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Jacques Chirac

Jacques René Chirac (UK: /ˈʃɪəræk/,[1][2] US: /ʒɑːk ʃɪəˈrɑːk/ (listen),[2][3][4] French: [ʒak ʁəne ʃiʁak] (listen); 29 November 1932 – 26 September 2019) was a French politician who served as President of France[5] from 1995 to 2007. Chirac was previously Prime Minister of France from 1974 to 1976 and from 1986 to 1988, as well as Mayor of Paris from 1977 to 1995.

Jacques Chirac
Chirac in 1997
President of France
In office
17 May 1995 – 16 May 2007
Prime Minister
Preceded byFrançois Mitterrand
Succeeded byNicolas Sarkozy
Prime Minister of France
In office
20 March 1986 – 10 May 1988
PresidentFrançois Mitterrand
Preceded byLaurent Fabius
Succeeded byMichel Rocard
In office
27 May 1974 – 25 August 1976
PresidentValéry Giscard d'Estaing
Preceded byPierre Messmer
Succeeded byRaymond Barre
Mayor of Paris
In office
20 March 1977 – 16 May 1995
Deputy
Preceded byOffice re-established
Succeeded byJean Tiberi
President of Rally for the Republic
In office
5 December 1976 – 4 November 1994
Preceded byParty established
Succeeded byAlain Juppé
Offices held
1970–1979
Minister of the Interior
In office
27 February 1974 – 28 May 1974
Prime MinisterPierre Messmer
Preceded byRaymond Marcellin
Succeeded byMichel Poniatowski
Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development
In office
7 July 1972 – 27 February 1974
Prime MinisterPierre Messmer
Preceded byMichel Cointat [fr]
Succeeded byRaymond Marcellin
Minister for Parliamentary Relations
In office
7 January 1971 – 5 July 1972
Prime MinisterJacques Chaban-Delmas
Preceded byRoger Frey
Succeeded byRobert Boulin
President of the General Council of Corrèze
In office
15 March 1970 – 25 March 1979
Preceded byÉlie Rouby [fr]
Succeeded byGeorges Debat [fr]
Personal details
Born
Jacques René Chirac

(1932-11-29)29 November 1932
Paris, France
Died26 September 2019(2019-09-26) (aged 86)
Paris, France
Resting placeMontparnasse Cemetery, Paris
Political party
  • PCF (before 1962)
  • UNR (1962–1968)
  • UDR (1968–1976)
  • RPR (1976–2002)
  • UMP (2002–2007)
Spouse
(m. 1956)
Children3, including Claude and Anh Dao Traxel (foster-daughter)
Alma mater
Signature
Military service
AllegianceFrench Fourth Republic
Branch/serviceFrench Army
Years of service1954–1957
RankSecond lieutenant

After attending the École nationale d'administration, Chirac began his career as a high-level civil servant, entering politics shortly thereafter. Chirac occupied various senior positions, including Minister of Agriculture and Minister of the Interior. In 1981 and 1988, he unsuccessfully ran for president as the standard-bearer for the conservative Gaullist party Rally for the Republic. Chirac's internal policies initially included lower tax rates, the removal of price controls, strong punishment for crime and terrorism, and business privatisation.[6] After pursuing these policies in his second term as prime minister, he changed his views. He argued for different economic policies and was elected president in 1995, with 52.6% of the vote in the second round, beating Socialist Lionel Jospin, after campaigning on a platform of healing the "social rift" (fracture sociale).[7] Chirac's economic policies, based on dirigisme, allowing for state-directed investment, stood in opposition to the laissez-faire policies of the United Kingdom under the ministries of Margaret Thatcher and John Major, which Chirac described as "Anglo-Saxon ultraliberalism".[8]

He was also known for his stand against the American-led invasion of Iraq, his recognition of the collaborationist French Government's role in deporting Jews, and his reduction of the presidential term from 7 years to 5 through a referendum in 2000.[citation needed] At the 2002 French presidential election, he won 82.2% of the vote in the second round against the far-right candidate, Jean-Marie Le Pen, and was the last president to be re-elected until 2022. During his second term, he had a very low approval rating and was considered one of the least popular presidents in modern French political history.[citation needed]

In 2011, the Paris court declared Chirac guilty of diverting public funds and abusing public confidence, giving him a two-year suspended prison sentence.[9]

Early life and education

Family background

Jacques René Chirac was born on 29 November 1932 in the 5th arrondissement of Paris.[10] He was the son of Abel François Marie Chirac (1898–1968), a successful executive for an aircraft company,[7] and Marie-Louise Valette (1902–1973), a housewife. His grandparents were all teachers[11] from Sainte-Féréole in Corrèze. His great-grandparents on both sides were peasants in the rural south-western region of the Corrèze.[12]

According to Chirac, his name "originates from the langue d'oc, that of the troubadours, therefore that of poetry".[13] He was a Catholic.[14]

Chirac was an only child (his elder sister, Jacqueline, died in infancy nearly ten years before his birth).[15] He was educated in Paris at the Cours Hattemer, a private school.[16] He then attended the Lycée Carnot and the Lycée Louis-le-Grand. After his baccalauréat, behind his father's back he went off to serve for three months as a sailor on a coal-transport.[17]

Chirac played rugby union for Brive's youth team, and also played at university level. He played no. 8 and second row.[18] At age 18, his ambition was to become a ship's captain.[19]

Education and early career

At age 16, Chirac wanted to learn Sanskrit and found a White Russian Sanskrit teacher in Paris who ended up teaching him Russian; by age 17 Chirac was almost fluent in Russian.[17] Inspired by Charles de Gaulle, Chirac started to pursue a civil service career in the 1950s. During this period, he joined the French Communist Party, sold copies of L'Humanité, and took part in meetings of a communist cell.[20] In 1950, he signed the Soviet-inspired Stockholm Appeal for the abolition of nuclear weapons – which led him to be questioned when he applied for his first visa to the United States.[21]

In 1953, after graduating from the Sciences Po, he attended a non-credit course at Harvard University's summer school, before entering the École nationale d'administration, which trains France's top civil servants, in 1957.[19]

In the United States, Chirac worked at Anheuser-Busch in St. Louis, Missouri.[22]

Chirac trained as a reserve military officer in armoured cavalry at Saumur.[23] He then volunteered to fight in the Algerian War, using personal connections to be sent despite the reservations of his superiors. His superiors did not want to make him an officer because they suspected he had communist leanings.[24] In 1965, he became an auditor in the Court of Auditors.[citation needed][25]

Early political career

The "Bulldozer": 1962–1971

In April 1962, Chirac was appointed head of the personal staff of Prime Minister Georges Pompidou. This appointment launched Chirac's political career. Pompidou considered Chirac his protégé, and referred to him as "my bulldozer" for his skill at getting things done. The nickname Le Bulldozer caught on in French political circles, where it also referred to his abrasive manner. As late as the 1988 presidential election, Chirac maintained this reputation.[26]

At Pompidou's suggestion, Chirac ran as a Gaullist for a seat in the National Assembly in 1967.[19] He was elected deputy for his home Corrèze département, a stronghold of the left. This surprising victory in the context of a Gaullist ebb permitted him to enter the government as Minister of Social Affairs. Although Chirac was well-situated in de Gaulle's entourage, being related by marriage to the general's sole companion at the time of the Appeal of 18 June 1940, he was more of a "Pompidolian" than a "Gaullist". When student and worker unrest rocked France in May 1968, Chirac played a central role in negotiating a truce.[19] Then, as state secretary of economy (1968–1971), he worked closely with Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, who headed the ministry of economy and finance.[27]

Cabinet minister: 1971–1974

After some months in the ministry for Relations with Parliament, Chirac's first high-level post came in 1972 when he became Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development under Pompidou, who had been elected president in 1969, after de Gaulle retired. Chirac quickly earned a reputation as a champion of French farmers' interests, and first attracted international attention when he assailed U.S., West German, and European Commission agricultural policies which conflicted with French interests.

On 27 February 1974, after the resignation of Raymond Marcellin, Chirac was appointed Minister of the Interior.[28] On 21 March 1974, he cancelled the SAFARI project due to privacy concerns after its existence was revealed by Le Monde.[29] From March 1974, he was entrusted by President Pompidou with preparations for the presidential election then scheduled for 1976. These elections were moved forward because of Pompidou's sudden death on 2 April 1974.

Chirac vainly attempted to rally Gaullists behind Prime Minister Pierre Messmer. Jacques Chaban-Delmas announced his candidacy in spite of the disapproval of the "Pompidolians". Chirac and others published the call of the 43 in favour of Giscard d'Estaing, the leader of the non-Gaullist part of the parliamentary majority. Giscard d'Estaing was elected as Pompidou's successor after France's most competitive election campaign in years. In return, the new president chose Chirac to lead the cabinet.

Prime Minister of Giscard: 1974–1976

 
Chirac with Romanian president Nicolae Ceaușescu during a visit in Neptun, 1975

When Valéry Giscard d'Estaing became president, he nominated Chirac as prime minister on 27 May 1974, to reconcile the "Giscardian" and "non-Giscardian" factions of the parliamentary majority. At the age of 41, Chirac stood out as the very model of the jeunes loups ('young wolves') of French politics, but he was faced with the hostility of the "Barons of Gaullism" who considered him a traitor for his role during the previous presidential campaign. In December 1974, he took the lead of the Union of Democrats for the Republic (UDR) against the will of its more senior personalities.

As prime minister, Chirac quickly set about persuading the Gaullists that, despite the social reforms proposed by President Giscard, the basic tenets of Gaullism, such as national and European independence, would be retained. Chirac was advised by Pierre Juillet and Marie-France Garaud, two former advisers of Pompidou. These two organised the campaign against Chaban-Delmas in 1974. They advocated a clash with Giscard d'Estaing because they thought his policy bewildered the conservative electorate.[30]

Citing Giscard's unwillingness to give him authority, Chirac resigned as prime minister in 1976.[31] He proceeded to build up his political base among France's several conservative parties, with a goal of reconstituting the Gaullist UDR into a Neo-Gaullist group, the Rally for the Republic (RPR). Chirac's first tenure as prime minister was also an arguably progressive one, with improvements in both the minimum wage and the social welfare system carried out during the course of his premiership.[30]

Mayor of Paris: 1977–1995

After his departure from the cabinet, Chirac wanted to gain the leadership of the political right, to gain the French presidency in the future. The RPR was conceived as an electoral machine against President Giscard d'Estaing. Paradoxically, Chirac benefited from Giscard's decision to create the office of mayor in Paris, which had been in abeyance since the 1871 Commune, because the leaders of the Third Republic (1871–1940) feared that having municipal control of the capital would give the mayor too much power. In 1977, Chirac stood as a candidate against Michel d'Ornano, a close friend of the president, and he won. As mayor of Paris, Chirac's political influence grew. He held this post until 1995.[32]

Chirac supporters point out that, as mayor, he provided programmes to help the elderly, people with disabilities, and single mothers, and introduced the street-cleaning Motocrotte,[33] while providing incentives for businesses to stay in Paris. His opponents contend that he installed "clientelist" policies.

Governmental opposition

Struggle for the right-wing leadership: 1976–1986

In 1978, Chirac attacked the pro-European policy of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing (VGE), and made a nationalist turn with the December 1978 Call of Cochin, initiated by his counsellors Marie-France Garaud and Pierre Juillet [fr], which had first been called by Pompidou. Hospitalised in Hôpital Cochin after a car crash, he declared that "as always about the drooping of France, the pro-foreign party acts with its peaceable and reassuring voice". He appointed Yvan Blot, an intellectual who would later join the National Front, as director of his campaigns for the 1979 European election.[34]

After the poor results of the election, Chirac broke with Garaud and Juillet. Vexed Marie-France Garaud stated: "We thought Chirac was made of the same marble of which statues are carved in, we perceive he's of the same faience bidets are made of."[35] His rivalry with Giscard d'Estaing intensified. Although it has been often interpreted by historians as the struggle between two rival French right-wing families (the Bonapartists, represented by Chirac, and the Orleanists, represented by VGE), both figures in fact were members of the liberal, Orleanist tradition, according to historian Alain-Gérard Slama.[34] But the eviction of the Gaullist barons and of President Giscard d'Estaing convinced Chirac to assume a strong neo-Gaullist stance.[citation needed]

Chirac made his first run for president against Giscard d'Estaing in the 1981 election, thus splitting the centre-right vote.[36] He was eliminated in the first round with 18% of the vote. He reluctantly supported Giscard in the second round. He refused to give instructions to the RPR voters but said that he supported the incumbent president "in a private capacity", which was interpreted as almost de facto support of the Socialist Party's (PS) candidate, François Mitterrand, who was elected by a broad majority.[37]

Giscard has always blamed Chirac for his defeat. He was told by Mitterrand, before his death, that the latter had dined with Chirac before the election. Chirac told the Socialist candidate that he wanted to "get rid of Giscard". In his memoirs, Giscard wrote that between the two rounds, he phoned the RPR headquarters. He passed himself off, as a right-wing voter, by changing his voice. The RPR employee advised him "certainly do not vote Giscard!" After 1981, the relationship between the two men became tense, with Giscard, even though he had been in the same government coalition as Chirac, criticising Chirac's actions openly.[citation needed]

After the May 1981 presidential election, the right also lost the subsequent legislative election that year. However, as Giscard had been knocked out, Chirac appeared as the principal leader of the right-wing opposition. Due to his attacks against the economic policy of the Socialist government, he gradually aligned himself with prevailing economically liberal opinion, even though it did not correspond with Gaullist doctrine. While the far-right National Front grew, taking advantage of the proportional representation electoral system which had been introduced for the 1986 legislative elections, he signed an electoral pact with the Giscardian (and more or less Christian Democratic) party Union for French Democracy (UDF).[citation needed]

