An Ifop survey found that Le Pen scored as highly as Hollande among blue-collar employees in the first round and outpolled the Socialist among manual workers. Both drew more working-class votes than Sarkozy.
After the president's campaign attacks on organized labor, France's largest union, the Communist-led CGT, called on members this week to vote Sarkozy out of office, breaking with a tradition of staying aloof from outright political positioning.
The frustration on the left runs so deep that the Communist daily l'Humanite newspaper accused Sarkozy of launching a hostile "takeover bid" for labor day, comparing the president on its front page with Marshall Philippe Petain, the wartime leader who collaborated with Nazi Germany.
France's celebration of the labor movement is part of a far broader international celebration that marks such developments as the introduction of the 8-hour working day in the early 20th century.
While its origins date back to the years after the French Revolution of 1789, the event was turned into a paid public holiday by Petain in 1941 and the date fixed on May 1. L'Humanite said that Petain, like Sarkozy, had accused the labor unions in his time of pursuing economic or political goals.
Hollande said he would attend a memorial ceremony on May Day for former Socialist Prime Minister Pierre Beregovoy, who took his life on May 1, 1993.
(Reporting By Brian Love; Editing by Paul Taylor/Janet McBride)
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Email
- Reprints
0 comments:
Post a Comment