidential palace, and took him inside to transfer nuclear codes and other secret files ahead of a short swearing-in ceremony attended by around 400 guests.


Hollande was due to fly to Berlin later in the day for his first meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Hollande, whose election comes as the euro zone is teetering back into crisis over fears about Greece’s future in the single currency, will give his first presidential news conference in Berlin in the evening, flanked by the center-right Merkel.

His first words as president will be keenly watched by financial markets eager for reassurance that his push to tack pro-growth instruments onto Europe’s budget discipline treaty will not sour the start of his relationship with Merkel.


Jean-Pierre Jouyet, a friend of three decades and a seasoned European affairs specialist, said the Berlin meeting was sure to go well but that this did not mean Hollande would be unable to press his case with Merkel for a more pro-growth strategy.


“It will go well in terms of form because Francois Hollande is courteous and so is Angela Merkel,” Jouyet, head of France’s financial markets regulator, told RTL radio. “In terms of substance, neither has lessons to give the other.”


Any indications on initial economic policy will be scrutinized both outside France and inside, where frustration over rampant unemployment and a sickly economy were key factors behind conservative Nicolas Sarkozy’s defeat.


Hollande, who said on the night of his election that the weight of events in Europe forced him to keep his celebrations short, said on Monday he knew he would be judged on how he starts his presidency.


Anxious not to lose the “Mr Normal” image that appealed to voters tired of his showman predecessor, Hollande has asked for his inauguration ceremony to be kept as low-key as possible.


In a break with tradition, he will invite just three dozen or so personal guests to join some 350 officials at the event and neither his nor his partner Valerie Trierweiler’s children will attend.


That said, the man who until recently chugged to work on a scooter will still be presented with the official chain of office, a gold collar weighing nearly a kilogram engraved with the names of all Fifth Republic presidents.


He will then be taken on a traditional victory spin down the Champs Elysees avenue in an open-topped car.


Hollande is set to name civil servant Pierre-Rene Lemas as his chief of staff shortly after his swearing-in. Germanophile Jean-Marc Ayrault, who has strong contacts in Berlin, could be named prime minister later in the day.


Before that, Sarkozy will go through the ritual of entrusting his successor with nuclear codes and other secret dossiers, and Hollande will eat his first lunch as president with Socialist former prime ministers Pierre Mauroy, Laurent Fabius, Michel Rocard, Edith Cresson and Lionel Jospin.


Hollande has picked an upscale hybrid Citroen as his official car and has had it fitted with a flat floor and a rail he can hold onto while standing up and waving to the public.


Aides said palace chauffeurs were frantically practicing driving the hybrid car without stalling it.


Hollande will be heading to the United States on Thursday for G8 and NATO summits as soon as his government is named and holds a first cabinet meeting on Thursday.

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