Prime Minister of Mitterrand: 1986–1988

 
Chirac (centre) during his second term as prime minister

When the RPR/UDF right-wing coalition won a slight majority in the National Assembly in the 1986 election, Mitterrand (PS) appointed Chirac prime minister (though many in Mitterrand's inner circle lobbied him to choose Jacques Chaban-Delmas instead). This unprecedented power-sharing arrangement, known as cohabitation, gave Chirac the lead in domestic affairs. However, it is generally conceded that Mitterrand used the areas granted to the President of the Republic, or "reserved domains" of the Presidency, Defence and Foreign Affairs, to belittle his prime minister.[citation needed]

Chirac's cabinet sold many public companies, renewing the liberalisation initiated under Laurent Fabius's Socialist government of 1984–1986, and abolished the solidarity tax on wealth (ISF), a symbolic tax on those with high value assets introduced by Mitterrand's government. Elsewhere, the plan for university reform (plan Devaquet) caused a crisis in 1986 when a student called Malik Oussekine was killed by the police, leading to massive demonstrations and the proposal's withdrawal. It has been said during other student crises that this event strongly affected Jacques Chirac, who was afterwards careful about possible police violence during such demonstrations (e.g., maybe explaining part of the decision to "promulgate without applying" the First Employment Contract (CPE) after large student demonstrations against it).[38]

One of his first acts concerning foreign policy was to call back Jacques Foccart (1913–1997), who had been de Gaulle's and his successors' leading counsellor for African matters, called by journalist Stephen Smith the "father of all "networks" on the continent, at the time [in 1986] aged 72."[39] Foccart, who had also co-founded the Gaullist SAC militia (dissolved by Mitterrand in 1982 after the Auriol massacre) along with Charles Pasqua, and who was a key component of the Françafrique system, was again called to the Elysée Palace when Chirac won the 1995 presidential election. Furthermore, confronted by anti-colonialist movements in New Caledonia, Prime Minister Chirac ordered a military intervention against the separatists in the Ouvéa cave, leading to the deaths of 19 militants. He allegedly refused any alliance with Jean-Marie Le Pen's Front National.[40]

Crossing the desert: 1988–1995

Chirac ran against Mitterrand for a second time in the 1988 election. He obtained 20 per cent of the vote in the first round, but lost the second with only 46 per cent. He resigned from the cabinet and the right lost the next legislative election.[41]

For the first time, his leadership over the RPR was challenged. Charles Pasqua and Philippe Séguin criticised his abandonment of Gaullist doctrines. On the right, a new generation of politicians, the "renovation men", accused Chirac and Giscard of being responsible for the electoral defeats. In 1992, convinced a candidate could not become president whilst advocating anti-European policies, he called for a "yes" vote in the referendum on the Maastricht Treaty, against the opinion of Pasqua, Séguin and a majority of the RPR voters, who chose to vote "no".[42]

While he still was mayor of Paris (since 1977),[43] Chirac went to Abidjan (Côte d'Ivoire) where he supported President Houphouët-Boigny (1960–1993), although the latter was being called a "thief" by the local population. Chirac then declared that multipartism was a "kind of luxury".[39]

Nevertheless, the right won the 1993 legislative election. Chirac announced that he did not want to come back as prime minister as his previous term had ended with his unsuccessful run for the presidency against Mitterrand who was still president at this point.

Chirac instead suggested the appointment of Edouard Balladur, who had promised that he would not run for the presidency against Chirac in 1995. However, benefiting from positive polls, Balladur decided to be a presidential candidate, with the support of a majority of right-wing politicians. Balladur broke from Chirac along with a number of friends and allies, including Charles Pasqua, Nicolas Sarkozy, etc., who supported his candidacy. A small group of fidels would remain with Chirac, including Alain Juppé and Jean-Louis Debré. When Nicolas Sarkozy became president in 2007, Juppé was one of the few chiraquiens to serve in François Fillon's government.[44]

Presidency (1995–2007)

First term: 1995–2002

Juppé ministry

 
Chirac with US president Bill Clinton outside the Élysée Palace, 1999

During the 1995 presidential campaign, Chirac criticised the "sole thought" (pensée unique) of neoliberalism represented by his challenger on the right and promised to reduce the "social fracture", placing himself more to the centre and thus forcing Balladur to radicalise himself. Ultimately, he obtained more votes than Balladur in the first round (20.8 per cent), and then defeated the Socialist candidate Lionel Jospin in the second round (52.6 per cent).

Chirac was elected on a platform of tax cuts and job programmes, but his policies did little to ease the labour strikes during his first months in office. On the domestic front, neo-liberal economic austerity measures introduced by Chirac and his conservative prime minister Alain Juppé, including budgetary cutbacks, proved highly unpopular. At about the same time, it became apparent that Juppé and others had obtained preferential conditions for public housing, as well as other perks. At the year's end Chirac faced major workers' strikes which turned, in November–December 1995, into a general strike, one of the largest since May 1968. The demonstrations were largely pitted against Juppé's plan for pension reform, and ultimately led to his dismissal.

Shortly after taking office, Chirac – undaunted by international protests by environmental groups – insisted upon the resumption of nuclear tests at Mururoa Atoll in French Polynesia in 1995, a few months before signing the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.[45] Reacting to criticism, Chirac said, "You only have to look back at 1935...There were people then who were against France arming itself, and look what happened." On 1 February 1996, Chirac announced that France had ended "once and for all" its nuclear testing and intended to accede to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.

Elected as President of the Republic, he refused to discuss the existence of French military bases in Africa, despite requests by the Ministry of Defence and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[39] The French Army thus remained in Côte d'Ivoire as well as in Omar Bongo's Gabon.

 
Chirac with Russian president Vladimir Putin, 2001
 
Chirac and US president George W. Bush during the 27th G8 summit, 2001
 
Chirac with German federal chancellor Gerhard Schröder, 2003

State responsibility for the roundup of Jews

Prior to 1995, the French government had maintained that the French Republic had been dismantled when Philippe Pétain instituted a new French State during World War II and that the Republic had been re-established when the war was over. It was not for France, therefore, to apologise for the roundup of Jews for deportation that happened while the Republic had not existed and was carried out by a state, Vichy France, which it did not recognise. President François Mitterrand had reiterated this position: "The Republic had nothing to do with this. I do not believe France is responsible," he said in September 1994.[46]

Chirac was the first president of France to take responsibility for the deportation of Jews during the Vichy regime. In a speech made on 16 July 1995 at the site of the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup, where 13,000 Jews had been held for deportation to concentration camps in July 1942, Chirac said, "France, on that day, committed the irreparable". Those responsible for the roundup were "4,500 policemen and gendarmes, French, under the authority of their leaders [who] obeyed the demands of the Nazis. ... the criminal folly of the occupiers was seconded by the French, by the French State".[47][48][49]

"Cohabitation" with Jospin

In 1997, Chirac dissolved parliament for early legislative elections in a gamble designed to bolster support for his conservative economic program. But instead, it created an uproar, and his power was weakened by the subsequent backlash. The Socialist Party (PS), joined by other parties on the left, soundly defeated Chirac's conservative allies, forcing Chirac into a new period of cohabitation with Jospin as prime minister (1997–2002), which lasted five years.

Cohabitation significantly weakened the power of Chirac's presidency. The French president, by a constitutional convention, only controls foreign and military policy— and even then, allocation of funding is under the control of Parliament and under the significant influence of the prime minister. Short of dissolving parliament and calling for new elections, the president was left with little power to influence public policy regarding crime, the economy, and public services. Chirac seized the occasion to periodically criticise Jospin's government.

His position was weakened by scandals about the financing of RPR by Paris municipality. In 2001, the left, represented by Bertrand Delanoë (PS), won a majority on the city council of the capital. Jean Tiberi, Chirac's successor at the Paris city hall, was forced to resign after having been put under investigations in June 1999 on charges of trafic d'influences in the HLMs of Paris affairs (related to the illegal financing of the RPR). Tiberi was finally expelled from the Rally for the Republic, Chirac's party, on 12 October 2000, declaring to the magazine Le Figaro on 18 November 2000: "Jacques Chirac is not my friend anymore".[50]

After the publication of the Jean-Claude Méry by Le Monde on 22 September 2000, in which Jean-Claude Méry, in charge of the RPR's financing, directly accused Chirac of organising the network, and of having been physically present on 5 October 1986, when Méry gave in cash 5 million Francs, which came from companies who had benefited from state deals, to Michel Roussin, personal secretary (directeur de cabinet) of Chirac,[51][52] Chirac refused to attend court in response to his summons by judge Eric Halphen, and the highest echelons of the French justice system declared that he could not be inculpated while in office.

During his two terms, he increased the Elysee Palace's total budget by 105 per cent (to €90 million, whereas 20 years before it was the equivalent of €43.7 million). He doubled the number of presidential cars – to 61 cars and seven scooters in the Palace's garage. He hired 145 extra employees – the total number of the people he employed simultaneously was 963.

Defence policy

 
Chirac at the Bastille Day military parade, 2006

As the Supreme Commander of the French armed forces, he reduced the military budget, as did his predecessor. At the end of his first term it accounted for three per cent of GDP.[53] In 1997 the aircraft carrier Clemenceau was decommissioned after 37 years of service, with her sister ship Foch decommissioned in 2000 after 37 years of service, leaving the French Navy with no aircraft carrier until 2001, when Charles de Gaulle was commissioned.[54] He also reduced expenditure on nuclear weapons[55] and the French nuclear arsenal was reduced to include 350 warheads, compared to the Russian nuclear arsenal of 16,000 warheads.[56] He also published a plan to reduce the number of fighters the French military had by 30.[57]

After François Mitterrand left office in 1995, Chirac began a rapprochement with NATO by joining the Military Committee and attempting to negotiate a return to the integrated military command, which failed after the French demand for parity with the United States went unmet. The possibility of a further attempt foundered after Chirac was forced into cohabitation with a Socialist-led cabinet between 1997 and 2002, then poor Franco-American relations after the French UN veto threat over Iraq in 2003 made transatlantic negotiations impossible.

Close call

On 25 July 2000, as Chirac and the first lady were returning from the G7 Summit in Okinawa, Japan, they were placed in a dangerous situation by Air France Flight 4590 after they landed at Charles de Gaulle International Airport. The first couple were in an Air France Boeing 747 taxiing toward the terminal when the jet had to stop and wait for Flight 4590 to take off.[58] The departing plane, an Aérospatiale-BAC Concorde, ran over a strip of metal on takeoff puncturing its left fuel tank and sliced electrical wires near the left landing gear. The sequence of events ignited a large fire and caused the Concorde to veer left on its takeoff roll. As it reached takeoff speed and lifted off the ground, it came within 30 feet of hitting Chirac's 747. The photograph of Flight 4590 ablaze, the only picture taken of the Concorde on fire, was taken by passenger Toshihiko Sato on Chirac's jetliner.

Second term: 2002–2007

 
Chirac greets the President of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and his wife Marisa Letícia during a ceremony at the Palácio da Alvorada in Brasília, 2006

At the age of 69, Chirac faced his fourth presidential campaign in 2002. He received 20% of the vote in the first ballot of the presidential elections in April 2002. It had been expected that he would face incumbent prime minister Lionel Jospin (PS) in the second round of elections; instead, Chirac faced far-right politician Jean-Marie Le Pen of the National Front (FN), who came in 200,000 votes ahead of Jospin. All parties other than the National Front (except for Lutte ouvrière) called for opposing Le Pen, even if it meant voting for Chirac. The 14-day period between the two rounds of voting was marked by demonstrations against Le Pen and slogans such as "Vote for the crook, not for the fascist" or "Vote with a clothespin on your nose". Chirac won re-election by a landslide, with 82 per cent of the vote on the second ballot. However, Chirac became increasingly unpopular during his second term. According to a July 2005 poll,[59] 37 per cent judged Chirac favourably and 63 per cent unfavorably. In 2006, The Economist wrote that Chirac "is the most unpopular occupant of the Elysée Palace in the fifth republic's history."[60]

Early term

As the left-wing Socialist Party was in thorough disarray following Jospin's defeat, Chirac reorganised politics on the right, establishing a new party – initially called the Union of the Presidential Majority, then the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP). The RPR had broken down; a number of members had formed Eurosceptic breakaways. While the Giscardian liberals of the Union for French Democracy (UDF) had moved to the right,[citation needed] the UMP won the parliamentary elections that followed the presidential poll with ease.

During an official visit to Madagascar on 21 July 2005, Chirac described the repression of the 1947 Malagasy uprising, which left between 80,000 and 90,000 dead, as "unacceptable".

Despite past opposition to state intervention the Chirac government approved a €2.8 billion aid package to troubled manufacturing giant Alstom.[61] In October 2004, Chirac signed a trade agreement with PRC president Hu Jintao where Alstom was given €1 billion in contracts and promises of future investment in China.[62]

Assassination attempt

On 14 July 2002, during Bastille Day celebrations, Chirac survived an assassination attempt by a lone gunman with a rifle hidden in a guitar case. The would-be assassin fired a shot toward the presidential motorcade, before being overpowered by bystanders.[63] The gunman, Maxime Brunerie, underwent psychiatric testing; the violent far-right group with which he was associated, Unité Radicale, was thence administratively dissolved.

Foreign policy

 
Chirac with George W. Bush, Gerhard Schröder, Vladimir Putin, Junichiro Koizumi and other state leaders in Moscow, 2005

Along with Vladimir Putin (whom he called "a personal friend"),[64] Hu Jintao, and Gerhard Schröder, Chirac emerged as a leading voice against George W. Bush and Tony Blair in 2003 during the organisation and deployment of American and British forces participating in a military coalition to forcibly remove the government of Iraq controlled by the Ba'ath Party under the leadership of Saddam Hussein that resulted in the 2003–2011 Iraq War.

Despite British and American pressure, Chirac threatened to veto, at that given point, a resolution in the UN Security Council that would authorise the use of military force to rid Iraq of alleged weapons of mass destruction, and rallied other governments to his position. "Iraq today does not represent an immediate threat that justifies an immediate war", Chirac said on 18 March 2003. Future prime minister Dominique de Villepin acquired much of his popularity for his speech against the war at the United Nations (UN).[65]

 
Chirac and British prime minister Tony Blair, 2003

After Togo's leader Gnassingbé Eyadéma's death on 5 February 2005, Chirac gave him tribute and supported his son, Faure Gnassingbé, who has since succeeded his father.[39]

On 19 January 2006, Chirac said that France was prepared to launch a nuclear strike against any country that sponsors a terrorist attack against French interests. He said his country's nuclear arsenal had been reconfigured to include the ability to make a tactical strike in retaliation for terrorism.[66]

Chirac criticised the Israeli offensive into Lebanon on 14 July 2006.[67] However, Israeli Army Radio later reported that Chirac had secretly told Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert that France would support an Israeli invasion of Syria and the overthrow of the government of President Bashar al-Assad, promising to veto any moves against Israel in the United Nations or European Union.[68] Whereas the disagreement on Iraq had caused a rift between Paris and Washington, recent analysis suggests that both governments worked closely together on the Syria file to end the Syrian occupation of Lebanon, and that Chirac was a driver of this diplomatic cooperation.[69]

In July 2006, the G8 met to discuss international energy concerns. Despite the rising awareness of global warming issues, the G8 focused on "energy security" issues. Chirac continued[when?] to be the voice[citation needed] within the G8 summit meetings to support international action to curb global warming and climate change concerns. Chirac warned that "humanity is dancing on a volcano" and called for serious action by the world's leading industrialised nations.[citation needed]

After Chirac's death in 2019, the street leading to the Louvre Abu Dhabi was named Jacques Chirac Street in November 2019 in celebration of Chirac's efforts to bolster links between France and the United Arab Emirates during his presidency.[70]

Chirac espoused a staunchly pro-Moroccan policy, and the already established pro-Moroccan French stances vis-à-vis the Western Sahara conflict were strengthened during his presidential tenure.[71]

Flight tax

Chirac requested the Landau-report (published in September 2004) and combined with the Report of the Technical Group on Innovative Financing Mechanisms formulated upon request by the Heads of State of Brazil, Chile, France and Spain (issued in December 2004), these documents present various opportunities for innovative financing mechanisms while equally stressing the advantages (stability and predictability) of tax-based models. The UNITAID project was born. Today the organisation's executive board is chaired by Marisol Touraine.[72]

2005 referendum on TCE

On 29 May 2005, a referendum was held in France to decide whether the country should ratify the proposed treaty for a Constitution of the European Union (TCE). The result was a victory for the No campaign, with 55 per cent of voters rejecting the treaty on a turnout of 69 per cent, dealing a devastating blow to Chirac and the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) party, and to part of the centre-left which had supported the TCE. Following the referendum defeat, Chirac replaced his prime minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin with Dominique de Villepin. In an address to the nation, Chirac declared that the new cabinet's top priority was to curb unemployment, which was consistently hovering above 10 per cent, calling for a "national mobilisation" to that effect.[73]

2005 civil unrest and CPE protests

Following major student protests in spring 2006, which followed civil unrest in autumn 2005 after the death of two young boys in Clichy-sous-Bois, one of the poorest communes in Paris' suburbs, Chirac retracted the proposed First Employment Contract (CPE) by "promulgating [it] without applying it", an unheard-of – and, some claim, illegal – move intended to appease the protesters while giving the appearance of not making a volte-face regarding the contract, and therefore to continue his support for his prime minister Dominique de Villepin.[citation needed]

Retirement

In early September 2005, Chirac suffered an event that his doctors described as a "vascular incident". It was officially reported as a "minor stroke"[74] or a mild stroke (also known as a transient ischemic attack).[75] He recovered and returned to his duties soon afterward.

In a pre-recorded television broadcast aired on 11 March 2007, he announced, in a widely predicted move, that he would not choose to seek a third term as president. (In 2000 the constitution had been amended to reduce the length of the presidential term to five years, so his second term was shorter than his first.)[76] "My whole life has been committed to serving France, and serving peace", Chirac said, adding that he would find new ways to serve France after leaving office. He did not explain the reasons for his decision.[77] He did not, during the broadcast, endorse any of the candidates running for election, but did devote several minutes of his talk to a plea against extremist politics that was considered a thinly disguised invocation to voters not to vote for Jean-Marie Le Pen and a recommendation to Nicolas Sarkozy not to orient his campaign so as to include themes traditionally associated with Le Pen.[78]

Post-presidency and death

 
Chirac in Saint-Tropez, 2010

Shortly after leaving office, he launched the Fondation Chirac[79] in June 2008. Since then it has been striving for peace through five advocacy programmes: conflict prevention, access to water and sanitation, access to quality medicines and healthcare, access to land resources, and preservation of cultural diversity. It supports field projects that involve local people and provide concrete and innovative solutions. Chirac chaired the jury for the Prize for Conflict Prevention awarded every year by his foundation.[80]

As a former president of France, he was entitled to a lifetime pension and personal security protection, and was an ex officio member for life of the Constitutional Council.[81] He sat for the first time on the council on 15 November 2007, six months after leaving the presidency. Immediately after Sarkozy's victory, Chirac moved into a 180-square-metre (1,900 sq ft) duplex on the Quai Voltaire in Paris lent to him by the family of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri. During the Didier Schuller affair, the latter accused Hariri of having participated in illegal funding of the RPR's political campaigns, but the judge closed the case without further investigations.[82]

In Volume 2 of his memoirs published in June 2011, Chirac mocked his successor Nicolas Sarkozy as "irritable, rash, impetuous, disloyal, ungrateful, and un-French".[83][84] Chirac wrote that he considered firing Sarkozy previously, and conceded responsibility in allowing Jean-Marie Le Pen to advance in 2002.[85] A poll conducted in 2010 suggested Chirac was the most admired political figure in France, while Sarkozy was 32nd.[83]

On 11 April 2008, Chirac's office announced that he had undergone successful surgery to fit a pacemaker.[86]

Chirac suffered from frail health and memory loss in later life. In February 2014 he was admitted to hospital because of pains related to gout.[87][88] On 10 December 2015, Chirac was hospitalised in Paris for undisclosed reasons, although his state of health did not "give any cause for concern", he remained for about a week in ICU.[89] According to his son-in-law Frederic Salat-Baroux, Chirac was again hospitalised in Paris with a lung infection on 18 September 2016.[90]

Death and state funeral

 
Chirac's grave in Montparnasse Cemetery, October 2019

Chirac died at his home in Paris on 26 September 2019, surrounded by his family.[91] A requiem mass was held at Saint-Sulpice on 30 September, celebrated by Michel Aupetit, Archbishop of Paris, and attended by representatives from about 175 countries, included 69 past and present heads of state, government and international organisations. Notable names included António Guterres, Jean-Claude Juncker, Jens Stoltenberg, Vladimir Putin, Sergio Mattarella, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Charles Michel, Viktor Orbán, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Saad Hariri, Borut Pahor, Salome Zourabichvili, Tony Blair, Jean Chrétien, Vaira Vike-Freiberga, Bill Clinton, Hamid Karzai, Dai Bingguo plus many ministers.[citation needed]

The day was declared a national day of mourning in France and a minute of silence was held nationwide at 15:00. Following the public ceremony, Chirac was buried at Montparnasse Cemetery, with only close family in attendance. Andorra announced three days of national mourning.[92] Lebanon declared the day of the ex-president's funeral national day of mourning.[93][94]

Popular culture

 
Portrait by Donald Sheridan

Chirac was a major supporter of the nation's film industry.[95]

Because of Jacques Chirac's long public career, he was often parodied or caricatured: Young Jacques Chirac is the basis of a young, dashing bureaucrat character in the 1976 Asterix comic strip album Obelix and Co., proposing methods to quell Gallic unrest to elderly, old-style Roman politicians. Chirac was also featured in Le Bêbête Show as an overexcited, jumpy character.

Jacques Chirac was a favourite character of Les Guignols de l'Info, a satiric latex puppet show.[96] He was originally portrayed as a rather likeable, though overexcited, character; following the corruption allegations, however, he was depicted as a kind of dilettante and incompetent who pilfered public money and lied through his teeth. His character for a while developed a superhero alter ego, Super Menteur ('super liar') to get him out of embarrassing situations. Because of his alleged improprieties, he was lambasted in a song Chirac en prison ('Chirac in prison') by French punk band Les Wampas, with a video clip made by the Guignols.[97]

He was given the Ig Nobel prize for peace, for commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of Hiroshima with atomic bomb tests in the Pacific (1996).

Portrayals in film

J. Grant Albrecht voices Chirac in the Oliver Stone film W. Marc Rioufol plays him in Richard Loncraine's 2010 film The Special Relationship.[98]

Bernard Le Coq portrays Chirac in La Dernière Campagne and The Conquest by Xavier Durringer.[99][100]

Controversies

Osirak controversy

At the invitation of Saddam Hussein (then vice-president of Iraq, but de facto dictator), Chirac made an official visit to Baghdad in 1975. Saddam approved a deal granting French oil companies a number of privileges plus a 23-percent share of Iraqi oil.[101] As part of this deal, France sold Iraq the Osirak MTR nuclear reactor, designed to test nuclear materials.

The Israeli Air Force alleged that the reactor's imminent commissioning was a threat to its security, and pre-emptively bombed the Osirak reactor on 7 June 1981, provoking considerable anger from French officials and the United Nations Security Council.[102]

The Osirak deal became a controversy again in 2002–2003, when an international military coalition led by the United States invaded Iraq and forcibly removed Hussein's government from power. France led several other European countries in an effort to prevent the invasion. The Osirak deal was then used by parts of the American media to criticise the Chirac-led opposition to starting a war in Iraq,[103] despite French involvement in the Gulf War.[104]

Conviction for corruption

Chirac has been named in several cases of alleged corruption that occurred during his term as mayor, some of which have led to felony convictions of some politicians and aides. However, a controversial judicial decision in 1999 granted Chirac immunity while he was president of France. He refused to testify on these matters, arguing that it would be incompatible with his presidential functions. Investigations concerning the running of Paris's city hall, the number of whose municipal employees increased by 25% from 1977 to 1995 (with 2,000 out of approximately 35,000 coming from the Corrèze region where Chirac had held his seat as deputy), as well as a lack of financial transparency (marchés publics) and the communal debt, were thwarted by the legal impossibility of questioning him as president.[105]

The conditions of the privatisation of the Parisian water system acquired very cheaply by the Compagnie Générale des Eaux and the Lyonnaise des Eaux, then directed by Jérôme Monod, a close friend of Chirac, were also criticised. Furthermore, the satirical newspaper Le Canard enchaîné revealed the astronomical "food expenses" paid by the Parisian municipality (€15 million a year according to the Canard), expenses managed by Roger Romani (who allegedly destroyed all archives of the period 1978–93 during night raids in 1999–2000). Thousands of people were invited each year to receptions in the Paris city hall, while many political, media and artistic personalities were hosted in private flats owned by the city.[105]

Chirac's immunity from prosecution ended in May 2007, when he left office as president. In November 2007 a preliminary charge of misuse of public funds was filed against him.[106] Chirac is said to be the first former French head of state to be formally placed under investigation for a crime.[107] On 30 October 2009, a judge ordered Chirac to stand trial on embezzlement charges, dating back to his time as mayor of Paris.[108]

On 7 March 2011, he went on trial on charges of diverting public funds, accused of giving fictional city jobs to 28 activists from his political party while serving as the mayor of Paris (1977–95).[109][110] Along with Chirac, nine others stood trial in two separate cases, one dealing with fictional jobs for 21 people and the other with jobs for the remaining seven.[109] The President of Union for a Popular Movement, who later served as France's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Alain Juppé, was sentenced to a 14-month suspended prison sentence for the same case in 2004.[111]

On 15 December 2011, Chirac was found guilty and given a suspended sentence of two years.[111] He was convicted of diverting public funds, abuse of trust and illegal conflict of interest. The suspended sentence meant he did not have to go to prison, and took into account his age, health, and status as a former head of state.[112] He did not attend his trial, since medical doctors deemed that his neurological problems damaged his memory.[111] His defence team decided not to appeal.[111][113]

The Clearstream Affair

During April and May 2006, Chirac's administration was beset by a crisis as his chosen prime minister, Dominique de Villepin, was accused of asking Philippe Rondot, a top level French spy, for a secret investigation into Villepin's chief political rival, Nicolas Sarkozy, in 2004. This matter has been called the second Clearstream Affair. On 10 May 2006, following a Cabinet meeting, Chirac made a rare television appearance to try to protect Villepin from the scandal and to debunk allegations that Chirac himself had set up a Japanese bank account containing 300 million francs in 1992 as Mayor of Paris.[114] Chirac said that "The Republic is not a dictatorship of rumours, a dictatorship of calumny."[115]

Personal life

In 1956, Chirac married Bernadette Chodron de Courcel, with whom he had two daughters: Laurence (4 March 1958 – 14 April 2016)[116] and Claude (born 6 December 1962). Claude was a long-term public relations assistant and personal adviser to her father,[117] while Laurence, who suffered from anorexia nervosa in her youth, did not participate in her father's political activities.[118] Chirac was the grandfather of Martin Rey-Chirac by the relationship of Claude with French judoka Thierry Rey.[119] A former Vietnamese refugee, Anh Dao Traxel, is a foster daughter of Jacques and Bernadette Chirac.[120]

Chirac remained married, but had many other relationships.[121][122][123]

Chirac was a close friend of actor Gregory Peck.[citation needed]

Academic works

In 1954, Chirac presented The Development of the Port of New-Orleans, a short geography/economic thesis to the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po—), which he had entered three years before. The 182-page typewritten work, supervised by Professor Jean Chardonnet, is illustrated by photographs, sketches and diagrams.

Political career

Governmental functions

  • Prime minister: 1974–76 (Resignation) / 1986–88.
  • Minister of Interior: March–May 1974.
  • Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development: 1972–74.
  • Minister of Relation with Parliament: 1971–72.
  • Secretary of State for Economy and Finance: 1968–71.
  • Secretary of State for Social Affairs: 1967–68.

Electoral mandates

European Parliament

National Assembly of France

Elected in 1967, reelected in 1968, 1973, 1976, 1981, 1986, 1988, 1993: Member for Corrèze: March–April 1967 (became Secretary of State in April 1967), reelected in 1968, 1973, but he remained a minister in 1976–1986 (became prime minister in 1986), 1988–95 (resigned to become President of the French Republic in 1995).

General Council

  • President of the General Council of Corrèze: 1970–1979. Reelected in 1973, 1976.
  • General councillor of Corrèze: 1968–88. Reelected in 1970, 1976, 1982.

Municipal Council

  • Mayor of Paris: 1977–95 (Resignation, became President of the French Republic in 1995). Reelected in 1983, 1989.
  • Councillor of Paris: 1977–1995 (Resignation). Reelected in 1983, 1989.
  • Municipal councillor of Sainte-Féréole: 1965–77. Reelected in 1971.

Political function

Ministries

First Chirac ministry

(27 May 1974 – 25 August 1976)

Second Chirac ministry

(20 March 1986 – 12 May 1988)

Honours

National honours

Foreign honours

Ribbon Country Honour Year
    Grand Star of the Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria [year needed]
    Collar of the Heydar Aliyev Order [year needed]
    Collar of the Order of the Condor of the Andes [year needed]
    Collar of the Order of the Southern Cross [year needed]
    Knight of the National Order of Quebec [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of the White Lion [year needed]
    Member 1st Class of the Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana [year needed]
    Grand Cross with Chain of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary [year needed]
    Knight Grand Cross with Collar Order of Merit of the Italian Republic [year needed]
    Grand Knight's Cross with Star of the Order of the Falcon [year needed]
    Grand Cordon with Collar of the Order of Al-Hussein bin Ali [year needed]
    Commander Grand Cross with Chain Order of the Three Stars [year needed]
    Grand Cordon of the National Order of the Cedar [year needed]
    First Class of the Order of the Grand Conqueror[124] [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of Vytautas the Great [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas [year needed]
    Civilian Class of the Order pro Merito Melitensi [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of Saint-Charles [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland [year needed]
    Knight of the Order of the White Eagle [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of Christ[125] [year needed]
    Grand Collar of the Order of Prince Henry[125] [year needed]
    Grand Collar of the Order of the Star of Romania [year needed]
    Member 1st Class of the Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" [year needed]
    Medal "In Commemoration of the 300th Anniversary of Saint Petersburg" [year needed]
    State Prize of the Russian Federation [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the National Order of the Lion [year needed]
    Grand Cross of the Order of Good Hope [year needed]
    Collar of the Order of Charles III [year needed]
    Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic [year needed]
    Knight of the Royal Order of the Seraphim [year needed]
    Grand Cordon of the Order of Independence [year needed]
    Grand Cordon of the Order of the Republic of Tunisia [year needed]
    Collar of the Order of Etihad (Order of the Federation) [year needed]
    Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath [year needed]
    Medal of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay[126] [year needed]
    Knight with the Collar of the Order of Pope Pius IX [year needed]

Publications

  • Discours pour la France à l'heure du choix, Paris, ed. Stock, 1978
  • La Lueur de l'espérance. Réflexion du soir pour le matin, Paris, ed. La Table ronde, 1978
  • Oui à l'Europe (With Alain Berger), Paris, ed. Albatros, 1984
  • Une ambition pour la France, Paris, ed. Albin Michel, 1988
  • Une nouvelle France. Réflexions 1, Paris, ed. NiL, 1994
  • La France pour tous, Paris, ed. NiL Éditions, 1995
  • Mon combat pour la France, tome I, Paris, ed. Odile Jacob, 2006
  • Le Développement du port de la Nouvelle-Orléans, Paris, ed. Presses universitaires du Nouveau Monde, 2007
  • Mon combat pour la paix, tome II, Paris, ed. Odile Jacob, 2007
  • Demain, il sera trop tard, Paris, ed. Desclée de Brouwer, 2008
  • Mémoires : Tome I, Chaque pas doit être un but, Paris, ed. NiL, 2009
  • Mémoires : Tome II, Le Temps présidentiel, Paris, ed. NiL Éditions, 2011

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Allport, Alan. Jacques Chirac (Infobase Publishing, 2007), short biography excerpt
  • Bell, David et al. eds. Biographical Dictionary of French Political Leaders Since 1870 (1990) pp 82–86.
  • Bell, David. Presidential Power in Fifth Republic France (2000) pp 211–40.
  • Bell, David S., Erwin C. Hargrove, and Kevin Theakston. "Skill in context: A comparison of politicians." Presidential Studies Quarterly 29.3 (1999): 528–548; comparison of George Bush (US), John Major (UK), and Jacques Chirac.
  • Chafer, Tony. "Chirac and 'la Francafrique': No longer a family affair." Modern & Contemporary France 13.1 (2005): 7-23. online 4 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • Drake, Helen. "Jacques chirac's balancing acts: The French right and Europe." South European Society & Politics 10.2 (2005): 297–313.
  • Elgie, Robert. "La cohabitation de longue durée: studying the 1997–2002 experience." Modern & Contemporary France (2002) 10#3 pp 297–31, in English.
  • Gaffney, John. "The Mainstream Right: Chirac and Balladur." in French Presidentialism and the Election of 1995 (Routledge, 2018) pp. 99–115.
  • Gaffney, John. "Protocol, Image, and Discourse in Political leadership Competition: the case of prime minister Lionel Jospin, 1997-2002." Modern & Contemporary France 10.3 (2002): 313–323.
  • Gaffney, John, ed. The French presidential and legislative elections of 2002 (Routledge, 2018).
  • Knapp, Andrew. "Jacques Chirac: Surviving without Leading?." in David Bell and John Gaffney, eds. The presidents of the French Fifth Republic (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2013). pp 159–180.
  • Levy, Jonah, Alistair Cole, and Patrick Le Galès. "From Chirac to Sarkozy. A New France." Developments in French politics 4 (2008): 1-21.
  • Maclean, Mairi. Economic Management and French Business: From de Gaulle to Chirac (Springer, 2002).
  • Milzow, Katrin. National interests and European integration: Discourse and politics of Blair, Chirac and Schroeder (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
  • Nester, William R. "President Chirac." in Nester, De Gaulle's Legacy (Palgrave Macmillan 2014) pp. 151–172.
  • Wilsford, David, ed. Political leaders of contemporary Western Europe: a biographical dictionary (Greenwood, 1995) pp 63–70.

Primary sources

  • Chirac, Jacques. My Life in Politics (2012).

In French

External links

  •   Media related to Jacques Chirac at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Jacques Chirac at Wikiquote
  • Some of Jacques Chirac's quotations (in French)
  • Appearances on C-SPAN

jacques, chirac, chirac, redirects, here, other, uses, chirac, disambiguation, jacques, rené, chirac, ɪər, ɑː, ɪəˈr, ɑː, listen, french, ʒak, ʁəne, ʃiʁak, listen, november, 1932, september, 2019, french, politician, served, president, france, from, 1995, 2007,. Chirac redirects here For other uses see Chirac disambiguation Jacques Rene Chirac UK ˈ ʃ ɪer ae k 1 2 US ʒ ɑː k ʃ ɪeˈr ɑː k listen 2 3 4 French ʒak ʁene ʃiʁak listen 29 November 1932 26 September 2019 was a French politician who served as President of France 5 from 1995 to 2007 Chirac was previously Prime Minister of France from 1974 to 1976 and from 1986 to 1988 as well as Mayor of Paris from 1977 to 1995 Jacques ChiracChirac in 1997President of FranceIn office 17 May 1995 16 May 2007Prime MinisterAlain Juppe Lionel Jospin Jean Pierre Raffarin Dominique de VillepinPreceded byFrancois MitterrandSucceeded byNicolas SarkozyPrime Minister of FranceIn office 20 March 1986 10 May 1988PresidentFrancois MitterrandPreceded byLaurent FabiusSucceeded byMichel RocardIn office 27 May 1974 25 August 1976PresidentValery Giscard d EstaingPreceded byPierre MessmerSucceeded byRaymond BarreMayor of ParisIn office 20 March 1977 16 May 1995DeputyChristian de La Malene Jean TiberiPreceded byOffice re establishedSucceeded byJean TiberiPresident of Rally for the RepublicIn office 5 December 1976 4 November 1994Preceded byParty establishedSucceeded byAlain JuppeOffices held 1970 1979Minister of the InteriorIn office 27 February 1974 28 May 1974Prime MinisterPierre MessmerPreceded byRaymond MarcellinSucceeded byMichel PoniatowskiMinister of Agriculture and Rural DevelopmentIn office 7 July 1972 27 February 1974Prime MinisterPierre MessmerPreceded byMichel Cointat fr Succeeded byRaymond MarcellinMinister for Parliamentary RelationsIn office 7 January 1971 5 July 1972Prime MinisterJacques Chaban DelmasPreceded byRoger FreySucceeded byRobert BoulinPresident of the General Council of CorrezeIn office 15 March 1970 25 March 1979Preceded byElie Rouby fr Succeeded byGeorges Debat fr Personal detailsBornJacques Rene Chirac 1932 11 29 29 November 1932Paris FranceDied26 September 2019 2019 09 26 aged 86 Paris FranceResting placeMontparnasse Cemetery ParisPolitical partyPCF before 1962 UNR 1962 1968 UDR 1968 1976 RPR 1976 2002 UMP 2002 2007 SpouseBernadette Chodron de Courcel m 1956 wbr Children3 including Claude and Anh Dao Traxel foster daughter Alma materSciences Po ENASignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceFrench Fourth RepublicBranch serviceFrench ArmyYears of service1954 1957RankSecond lieutenantAfter attending the Ecole nationale d administration Chirac began his career as a high level civil servant entering politics shortly thereafter Chirac occupied various senior positions including Minister of Agriculture and Minister of the Interior In 1981 and 1988 he unsuccessfully ran for president as the standard bearer for the conservative Gaullist party Rally for the Republic Chirac s internal policies initially included lower tax rates the removal of price controls strong punishment for crime and terrorism and business privatisation 6 After pursuing these policies in his second term as prime minister he changed his views He argued for different economic policies and was elected president in 1995 with 52 6 of the vote in the second round beating Socialist Lionel Jospin after campaigning on a platform of healing the social rift fracture sociale 7 Chirac s economic policies based on dirigisme allowing for state directed investment stood in opposition to the laissez faire policies of the United Kingdom under the ministries of Margaret Thatcher and John Major which Chirac described as Anglo Saxon ultraliberalism 8 He was also known for his stand against the American led invasion of Iraq his recognition of the collaborationist French Government s role in deporting Jews and his reduction of the presidential term from 7 years to 5 through a referendum in 2000 citation needed At the 2002 French presidential election he won 82 2 of the vote in the second round against the far right candidate Jean Marie Le Pen and was the last president to be re elected until 2022 During his second term he had a very low approval rating and was considered one of the least popular presidents in modern French political history citation needed In 2011 the Paris court declared Chirac guilty of diverting public funds and abusing public confidence giving him a two year suspended prison sentence 9 Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 Family background 1 2 Education and early career 2 Early political career 2 1 The Bulldozer 1962 1971 2 2 Cabinet minister 1971 1974 2 3 Prime Minister of Giscard 1974 1976 2 4 Mayor of Paris 1977 1995 3 Governmental opposition 3 1 Struggle for the right wing leadership 1976 1986 3 2 Prime Minister of Mitterrand 1986 1988 3 3 Crossing the desert 1988 1995 4 Presidency 1995 2007 4 1 First term 1995 2002 4 1 1 Juppe ministry 4 1 2 State responsibility for the roundup of Jews 4 1 3 Cohabitation with Jospin 4 1 4 Defence policy 4 1 5 Close call 4 2 Second term 2002 2007 4 2 1 Early term 4 2 2 Assassination attempt 4 2 3 Foreign policy 4 2 4 Flight tax 4 2 5 2005 referendum on TCE 4 2 6 2005 civil unrest and CPE protests 4 2 7 Retirement 5 Post presidency and death 5 1 Death and state funeral 6 Popular culture 6 1 Portrayals in film 7 Controversies 7 1 Osirak controversy 7 2 Conviction for corruption 7 3 The Clearstream Affair 8 Personal life 9 Academic works 10 Political career 10 1 Governmental functions 10 2 Electoral mandates 10 2 1 European Parliament 10 2 2 National Assembly of France 10 2 3 General Council 10 2 4 Municipal Council 10 3 Political function 11 Ministries 11 1 First Chirac ministry 11 2 Second Chirac ministry 12 Honours 12 1 National honours 12 2 Foreign honours 13 Publications 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 16 1 Primary sources 16 2 In French 17 External linksEarly life and education EditFamily background Edit Jacques Rene Chirac was born on 29 November 1932 in the 5th arrondissement of Paris 10 He was the son of Abel Francois Marie Chirac 1898 1968 a successful executive for an aircraft company 7 and Marie Louise Valette 1902 1973 a housewife His grandparents were all teachers 11 from Sainte Fereole in Correze His great grandparents on both sides were peasants in the rural south western region of the Correze 12 According to Chirac his name originates from the langue d oc that of the troubadours therefore that of poetry 13 He was a Catholic 14 Chirac was an only child his elder sister Jacqueline died in infancy nearly ten years before his birth 15 He was educated in Paris at the Cours Hattemer a private school 16 He then attended the Lycee Carnot and the Lycee Louis le Grand After his baccalaureat behind his father s back he went off to serve for three months as a sailor on a coal transport 17 Chirac played rugby union for Brive s youth team and also played at university level He played no 8 and second row 18 At age 18 his ambition was to become a ship s captain 19 Education and early career Edit At age 16 Chirac wanted to learn Sanskrit and found a White Russian Sanskrit teacher in Paris who ended up teaching him Russian by age 17 Chirac was almost fluent in Russian 17 Inspired by Charles de Gaulle Chirac started to pursue a civil service career in the 1950s During this period he joined the French Communist Party sold copies of L Humanite and took part in meetings of a communist cell 20 In 1950 he signed the Soviet inspired Stockholm Appeal for the abolition of nuclear weapons which led him to be questioned when he applied for his first visa to the United States 21 In 1953 after graduating from the Sciences Po he attended a non credit course at Harvard University s summer school before entering the Ecole nationale d administration which trains France s top civil servants in 1957 19 In the United States Chirac worked at Anheuser Busch in St Louis Missouri 22 Chirac trained as a reserve military officer in armoured cavalry at Saumur 23 He then volunteered to fight in the Algerian War using personal connections to be sent despite the reservations of his superiors His superiors did not want to make him an officer because they suspected he had communist leanings 24 In 1965 he became an auditor in the Court of Auditors citation needed 25 Early political career EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Bulldozer 1962 1971 Edit In April 1962 Chirac was appointed head of the personal staff of Prime Minister Georges Pompidou This appointment launched Chirac s political career Pompidou considered Chirac his protege and referred to him as my bulldozer for his skill at getting things done The nickname Le Bulldozer caught on in French political circles where it also referred to his abrasive manner As late as the 1988 presidential election Chirac maintained this reputation 26 At Pompidou s suggestion Chirac ran as a Gaullist for a seat in the National Assembly in 1967 19 He was elected deputy for his home Correze departement a stronghold of the left This surprising victory in the context of a Gaullist ebb permitted him to enter the government as Minister of Social Affairs Although Chirac was well situated in de Gaulle s entourage being related by marriage to the general s sole companion at the time of the Appeal of 18 June 1940 he was more of a Pompidolian than a Gaullist When student and worker unrest rocked France in May 1968 Chirac played a central role in negotiating a truce 19 Then as state secretary of economy 1968 1971 he worked closely with Valery Giscard d Estaing who headed the ministry of economy and finance 27 Cabinet minister 1971 1974 Edit After some months in the ministry for Relations with Parliament Chirac s first high level post came in 1972 when he became Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development under Pompidou who had been elected president in 1969 after de Gaulle retired Chirac quickly earned a reputation as a champion of French farmers interests and first attracted international attention when he assailed U S West German and European Commission agricultural policies which conflicted with French interests On 27 February 1974 after the resignation of Raymond Marcellin Chirac was appointed Minister of the Interior 28 On 21 March 1974 he cancelled the SAFARI project due to privacy concerns after its existence was revealed by Le Monde 29 From March 1974 he was entrusted by President Pompidou with preparations for the presidential election then scheduled for 1976 These elections were moved forward because of Pompidou s sudden death on 2 April 1974 Chirac vainly attempted to rally Gaullists behind Prime Minister Pierre Messmer Jacques Chaban Delmas announced his candidacy in spite of the disapproval of the Pompidolians Chirac and others published the call of the 43 in favour of Giscard d Estaing the leader of the non Gaullist part of the parliamentary majority Giscard d Estaing was elected as Pompidou s successor after France s most competitive election campaign in years In return the new president chose Chirac to lead the cabinet Prime Minister of Giscard 1974 1976 Edit Chirac with Romanian president Nicolae Ceaușescu during a visit in Neptun 1975 When Valery Giscard d Estaing became president he nominated Chirac as prime minister on 27 May 1974 to reconcile the Giscardian and non Giscardian factions of the parliamentary majority At the age of 41 Chirac stood out as the very model of the jeunes loups young wolves of French politics but he was faced with the hostility of the Barons of Gaullism who considered him a traitor for his role during the previous presidential campaign In December 1974 he took the lead of the Union of Democrats for the Republic UDR against the will of its more senior personalities As prime minister Chirac quickly set about persuading the Gaullists that despite the social reforms proposed by President Giscard the basic tenets of Gaullism such as national and European independence would be retained Chirac was advised by Pierre Juillet and Marie France Garaud two former advisers of Pompidou These two organised the campaign against Chaban Delmas in 1974 They advocated a clash with Giscard d Estaing because they thought his policy bewildered the conservative electorate 30 Citing Giscard s unwillingness to give him authority Chirac resigned as prime minister in 1976 31 He proceeded to build up his political base among France s several conservative parties with a goal of reconstituting the Gaullist UDR into a Neo Gaullist group the Rally for the Republic RPR Chirac s first tenure as prime minister was also an arguably progressive one with improvements in both the minimum wage and the social welfare system carried out during the course of his premiership 30 Mayor of Paris 1977 1995 Edit After his departure from the cabinet Chirac wanted to gain the leadership of the political right to gain the French presidency in the future The RPR was conceived as an electoral machine against President Giscard d Estaing Paradoxically Chirac benefited from Giscard s decision to create the office of mayor in Paris which had been in abeyance since the 1871 Commune because the leaders of the Third Republic 1871 1940 feared that having municipal control of the capital would give the mayor too much power In 1977 Chirac stood as a candidate against Michel d Ornano a close friend of the president and he won As mayor of Paris Chirac s political influence grew He held this post until 1995 32 Chirac supporters point out that as mayor he provided programmes to help the elderly people with disabilities and single mothers and introduced the street cleaning Motocrotte 33 while providing incentives for businesses to stay in Paris His opponents contend that he installed clientelist policies Governmental opposition EditStruggle for the right wing leadership 1976 1986 Edit In 1978 Chirac attacked the pro European policy of Valery Giscard d Estaing VGE and made a nationalist turn with the December 1978 Call of Cochin initiated by his counsellors Marie France Garaud and Pierre Juillet fr which had first been called by Pompidou Hospitalised in Hopital Cochin after a car crash he declared that as always about the drooping of France the pro foreign party acts with its peaceable and reassuring voice He appointed Yvan Blot an intellectual who would later join the National Front as director of his campaigns for the 1979 European election 34 After the poor results of the election Chirac broke with Garaud and Juillet Vexed Marie France Garaud stated We thought Chirac was made of the same marble of which statues are carved in we perceive he s of the same faience bidets are made of 35 His rivalry with Giscard d Estaing intensified Although it has been often interpreted by historians as the struggle between two rival French right wing families the Bonapartists represented by Chirac and the Orleanists represented by VGE both figures in fact were members of the liberal Orleanist tradition according to historian Alain Gerard Slama 34 But the eviction of the Gaullist barons and of President Giscard d Estaing convinced Chirac to assume a strong neo Gaullist stance citation needed Chirac made his first run for president against Giscard d Estaing in the 1981 election thus splitting the centre right vote 36 He was eliminated in the first round with 18 of the vote He reluctantly supported Giscard in the second round He refused to give instructions to the RPR voters but said that he supported the incumbent president in a private capacity which was interpreted as almost de facto support of the Socialist Party s PS candidate Francois Mitterrand who was elected by a broad majority 37 Giscard has always blamed Chirac for his defeat He was told by Mitterrand before his death that the latter had dined with Chirac before the election Chirac told the Socialist candidate that he wanted to get rid of Giscard In his memoirs Giscard wrote that between the two rounds he phoned the RPR headquarters He passed himself off as a right wing voter by changing his voice The RPR employee advised him certainly do not vote Giscard After 1981 the relationship between the two men became tense with Giscard even though he had been in the same government coalition as Chirac criticising Chirac s actions openly citation needed After the May 1981 presidential election the right also lost the subsequent legislative election that year However as Giscard had been knocked out Chirac appeared as the principal leader of the right wing opposition Due to his attacks against the economic policy of the Socialist government he gradually aligned himself with prevailing economically liberal opinion even though it did not correspond with Gaullist doctrine While the far right National Front grew taking advantage of the proportional representation electoral system which had been introduced for the 1986 legislative elections he signed an electoral pact with the Giscardian and more or less Christian Democratic party Union for French Democracy UDF citation needed Prime Minister of Mitterrand 1986 1988 Edit Chirac centre during his second term as prime minister When the RPR UDF right wing coalition won a slight majority in the National Assembly in the 1986 election Mitterrand PS appointed Chirac prime minister though many in Mitterrand s inner circle lobbied him to choose Jacques Chaban Delmas instead This unprecedented power sharing arrangement known as cohabitation gave Chirac the lead in domestic affairs However it is generally conceded that Mitterrand used the areas granted to the President of the Republic or reserved domains of the Presidency Defence and Foreign Affairs to belittle his prime minister citation needed Chirac s cabinet sold many public companies renewing the liberalisation initiated under Laurent Fabius s Socialist government of 1984 1986 and abolished the solidarity tax on wealth ISF a symbolic tax on those with high value assets introduced by Mitterrand s government Elsewhere the plan for university reform plan Devaquet caused a crisis in 1986 when a student called Malik Oussekine was killed by the police leading to massive demonstrations and the proposal s withdrawal It has been said during other student crises that this event strongly affected Jacques Chirac who was afterwards careful about possible police violence during such demonstrations e g maybe explaining part of the decision to promulgate without applying the First Employment Contract CPE after large student demonstrations against it 38 One of his first acts concerning foreign policy was to call back Jacques Foccart 1913 1997 who had been de Gaulle s and his successors leading counsellor for African matters called by journalist Stephen Smith the father of all networks on the continent at the time in 1986 aged 72 39 Foccart who had also co founded the Gaullist SAC militia dissolved by Mitterrand in 1982 after the Auriol massacre along with Charles Pasqua and who was a key component of the Francafrique system was again called to the Elysee Palace when Chirac won the 1995 presidential election Furthermore confronted by anti colonialist movements in New Caledonia Prime Minister Chirac ordered a military intervention against the separatists in the Ouvea cave leading to the deaths of 19 militants He allegedly refused any alliance with Jean Marie Le Pen s Front National 40 Crossing the desert 1988 1995 Edit Chirac ran against Mitterrand for a second time in the 1988 election He obtained 20 per cent of the vote in the first round but lost the second with only 46 per cent He resigned from the cabinet and the right lost the next legislative election 41 For the first time his leadership over the RPR was challenged Charles Pasqua and Philippe Seguin criticised his abandonment of Gaullist doctrines On the right a new generation of politicians the renovation men accused Chirac and Giscard of being responsible for the electoral defeats In 1992 convinced a candidate could not become president whilst advocating anti European policies he called for a yes vote in the referendum on the Maastricht Treaty against the opinion of Pasqua Seguin and a majority of the RPR voters who chose to vote no 42 While he still was mayor of Paris since 1977 43 Chirac went to Abidjan Cote d Ivoire where he supported President Houphouet Boigny 1960 1993 although the latter was being called a thief by the local population Chirac then declared that multipartism was a kind of luxury 39 Nevertheless the right won the 1993 legislative election Chirac announced that he did not want to come back as prime minister as his previous term had ended with his unsuccessful run for the presidency against Mitterrand who was still president at this point Chirac instead suggested the appointment of Edouard Balladur who had promised that he would not run for the presidency against Chirac in 1995 However benefiting from positive polls Balladur decided to be a presidential candidate with the support of a majority of right wing politicians Balladur broke from Chirac along with a number of friends and allies including Charles Pasqua Nicolas Sarkozy etc who supported his candidacy A small group of fidels would remain with Chirac including Alain Juppe and Jean Louis Debre When Nicolas Sarkozy became president in 2007 Juppe was one of the few chiraquiens to serve in Francois Fillon s government 44 Presidency 1995 2007 EditFirst term 1995 2002 Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Jacques Chirac news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Juppe ministry Edit Chirac with US president Bill Clinton outside the Elysee Palace 1999 During the 1995 presidential campaign Chirac criticised the sole thought pensee unique of neoliberalism represented by his challenger on the right and promised to reduce the social fracture placing himself more to the centre and thus forcing Balladur to radicalise himself Ultimately he obtained more votes than Balladur in the first round 20 8 per cent and then defeated the Socialist candidate Lionel Jospin in the second round 52 6 per cent Chirac was elected on a platform of tax cuts and job programmes but his policies did little to ease the labour strikes during his first months in office On the domestic front neo liberal economic austerity measures introduced by Chirac and his conservative prime minister Alain Juppe including budgetary cutbacks proved highly unpopular At about the same time it became apparent that Juppe and others had obtained preferential conditions for public housing as well as other perks At the year s end Chirac faced major workers strikes which turned in November December 1995 into a general strike one of the largest since May 1968 The demonstrations were largely pitted against Juppe s plan for pension reform and ultimately led to his dismissal Shortly after taking office Chirac undaunted by international protests by environmental groups insisted upon the resumption of nuclear tests at Mururoa Atoll in French Polynesia in 1995 a few months before signing the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty 45 Reacting to criticism Chirac said You only have to look back at 1935 There were people then who were against France arming itself and look what happened On 1 February 1996 Chirac announced that France had ended once and for all its nuclear testing and intended to accede to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Elected as President of the Republic he refused to discuss the existence of French military bases in Africa despite requests by the Ministry of Defence and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs 39 The French Army thus remained in Cote d Ivoire as well as in Omar Bongo s Gabon Chirac with Russian president Vladimir Putin 2001 Chirac and US president George W Bush during the 27th G8 summit 2001 Chirac with German federal chancellor Gerhard Schroder 2003 State responsibility for the roundup of Jews Edit Prior to 1995 the French government had maintained that the French Republic had been dismantled when Philippe Petain instituted a new French State during World War II and that the Republic had been re established when the war was over It was not for France therefore to apologise for the roundup of Jews for deportation that happened while the Republic had not existed and was carried out by a state Vichy France which it did not recognise President Francois Mitterrand had reiterated this position The Republic had nothing to do with this I do not believe France is responsible he said in September 1994 46 Chirac was the first president of France to take responsibility for the deportation of Jews during the Vichy regime In a speech made on 16 July 1995 at the site of the Vel d Hiv Roundup where 13 000 Jews had been held for deportation to concentration camps in July 1942 Chirac said France on that day committed the irreparable Those responsible for the roundup were 4 500 policemen and gendarmes French under the authority of their leaders who obeyed the demands of the Nazis the criminal folly of the occupiers was seconded by the French by the French State 47 48 49 Cohabitation with Jospin Edit In 1997 Chirac dissolved parliament for early legislative elections in a gamble designed to bolster support for his conservative economic program But instead it created an uproar and his power was weakened by the subsequent backlash The Socialist Party PS joined by other parties on the left soundly defeated Chirac s conservative allies forcing Chirac into a new period of cohabitation with Jospin as prime minister 1997 2002 which lasted five years Cohabitation significantly weakened the power of Chirac s presidency The French president by a constitutional convention only controls foreign and military policy and even then allocation of funding is under the control of Parliament and under the significant influence of the prime minister Short of dissolving parliament and calling for new elections the president was left with little power to influence public policy regarding crime the economy and public services Chirac seized the occasion to periodically criticise Jospin s government His position was weakened by scandals about the financing of RPR by Paris municipality In 2001 the left represented by Bertrand Delanoe PS won a majority on the city council of the capital Jean Tiberi Chirac s successor at the Paris city hall was forced to resign after having been put under investigations in June 1999 on charges of trafic d influences in the HLMs of Paris affairs related to the illegal financing of the RPR Tiberi was finally expelled from the Rally for the Republic Chirac s party on 12 October 2000 declaring to the magazine Le Figaro on 18 November 2000 Jacques Chirac is not my friend anymore 50 After the publication of the Jean Claude Mery by Le Monde on 22 September 2000 in which Jean Claude Mery in charge of the RPR s financing directly accused Chirac of organising the network and of having been physically present on 5 October 1986 when Mery gave in cash 5 million Francs which came from companies who had benefited from state deals to Michel Roussin personal secretary directeur de cabinet of Chirac 51 52 Chirac refused to attend court in response to his summons by judge Eric Halphen and the highest echelons of the French justice system declared that he could not be inculpated while in office During his two terms he increased the Elysee Palace s total budget by 105 per cent to 90 million whereas 20 years before it was the equivalent of 43 7 million He doubled the number of presidential cars to 61 cars and seven scooters in the Palace s garage He hired 145 extra employees the total number of the people he employed simultaneously was 963 Defence policy Edit Chirac at the Bastille Day military parade 2006 As the Supreme Commander of the French armed forces he reduced the military budget as did his predecessor At the end of his first term it accounted for three per cent of GDP 53 In 1997 the aircraft carrier Clemenceau was decommissioned after 37 years of service with her sister ship Foch decommissioned in 2000 after 37 years of service leaving the French Navy with no aircraft carrier until 2001 when Charles de Gaulle was commissioned 54 He also reduced expenditure on nuclear weapons 55 and the French nuclear arsenal was reduced to include 350 warheads compared to the Russian nuclear arsenal of 16 000 warheads 56 He also published a plan to reduce the number of fighters the French military had by 30 57 After Francois Mitterrand left office in 1995 Chirac began a rapprochement with NATO by joining the Military Committee and attempting to negotiate a return to the integrated military command which failed after the French demand for parity with the United States went unmet The possibility of a further attempt foundered after Chirac was forced into cohabitation with a Socialist led cabinet between 1997 and 2002 then poor Franco American relations after the French UN veto threat over Iraq in 2003 made transatlantic negotiations impossible Close call Edit On 25 July 2000 as Chirac and the first lady were returning from the G7 Summit in Okinawa Japan they were placed in a dangerous situation by Air France Flight 4590 after they landed at Charles de Gaulle International Airport The first couple were in an Air France Boeing 747 taxiing toward the terminal when the jet had to stop and wait for Flight 4590 to take off 58 The departing plane an Aerospatiale BAC Concorde ran over a strip of metal on takeoff puncturing its left fuel tank and sliced electrical wires near the left landing gear The sequence of events ignited a large fire and caused the Concorde to veer left on its takeoff roll As it reached takeoff speed and lifted off the ground it came within 30 feet of hitting Chirac s 747 The photograph of Flight 4590 ablaze the only picture taken of the Concorde on fire was taken by passenger Toshihiko Sato on Chirac s jetliner Second term 2002 2007 Edit Main article Jacques Chirac s second term as President of France Chirac greets the President of Brazil Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and his wife Marisa Leticia during a ceremony at the Palacio da Alvorada in Brasilia 2006 At the age of 69 Chirac faced his fourth presidential campaign in 2002 He received 20 of the vote in the first ballot of the presidential elections in April 2002 It had been expected that he would face incumbent prime minister Lionel Jospin PS in the second round of elections instead Chirac faced far right politician Jean Marie Le Pen of the National Front FN who came in 200 000 votes ahead of Jospin All parties other than the National Front except for Lutte ouvriere called for opposing Le Pen even if it meant voting for Chirac The 14 day period between the two rounds of voting was marked by demonstrations against Le Pen and slogans such as Vote for the crook not for the fascist or Vote with a clothespin on your nose Chirac won re election by a landslide with 82 per cent of the vote on the second ballot However Chirac became increasingly unpopular during his second term According to a July 2005 poll 59 37 per cent judged Chirac favourably and 63 per cent unfavorably In 2006 The Economist wrote that Chirac is the most unpopular occupant of the Elysee Palace in the fifth republic s history 60 Early term Edit As the left wing Socialist Party was in thorough disarray following Jospin s defeat Chirac reorganised politics on the right establishing a new party initially called the Union of the Presidential Majority then the Union for a Popular Movement UMP The RPR had broken down a number of members had formed Eurosceptic breakaways While the Giscardian liberals of the Union for French Democracy UDF had moved to the right citation needed the UMP won the parliamentary elections that followed the presidential poll with ease During an official visit to Madagascar on 21 July 2005 Chirac described the repression of the 1947 Malagasy uprising which left between 80 000 and 90 000 dead as unacceptable Despite past opposition to state intervention the Chirac government approved a 2 8 billion aid package to troubled manufacturing giant Alstom 61 In October 2004 Chirac signed a trade agreement with PRC president Hu Jintao where Alstom was given 1 billion in contracts and promises of future investment in China 62 Assassination attempt Edit On 14 July 2002 during Bastille Day celebrations Chirac survived an assassination attempt by a lone gunman with a rifle hidden in a guitar case The would be assassin fired a shot toward the presidential motorcade before being overpowered by bystanders 63 The gunman Maxime Brunerie underwent psychiatric testing the violent far right group with which he was associated Unite Radicale was thence administratively dissolved Foreign policy Edit Chirac with George W Bush Gerhard Schroder Vladimir Putin Junichiro Koizumi and other state leaders in Moscow 2005 Along with Vladimir Putin whom he called a personal friend 64 Hu Jintao and Gerhard Schroder Chirac emerged as a leading voice against George W Bush and Tony Blair in 2003 during the organisation and deployment of American and British forces participating in a military coalition to forcibly remove the government of Iraq controlled by the Ba ath Party under the leadership of Saddam Hussein that resulted in the 2003 2011 Iraq War Despite British and American pressure Chirac threatened to veto at that given point a resolution in the UN Security Council that would authorise the use of military force to rid Iraq of alleged weapons of mass destruction and rallied other governments to his position Iraq today does not represent an immediate threat that justifies an immediate war Chirac said on 18 March 2003 Future prime minister Dominique de Villepin acquired much of his popularity for his speech against the war at the United Nations UN 65 Chirac and British prime minister Tony Blair 2003 After Togo s leader Gnassingbe Eyadema s death on 5 February 2005 Chirac gave him tribute and supported his son Faure Gnassingbe who has since succeeded his father 39 On 19 January 2006 Chirac said that France was prepared to launch a nuclear strike against any country that sponsors a terrorist attack against French interests He said his country s nuclear arsenal had been reconfigured to include the ability to make a tactical strike in retaliation for terrorism 66 Chirac criticised the Israeli offensive into Lebanon on 14 July 2006 67 However Israeli Army Radio later reported that Chirac had secretly told Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert that France would support an Israeli invasion of Syria and the overthrow of the government of President Bashar al Assad promising to veto any moves against Israel in the United Nations or European Union 68 Whereas the disagreement on Iraq had caused a rift between Paris and Washington recent analysis suggests that both governments worked closely together on the Syria file to end the Syrian occupation of Lebanon and that Chirac was a driver of this diplomatic cooperation 69 In July 2006 the G8 met to discuss international energy concerns Despite the rising awareness of global warming issues the G8 focused on energy security issues Chirac continued when to be the voice citation needed within the G8 summit meetings to support international action to curb global warming and climate change concerns Chirac warned that humanity is dancing on a volcano and called for serious action by the world s leading industrialised nations citation needed After Chirac s death in 2019 the street leading to the Louvre Abu Dhabi was named Jacques Chirac Street in November 2019 in celebration of Chirac s efforts to bolster links between France and the United Arab Emirates during his presidency 70 Chirac espoused a staunchly pro Moroccan policy and the already established pro Moroccan French stances vis a vis the Western Sahara conflict were strengthened during his presidential tenure 71 Flight tax Edit Chirac requested the Landau report published in September 2004 and combined with the Report of the Technical Group on Innovative Financing Mechanisms formulated upon request by the Heads of State of Brazil Chile France and Spain issued in December 2004 these documents present various opportunities for innovative financing mechanisms while equally stressing the advantages stability and predictability of tax based models The UNITAID project was born Today the organisation s executive board is chaired by Marisol Touraine 72 2005 referendum on TCE Edit Further information 2005 French European Constitution referendum and Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe On 29 May 2005 a referendum was held in France to decide whether the country should ratify the proposed treaty for a Constitution of the European Union TCE The result was a victory for the No campaign with 55 per cent of voters rejecting the treaty on a turnout of 69 per cent dealing a devastating blow to Chirac and the Union for a Popular Movement UMP party and to part of the centre left which had supported the TCE Following the referendum defeat Chirac replaced his prime minister Jean Pierre Raffarin with Dominique de Villepin In an address to the nation Chirac declared that the new cabinet s top priority was to curb unemployment which was consistently hovering above 10 per cent calling for a national mobilisation to that effect 73 2005 civil unrest and CPE protests Edit Further information 2005 civil unrest in France and 2006 labour protests in France Following major student protests in spring 2006 which followed civil unrest in autumn 2005 after the death of two young boys in Clichy sous Bois one of the poorest communes in Paris suburbs Chirac retracted the proposed First Employment Contract CPE by promulgating it without applying it an unheard of and some claim illegal move intended to appease the protesters while giving the appearance of not making a volte face regarding the contract and therefore to continue his support for his prime minister Dominique de Villepin citation needed Retirement Edit In early September 2005 Chirac suffered an event that his doctors described as a vascular incident It was officially reported as a minor stroke 74 or a mild stroke also known as a transient ischemic attack 75 He recovered and returned to his duties soon afterward In a pre recorded television broadcast aired on 11 March 2007 he announced in a widely predicted move that he would not choose to seek a third term as president In 2000 the constitution had been amended to reduce the length of the presidential term to five years so his second term was shorter than his first 76 My whole life has been committed to serving France and serving peace Chirac said adding that he would find new ways to serve France after leaving office He did not explain the reasons for his decision 77 He did not during the broadcast endorse any of the candidates running for election but did devote several minutes of his talk to a plea against extremist politics that was considered a thinly disguised invocation to voters not to vote for Jean Marie Le Pen and a recommendation to Nicolas Sarkozy not to orient his campaign so as to include themes traditionally associated with Le Pen 78 Post presidency and death Edit Chirac in Saint Tropez 2010 Shortly after leaving office he launched the Fondation Chirac 79 in June 2008 Since then it has been striving for peace through five advocacy programmes conflict prevention access to water and sanitation access to quality medicines and healthcare access to land resources and preservation of cultural diversity It supports field projects that involve local people and provide concrete and innovative solutions Chirac chaired the jury for the Prize for Conflict Prevention awarded every year by his foundation 80 As a former president of France he was entitled to a lifetime pension and personal security protection and was an ex officio member for life of the Constitutional Council 81 He sat for the first time on the council on 15 November 2007 six months after leaving the presidency Immediately after Sarkozy s victory Chirac moved into a 180 square metre 1 900 sq ft duplex on the Quai Voltaire in Paris lent to him by the family of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri During the Didier Schuller affair the latter accused Hariri of having participated in illegal funding of the RPR s political campaigns but the judge closed the case without further investigations 82 In Volume 2 of his memoirs published in June 2011 Chirac mocked his successor Nicolas Sarkozy as irritable rash impetuous disloyal ungrateful and un French 83 84 Chirac wrote that he considered firing Sarkozy previously and conceded responsibility in allowing Jean Marie Le Pen to advance in 2002 85 A poll conducted in 2010 suggested Chirac was the most admired political figure in France while Sarkozy was 32nd 83 On 11 April 2008 Chirac s office announced that he had undergone successful surgery to fit a pacemaker 86 Chirac suffered from frail health and memory loss in later life In February 2014 he was admitted to hospital because of pains related to gout 87 88 On 10 December 2015 Chirac was hospitalised in Paris for undisclosed reasons although his state of health did not give any cause for concern he remained for about a week in ICU 89 According to his son in law Frederic Salat Baroux Chirac was again hospitalised in Paris with a lung infection on 18 September 2016 90 Death and state funeral Edit Chirac s grave in Montparnasse Cemetery October 2019 Chirac died at his home in Paris on 26 September 2019 surrounded by his family 91 A requiem mass was held at Saint Sulpice on 30 September celebrated by Michel Aupetit Archbishop of Paris and attended by representatives from about 175 countries included 69 past and present heads of state government and international organisations Notable names included Antonio Guterres Jean Claude Juncker Jens Stoltenberg Vladimir Putin Sergio Mattarella Frank Walter Steinmeier Charles Michel Viktor Orban Recep Tayyip Erdogan Saad Hariri Borut Pahor Salome Zourabichvili Tony Blair Jean Chretien Vaira Vike Freiberga Bill Clinton Hamid Karzai Dai Bingguo plus many ministers citation needed The day was declared a national day of mourning in France and a minute of silence was held nationwide at 15 00 Following the public ceremony Chirac was buried at Montparnasse Cemetery with only close family in attendance Andorra announced three days of national mourning 92 Lebanon declared the day of the ex president s funeral national day of mourning 93 94 Popular culture Edit Portrait by Donald Sheridan Chirac was a major supporter of the nation s film industry 95 Because of Jacques Chirac s long public career he was often parodied or caricatured Young Jacques Chirac is the basis of a young dashing bureaucrat character in the 1976 Asterix comic strip album Obelix and Co proposing methods to quell Gallic unrest to elderly old style Roman politicians Chirac was also featured in Le Bebete Show as an overexcited jumpy character Jacques Chirac was a favourite character of Les Guignols de l Info a satiric latex puppet show 96 He was originally portrayed as a rather likeable though overexcited character following the corruption allegations however he was depicted as a kind of dilettante and incompetent who pilfered public money and lied through his teeth His character for a while developed a superhero alter ego Super Menteur super liar to get him out of embarrassing situations Because of his alleged improprieties he was lambasted in a song Chirac en prison Chirac in prison by French punk band Les Wampas with a video clip made by the Guignols 97 He was given the Ig Nobel prize for peace for commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of Hiroshima with atomic bomb tests in the Pacific 1996 Portrayals in film Edit J Grant Albrecht voices Chirac in the Oliver Stone film W Marc Rioufol plays him in Richard Loncraine s 2010 film The Special Relationship 98 Bernard Le Coq portrays Chirac in La Derniere Campagne and The Conquest by Xavier Durringer 99 100 Controversies EditOsirak controversy Edit At the invitation of Saddam Hussein then vice president of Iraq but de facto dictator Chirac made an official visit to Baghdad in 1975 Saddam approved a deal granting French oil companies a number of privileges plus a 23 percent share of Iraqi oil 101 As part of this deal France sold Iraq the Osirak MTR nuclear reactor designed to test nuclear materials The Israeli Air Force alleged that the reactor s imminent commissioning was a threat to its security and pre emptively bombed the Osirak reactor on 7 June 1981 provoking considerable anger from French officials and the United Nations Security Council 102 The Osirak deal became a controversy again in 2002 2003 when an international military coalition led by the United States invaded Iraq and forcibly removed Hussein s government from power France led several other European countries in an effort to prevent the invasion The Osirak deal was then used by parts of the American media to criticise the Chirac led opposition to starting a war in Iraq 103 despite French involvement in the Gulf War 104 Conviction for corruption Edit Chirac has been named in several cases of alleged corruption that occurred during his term as mayor some of which have led to felony convictions of some politicians and aides However a controversial judicial decision in 1999 granted Chirac immunity while he was president of France He refused to testify on these matters arguing that it would be incompatible with his presidential functions Investigations concerning the running of Paris s city hall the number of whose municipal employees increased by 25 from 1977 to 1995 with 2 000 out of approximately 35 000 coming from the Correze region where Chirac had held his seat as deputy as well as a lack of financial transparency marches publics and the communal debt were thwarted by the legal impossibility of questioning him as president 105 The conditions of the privatisation of the Parisian water system acquired very cheaply by the Compagnie Generale des Eaux and the Lyonnaise des Eaux then directed by Jerome Monod a close friend of Chirac were also criticised Furthermore the satirical newspaper Le Canard enchaine revealed the astronomical food expenses paid by the Parisian municipality 15 million a year according to the Canard expenses managed by Roger Romani who allegedly destroyed all archives of the period 1978 93 during night raids in 1999 2000 Thousands of people were invited each year to receptions in the Paris city hall while many political media and artistic personalities were hosted in private flats owned by the city 105 Chirac s immunity from prosecution ended in May 2007 when he left office as president In November 2007 a preliminary charge of misuse of public funds was filed against him 106 Chirac is said to be the first former French head of state to be formally placed under investigation for a crime 107 On 30 October 2009 a judge ordered Chirac to stand trial on embezzlement charges dating back to his time as mayor of Paris 108 On 7 March 2011 he went on trial on charges of diverting public funds accused of giving fictional city jobs to 28 activists from his political party while serving as the mayor of Paris 1977 95 109 110 Along with Chirac nine others stood trial in two separate cases one dealing with fictional jobs for 21 people and the other with jobs for the remaining seven 109 The President of Union for a Popular Movement who later served as France s Minister of Foreign Affairs Alain Juppe was sentenced to a 14 month suspended prison sentence for the same case in 2004 111 On 15 December 2011 Chirac was found guilty and given a suspended sentence of two years 111 He was convicted of diverting public funds abuse of trust and illegal conflict of interest The suspended sentence meant he did not have to go to prison and took into account his age health and status as a former head of state 112 He did not attend his trial since medical doctors deemed that his neurological problems damaged his memory 111 His defence team decided not to appeal 111 113 See also Corruption scandals in the Paris region The Clearstream Affair Edit Further information Clearstream During April and May 2006 Chirac s administration was beset by a crisis as his chosen prime minister Dominique de Villepin was accused of asking Philippe Rondot a top level French spy for a secret investigation into Villepin s chief political rival Nicolas Sarkozy in 2004 This matter has been called the second Clearstream Affair On 10 May 2006 following a Cabinet meeting Chirac made a rare television appearance to try to protect Villepin from the scandal and to debunk allegations that Chirac himself had set up a Japanese bank account containing 300 million francs in 1992 as Mayor of Paris 114 Chirac said that The Republic is not a dictatorship of rumours a dictatorship of calumny 115 Personal life EditIn 1956 Chirac married Bernadette Chodron de Courcel with whom he had two daughters Laurence 4 March 1958 14 April 2016 116 and Claude born 6 December 1962 Claude was a long term public relations assistant and personal adviser to her father 117 while Laurence who suffered from anorexia nervosa in her youth did not participate in her father s political activities 118 Chirac was the grandfather of Martin Rey Chirac by the relationship of Claude with French judoka Thierry Rey 119 A former Vietnamese refugee Anh Dao Traxel is a foster daughter of Jacques and Bernadette Chirac 120 Chirac remained married but had many other relationships 121 122 123 Chirac was a close friend of actor Gregory Peck citation needed Academic works EditIn 1954 Chirac presented The Development of the Port of New Orleans a short geography economic thesis to the Institut d Etudes Politiques de Paris Sciences Po which he had entered three years before The 182 page typewritten work supervised by Professor Jean Chardonnet is illustrated by photographs sketches and diagrams Political career EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message President of the French Republic 1995 2007 Reelected in 2002 Member of the Constitutional Council of France Since 2007 Governmental functions Edit Prime minister 1974 76 Resignation 1986 88 Minister of Interior March May 1974 Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development 1972 74 Minister of Relation with Parliament 1971 72 Secretary of State for Economy and Finance 1968 71 Secretary of State for Social Affairs 1967 68 Electoral mandates Edit European Parliament Edit Member of European Parliament 1979 80 Resignation Elected in 1979 National Assembly of France Edit Elected in 1967 reelected in 1968 1973 1976 1981 1986 1988 1993 Member for Correze March April 1967 became Secretary of State in April 1967 reelected in 1968 1973 but he remained a minister in 1976 1986 became prime minister in 1986 1988 95 resigned to become President of the French Republic in 1995 General Council Edit President of the General Council of Correze 1970 1979 Reelected in 1973 1976 General councillor of Correze 1968 88 Reelected in 1970 1976 1982 Municipal Council Edit Mayor of Paris 1977 95 Resignation became President of the French Republic in 1995 Reelected in 1983 1989 Councillor of Paris 1977 1995 Resignation Reelected in 1983 1989 Municipal councillor of Sainte Fereole 1965 77 Reelected in 1971 Political function Edit President of the Rally for the Republic 1976 94 Resignation Ministries EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message First Chirac ministry Edit Further information in French First Chirac ministry fr 27 May 1974 25 August 1976 Jacques Chirac Prime Minister Jean Sauvagnargues Minister of Foreign Affairs Jacques Soufflet fr Minister of Defence Michel Poniatowski Minister of the Interior Jean Pierre Fourcade Minister of Economy and Finance Michel d Ornano Minister of Industry Tourism Posts and Telecommunications Michel Durafour Minister of Employment and Social Affairs Jean Lecanuet Minister of Justice Rene Haby Minister of National Education Simone Veil Minister of Health Christian Bonnet Minister of Agriculture Norbert Segard fr Minister of External Trade Robert Galley Minister of Equipment Vincent Ansquer fr Minister of Trade and Craft Pierre Abelin Minister of Cooperation Jean Jacques Servan Schreiber Minister of Reforms Andre Jarrot fr Minister of Quality of LifeSecond Chirac ministry Edit Further information in French Second Chirac ministry fr 20 March 1986 12 May 1988 Jacques Chirac Prime Minister Jean Bernard Raimond Minister of Foreign Affairs Andre Giraud Minister of Defence Charles Pasqua Minister of the Interior Edouard Balladur Minister of State Minister of Economy Finance and Privatisation Alain Madelin Minister of Industry Tourism Posts and Telecommunications Philippe Seguin Minister of Employment and Social Affairs Albin Chalandon Minister of Justice Rene Monory Minister of National Education Francois Leotard Minister of Culture and Communications Francois Guillaume Minister of Agriculture Bernard Pons Minister of Overseas Departments and Territories Pierre Mehaignerie Minister of Housing Equipment Regional Planning and Transport Andre Rossinot Minister for Relations with Parliament Michel Aurillac Minister of CooperationHonours EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message National honours Edit Ribbon Description Year Grand Master amp Grand Cross of the National Order of the Legion of Honour year needed Grand Master amp Grand Cross of the National Order of Merit year needed Knight of the Order of the Black Star year needed Commander of the Order of Agricultural Merit year needed Knight of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres year needed Cross for Military Valour year needed Combatant s Cross year needed Aeronautical Medal year needed North Africa Security and Order Operations Commemorative Medal year needed Foreign honours Edit Ribbon Country Honour Year Grand Star of the Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria year needed Collar of the Heydar Aliyev Order year needed Collar of the Order of the Condor of the Andes year needed Collar of the Order of the Southern Cross year needed Knight of the National Order of Quebec year needed Grand Cross of the Order of the White Lion year needed Member 1st Class of the Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana year needed Grand Cross with Chain of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary year needed Knight Grand Cross with Collar Order of Merit of the Italian Republic year needed Grand Knight s Cross with Star of the Order of the Falcon year needed Grand Cordon with Collar of the Order of Al Hussein bin Ali year needed Commander Grand Cross with Chain Order of the Three Stars year needed Grand Cordon of the National Order of the Cedar year needed First Class of the Order of the Grand Conqueror 124 year needed Grand Cross of the Order of Vytautas the Great year needed Grand Cross of the Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas year needed Civilian Class of the Order pro Merito Melitensi year needed Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Charles year needed Grand Cross of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite year needed Grand Cross of the Order of St Olav year needed Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland year needed Knight of the Order of the White Eagle year needed Grand Cross of the Order of Christ 125 year needed Grand Collar of the Order of Prince Henry 125 year needed Grand Collar of the Order of the Star of Romania year needed Member 1st Class of the Order For Merit to the Fatherland year needed Medal In Commemoration of the 300th Anniversary of Saint Petersburg year needed State Prize of the Russian Federation year needed Grand Cross of the National Order of the Lion year needed Grand Cross of the Order of Good Hope year needed Collar of the Order of Charles III year needed Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic year needed Knight of the Royal Order of the Seraphim year needed Grand Cordon of the Order of Independence year needed Grand Cordon of the Order of the Republic of Tunisia year needed Collar of the Order of Etihad Order of the Federation year needed Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath year needed Medal of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay 126 year needed Knight with the Collar of the Order of Pope Pius IX year needed Publications EditDiscours pour la France a l heure du choix Paris ed Stock 1978 La Lueur de l esperance Reflexion du soir pour le matin Paris ed La Table ronde 1978 Oui a l Europe With Alain Berger Paris ed Albatros 1984 Une ambition pour la France Paris ed Albin Michel 1988 Une nouvelle France Reflexions 1 Paris ed NiL 1994 La France pour tous Paris ed NiL Editions 1995 Mon combat pour la France tome I Paris ed Odile Jacob 2006 Le Developpement du port de la Nouvelle Orleans Paris ed Presses universitaires du Nouveau Monde 2007 Mon combat pour la paix tome II Paris ed Odile Jacob 2007 Demain il sera trop tard Paris ed Desclee de Brouwer 2008 Memoires Tome I Chaque pas doit etre un but Paris ed NiL 2009 Memoires Tome II Le Temps presidentiel Paris ed NiL Editions 2011See also Edit1995 French presidential election Musee du President Jacques Chirac Musee du Quai Branly Jacques ChiracReferences Edit Chirac Jacques Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 17 April 2022 a b Chirac Jacques Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Longman Archived from the original on 22 August 2019 Retrieved 22 August 2019 Chirac The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 22 August 2019 Chirac Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 22 August 2019 He was ex officio Co Prince of Andorra Privatization Is Essential Chirac Warns Socialists Resisting Global Currents France Sticks to Being French Archived 9 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine International Herald Tribune a b Jacques Chirac President of France from 1995 to 2007 Bonjourlafrance net Archived from the original on 7 August 2004 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Giavazzi Francesco Alberto Alesina 2006 The Future of Europe Reform Or Decline p 125 ISBN 9780262012324 France Connexion Chirac gets 2 year suspended sentence connexionfrance com Archived from the original on 7 June 2021 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Fichier des deces annee 2019 Death file year 2019 in French National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies Archived from the original on 1 January 2021 Retrieved 26 January 2021 Graham Robert 26 September 2019 Jacques Chirac French president 1932 2019 Financial Times Archived from the original on 1 October 2020 Retrieved 1 January 2020 The last true Gaullist how Jacques Chirac charmed France New Statesman Archived from the original on 4 October 2019 Retrieved 1 January 2020 Boue Merrac Pierre 1 January 1995 Jacques Chirac authentique la biographie inedite du Ve President de la Ve Republique in French FeniXX reedition numerique ISBN 978 2 402 13414 9 Jacques Chirac Fast Facts CNN 21 January 2013 Archived from the original on 1 October 2020 Retrieved 30 December 2019 Willsher Kim 15 December 2011 Jacques Chirac verdict welcomed by anti corruption campaigners The Guardian Archived from the original on 1 October 2020 Retrieved 28 September 2019 Quelques Anciens Celebres Hattemer Archived from the original on 18 June 2015 Retrieved 30 June 2015 a b Chirac Jacques 2012 My Life in Politics St Martin s Press p 11 ISBN 978 1137088031 Famous Ruggers by Wes Clark and others Archived 19 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 19 August 2009 a b c d Ross George 2013 The Trials and Triumphs of Egocentric Buffalo French Politics Culture amp Society 31 1 105 117 doi 10 3167 fpcs 2013 310107 ISSN 1537 6370 JSTOR 24517586 France 3 12 November 1993 Jacques Chirac sabre au clair L Humanite in French 8 May 1995 Archived from the original on 29 March 2010 Retrieved 17 December 2011 Jacques Chirac former French president is dead at 86 CNN 26 September 2019 Archived from the original on 1 October 2020 Retrieved 26 September 2019 Pean Pierre 2007 L inconnu de l Elysee in French Paris Fayard ISBN 978 2213631493 Emmanuel Hecht and Francois Vey Chirac de A a Z dictionnaire critique et 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privilegiant les hommes forts au pouvoir Stephen Smith in L Histoire n 313 October 2006 special issue on Chirac p 70 in French de Quetteville Harry 25 April 2002 Chirac labels racist Le Pen as threat to nation s soul The Age Australia Archived from the original on 10 May 2008 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Jacques Chirac obituary The Guardian 26 September 2019 Archived from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 24 March 2020 Appleton Andrew 1992 Maastricht and the French Party System Domestic Implications of the Treaty Referendum French Politics and Society 10 4 1 18 ISSN 0882 1267 JSTOR 42844330 Clarity James F Tagliabue John 26 September 2019 Jacques Chirac Who Led France Envisioning European Unity Is Dead at 86 The New York Times Archived from the original on 26 September 2019 Retrieved 24 March 2020 Rotella Sebastian Sicakyuz Achrene 19 May 2007 Sarkozy s team is small in size wide in scope Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2020 Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Acronym org uk Archived from the original on 25 July 2009 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Simons Marlise 17 July 1995 Chirac Affirms France s Guilt in Fate of Jews The New York Times Archived from the original on 7 December 2017 Retrieved 28 December 2017 France opens WW2 Vichy regime files BBC 28 December 2015 Archived from the original on 9 November 2017 Retrieved 21 June 2018 Allocution de M Jacques CHIRAC President de la Republique prononcee lors des ceremonies commemorant la grande rafle des 16 et 17 juillet 1942 Paris Archived 13 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine President de la republique Allocution de M Jacques CHIRAC President de la Republique prononcee lors des ceremonies commemorant la grande rafle des 16 et 17 juillet 1942 Paris PDF jacqueschirac asso in French 16 July 1995 Archived from the original PDF on 24 July 2014 Retrieved 17 July 2014 Rien ne va plus entre Chirac et Tiberi Le Figaro 18 November 2000 in French Un temoignage pour l histoire Archived 13 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Le Monde 22 September 2000 in French La suite du testament de Jean Claude Mery Archived 13 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Le Monde 23 September 2000 in French CIA The World Factbook Rank Order Military expenditures percent of GDP Archived 13 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Cia gov Retrieved 17 December 2011 Porte avions Charles de Gaulle Netmarine net Archived from the original on 6 April 2010 Retrieved 20 April 2010 John Pike Nuclear Weapons France Nuclear Forces GlobalSecurity org Archived from the original on 8 September 2009 Retrieved 20 April 2010 John Pike Worldwide Nuclear Forces Globalsecurity org Archived from the original on 7 July 2010 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Archived copy defense gouv fr Archived from the original on 22 September 2020 Retrieved 15 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Rose David Concorde the unanswered questions The Guardian 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Terrorism Is Possible Archived 4 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Washington Post 20 January 2006 France Criticizes Israel Attack on Lebanon The Washington Post 14 July 2006 Archived from the original on 24 October 2012 France Urged Israel to Invade Syria During War 18 March 2007 Archived from the original on 5 August 2019 Retrieved 5 August 2019 Duclos Michel 1 October 2019 Jacques Chirac explorateur du monde multipolaire Institut Montaigne in French Archived from the original on 1 October 2019 Retrieved 1 October 2019 Dajani Haneen 11 November 2019 Street named in honour of Jacques Chirac at Louvre Abu Dhabi ceremony The National Archived from the original on 30 August 2020 Retrieved 21 April 2020 Tisseron Antonin 2014 Diplomatic Struggle in Africa and Europe over the Western Sahara Conflict In Boukhars Anouar Roussellier Jacques eds Perspectives on Western Sahara Myths Nationalisms and Geopolitics Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield p 154 ISBN 978 1 4422 2685 2 Archived from the original on 27 September 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2021 World Health Organisation Unitaid Governance Archived from the original on 22 April 2021 Retrieved 22 April 2021 Rotella Sebastian Sicakyuz Achrene 1 June 2005 Stung by Voters on EU Chirac Replaces His Prime Minister Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 3 April 2010 Retrieved 10 December 2017 Willsher Kim 4 September 2005 Minor stroke puts Chirac in hospital but he hangs on to reins of government The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 4 December 2011 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Rivals in open warfare after Chirac s stroke raises stakes in succession fight battle The Belfast Telegraph 6 September 2005 Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Duhamel Olivier 30 November 2001 France s New Five Year Presidential Term Archived from the original on 20 April 2017 Retrieved 19 April 2017 France s Chirac says he will not run for re election Archived 20 March 2007 at the Wayback 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President Who Championed European Identity Is Dead at 86 The New York Times Archived from the original on 26 September 2019 Retrieved 26 September 2019 Andorran government announces three day national mourning over Jacques Chirac s death All Andorra 27 September 2019 PM Hariri declares day of mourning for Chirac friend of Lebanon Ya Libnan 28 September 2019 Retrieved 4 May 2022 Lebanon declares Monday a national day of mourning for Chirac Peter Baxter The cinema of Jacques Chirac governing the French film industry 1995 2007 Screen 56 3 2015 357 368 INTERVIEW Chirac juge sympathique sa marionnette des Guignols actualite Medias 2 0 Le Point 13 December 2009 Archived from the original on 13 December 2009 Retrieved 14 November 2019 Chirac en prison Video Dailymotion 13 August 2009 Archived from the original on 30 November 2021 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Jacques Chirac au cinema ce sera lui Le Parisien 20 May 2010 Archived from the original on 18 January 2021 Retrieved 10 January 2020 Bernard Le Coq dans la peau du retraite Chirac Telerama 16 April 2013 Archived from the original on 30 November 2019 Retrieved 10 January 2020 Jacques Chirac cinematographique mais pas trop Slate in French 30 September 2019 Archived from the original on 11 December 2019 Retrieved 9 January 2020 Taheri Amir The Chirac Doctrine France s Iraq war plan Archived 14 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine National Review Online 4 November 2002 1981 Israel bombs Baghdad nuclear reactor Archived 17 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine On this day 7 June BBC News Retrieved 5 September 2008 Joshua Glenn Rebuilding Iraq Archived 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Boston Globe 2 March 2003 Out of Area or Out of Reach European Military Support for Operations in Southwest Asia PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 April 2011 Retrieved 13 June 2010 a b Jean Guarrigues professor at the University of Orleans and author of Les Scandales de la Republique De Panama a l Affaire Elf Robert Laffon 2004 La derive des affaires in L Histoire n 313 October 2006 pp 66 71 in French Lichfield John 22 November 2007 Chirac faces investigation into misuse of public cash The Independent London Archived from the original on 18 January 2009 Retrieved 6 July 2008 Le dossier judiciaire de Jacques Chirac s alourdit Capital in French 22 February 2008 Retrieved 6 July 2008 permanent dead link Alan Cowell 30 October 2009 Frances Chirac Ordered to Face Trial The New York Times Archived from the original on 12 May 2013 Retrieved 30 October 2009 a b France Jacques Chirac corruption trial opens BBC News 7 March 2011 Archived from the original on 8 March 2011 Retrieved 8 March 2011 Samuel Henry 7 March 2011 Jacques Chirac trial faces further delays The Telegraph Archived from the original on 9 March 2011 Retrieved 8 March 2011 a b c d French ex President Jacques Chirac guilty of corruption BBC 15 December 2011 Archived from the original on 15 December 2011 Retrieved 15 December 2011 Jacques Chirac found guilty of corruption Archived 8 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian 15 December 2011 Erlanger Steven 15 December 2011 Chirac Found Guilty in Political Funding Case The New York Times Archived from the original on 15 December 2011 Retrieved 15 December 2011 French farce Archived 11 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Times 11 May 2006 Caught in deep water Chirac swims against a tide of scandal The Times 11 May 2006 The troubled daughter of a French President hidden away for decades has died The Independent Archived from the original on 6 September 2017 Retrieved 18 April 2016 BBC World Service Letter from Paris John Laurenson on Claude Chirac s crucial but understated electoral role BBC News 21 March 2002 Archived from the original on 15 January 2009 Retrieved 20 April 2010 Colin Randall Chirac s wife tells of anorexic daughter s death wish Archived 25 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine Daily Telegraph 12 July 2004 Claude Chirac his son Martin Rey Chirac ready to follow in the footsteps of his illustrious grandfather World Today News 7 December 2020 Bremner Charles 21 July 2005 Troubled Chirac s adopted daughter rides to his rescue The Times London Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 20 May 2018 French leaders featured in extramarital affair website billboard campaign Archived 28 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine 22 October 2012 Retrieved 16 September 2019 First lady tells of Chirac s infidelity 22 February 2014 Archived from the original on 28 June 2019 Retrieved 28 June 2019 The Hollande Affair and the End of Presidential Privacy in France The Atlantic 15 January 2014 Archived from the original on 28 June 2019 Retrieved 28 June 2019 Kadhafi awards Chirac the Grand Conqueror Medal Archived from the original on 26 May 2021 Retrieved 23 March 2021 a b ENTIDADES ESTRANGEIRAS AGRACIADAS COM ORDENS PORTUGUESAS Pagina Oficial das Ordens Honorificas Portuguesas Resolucion N 814 996 impo com uy Archived from the original on 8 January 2021 Retrieved 27 November 2020 Further reading EditAllport Alan Jacques Chirac Infobase Publishing 2007 short biography excerpt Bell David et al eds Biographical Dictionary of French Political Leaders Since 1870 1990 pp 82 86 Bell David Presidential Power in Fifth Republic France 2000 pp 211 40 Bell David S Erwin C Hargrove and Kevin Theakston Skill in context A comparison of politicians Presidential Studies Quarterly 29 3 1999 528 548 comparison of George Bush US John Major UK and Jacques Chirac Chafer Tony Chirac and la Francafrique No longer a family affair Modern amp Contemporary France 13 1 2005 7 23 online Archived 4 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine Drake Helen Jacques chirac s balancing acts The French right and Europe South European Society amp Politics 10 2 2005 297 313 Elgie Robert La cohabitation de longue duree studying the 1997 2002 experience Modern amp Contemporary France 2002 10 3 pp 297 31 in English Gaffney John The Mainstream Right Chirac and Balladur in French Presidentialism and the Election of 1995 Routledge 2018 pp 99 115 Gaffney John Protocol Image and Discourse in Political leadership Competition the case of prime minister Lionel Jospin 1997 2002 Modern amp Contemporary France 10 3 2002 313 323 Gaffney John ed The French presidential and legislative elections of 2002 Routledge 2018 Knapp Andrew Jacques Chirac Surviving without Leading in David Bell and John Gaffney eds The presidents of the French Fifth Republic Palgrave Macmillan UK 2013 pp 159 180 Levy Jonah Alistair Cole and Patrick Le Gales From Chirac to Sarkozy A New France Developments in French politics 4 2008 1 21 Maclean Mairi Economic Management and French Business From de Gaulle to Chirac Springer 2002 Milzow Katrin National interests and European integration Discourse and politics of Blair Chirac and Schroeder Palgrave Macmillan 2012 Nester William R President Chirac in Nester De Gaulle s Legacy Palgrave Macmillan 2014 pp 151 172 Wilsford David ed Political leaders of contemporary Western Europe a biographical dictionary Greenwood 1995 pp 63 70 Primary sources Edit Chirac Jacques My Life in Politics 2012 In French Edit Emmanuel Hecht Thierry Vey Chirac de A a Z dictionnaire critique et impertinent Editions Albin Michel ISBN 2 226 07664 6 Valery Giscard d Estaing Le pouvoir et la vie tome 3 Frederic Lepage A Table avec Chirac Jacques Chirac La Nouvelle Orleans et son port en 1954 Presses Universitaires du Nouveau Monde ISBN 1 931948 68 2External links Edit Media related to Jacques Chirac at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to Jacques Chirac at Wikiquote Some of Jacques Chirac s quotations in French Appearances on C SPAN Portal Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacques Chirac amp oldid 1130974988, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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