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Jospin

  • 1 Jospin, Lionel

       (adj Jospiniste) - born 1937
       Socialist Prime Minister of France from 1997 to 2002. Jospin served as Minister of Education under Prime Minister Michel Rocard from 1988 to 1992; before and after this period, he was first secretary (leader) of the French Socialist party. In 1995, he was selected as socialist candidate in the Presidential election, and was only narrowly defeated in the second round by Jacques Chirac. In 1997, Jospin led the socialists to a decisive victory at the general election, and was subsequently called by Chirac to form a Socialist government.
       Though once a Trotskyist, and reputed as a left-winger, Jospin proved to be a very middle-of-the -road Prime Minister. His government introduced the much maligned principle of the official 35-hour working week, but also oversaw the privatisation of a number of state industries and tax reductions. In 2002, he was beaten into third place by the National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen in the first round of the presidential election.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Jospin, Lionel

  • 2 Aubry, Martine

       b.1950
       Daughter of Jacques Delors, Martine Aubry is a French socialist politician, elected as leader of the Socialist Party (PS) in November 2008 after a fierce contest with her centre-left rival Ségolène Royal. As minister of employment in the Jospin government from 1997 to 2000, Aubry is best known for having introduced the statutory 35-hour working week into French labour law, a move heavily criticized by her political opponents, as having severly damaged France's international competitiveness and thereby boosted unemployment rather than reducing it. Though the Jospin government to which she belonged was committed to getting rid of "cumul des mandats", Aubry in early 2009 was simultaneously first secretary of the Socialist Party, Mayor of Lille, and president of the Lille metropolitan area. As leader of the PS, she has been much criticised from within, firstly for her very narrow margin of victory in the leadership contest (50.04%), secondly for being a "three-day-week" leader of the PS (the rest of the week being devoted to her functions in Lille) and thirdly for leading the party to its worst electoral score, in the 2009 European elections, where the Socialists obtained under 15% of the vote, just a short way in front of the Green party.
       Since the Strauss-Kahn affair rocked the Socialist party in 2011, Aubry is seen as one of the two main contenders for nomination as the PS's candidate in the French 2012 Presidential election - the other being her predecessor the more social democratic François Hollande.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Aubry, Martine

  • 3 cohabitation

    cohabitation [kɔabitasjɔ̃]
    feminine noun
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    This describes the situation when, as a result of a presidential or general election, the French people find themselves with a president from one political party and a government from another. A recent example of cohabitation is the combination of a Socialist Prime Minister, Lionel Jospin, with a Gaullist President, Jacques Chirac.
    * * *
    A period in which the government and the Président de la République come from opposite political camps. The first instance of political cohabitation in the 5th Republic occurred in 1986 when François Mitterrand (PS) was president and Jacques Chirac (RPR) became prime minister. parti
    * * *
    kɔabitasjɔ̃ nf
    1) (= concubinage) living together, [amis] sharing
    2) POLITIQUE, DROIT cohabitation
    * * *
    1 living with somebody, living under the same roof as somebody; la cohabitation avec la belle-famille living with one's in-laws;
    2 Pol period when the French president and the government are drawn from opposing parties.
    Cohabitation A period in which the government and the Président de la République come from opposite political camps. The first instance of political cohabitation in the 5th Republic occurred in 1986 when François Mitterrand (PS) was president and Jacques Chirac (RPR) became prime minister. ⇒ parti
    [kɔabitasjɔ̃] nom féminin
    2. POLITIQUEcoexistence of an elected head of state and an opposition parliamentary majority
    Describes a situation whereby the French president represents one political party and the government another. This term was first used during the period 1986-1988, when the socialist president (François Mitterrand) had a right-wing prime minister (Jacques Chirac), following the victory of the RPR in the legislative elections.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > cohabitation

  • 4 Chirac, Jacques

       born 1932.
       (adj. Chiraquien)
       Former conservative (Gaullist) President of France, from 1995 to 2007. Chirac's reelection in 2002 was an unexpected twist of fortune, caused by the elimination of the front-runner, socialist Lionel Jospin, pipped into third place in the first round of the election by a surge in the vote for the far right wing leader of the French National Front, Jean Marie Le Pen.Facing Le Pen in the second round, Chirac was reelected with a massive majority in what was in essence a contest between the the extreme right and everyone else. Had the second round of the election been a classic left-right contest, Chirac's re-election would not have been guaranteed.
       Jacques Chirac was a highly ambitious career politician, who worked his way rapidly up the ranks of the Gaullist movement; yet his first steps in politics were actually as a militant for the Communist party, and as a student he sold the communist newspaper l'Humanité on the streets of Paris. After graduating from "Sciences Po", he changed tack, married into Parisian high society, studied at the elite ENA (Ecole Nationale d'Administration), and then began a career in politics, working for the office of the prime minister, Georges Pompidou. In 1976, he was appointed junior minister for employment in the third Pompidou government, and from then after he remained one of the most omnipresent of conservative politicians in France. From Gaullist, he became a supporter of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing during Giscard's 1974 bid for the presidency - against the Gaullist Chaban-Delmas - and was appointed Prime Minister when Giscard won. Two years later, he resigned, complaining that Giscard was cramping his style.
       This was the start of his rise to the top. No longer prime minister, in 1977 he set about building his own power base, or rather his own two power bases, firstly as leader of a new political party, the RPR, created out of the old Gaullist UDR, and secondly by becoming elected Mayor of Paris. In 1981, he challenged Giscard for the presidency, but came third in the first round of the election, which was won by François Mitterrand. By 1986 he was clear leader of the conservative opposition. When the conservatives won the general election of that year, he was appointed prime minister, ushering in the first period of cohabitation (see below) between a president and a government of different political persuasions.
       In 1988, he was again a candidate in the presidential election, and again lost; but with his power base in Paris and in the RPR, he then had seven years in which to prepare his third, and first successful, challenge for the presidency.
       He served two terms as president, the first of seven years, the second of five - though as already stated, his reelection in 2002 was more due to the failure of the Socialist campaign and the surprise presence of Le Pen in the second round, than in his own popularity. It is still rather early to judge the Chirac presidency in a historic perspective, but early appraisals suggest that it will not be remembered as a great period in French history. It was a time during which France dramatically failed to adapt to the changes in the modern world - the end of the Cold War and the challenge of globalisation - and failed to push through the social and economic reforms that were allowing other developed nations such as France, Germany or Spain, to find their place in the new world order.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Chirac, Jacques

  • 5 Cumul des mandats

       Expression used to describe the cumulation, by a single politician, of a range of different representative functions, such as parliamentarian and mayor, or mayor and president of a regional council. The principle of combining different representative roles is deeply anchored in the French political tradition, where national politicians frequently built up their reputation and power bases in their local fiefdoms, and local politics were often in the hands of local "notables" with their fingers in many pies.. Jacques Chirac, for example, had a range of elected and ministerial jobs, and was at one time simultaneously député for the Corrèzedepartment, President of the General council of Corrèze, and Mayor of Paris. Since the 1990's, there have been attempts to outlaw the practice of double mandates. Lionel Jospin forbade ministers in his government from being mayor at the same time, and this unwritten rule continued to be applied - more or less - until the end of the Chirac presidency. Since the start of the Sarkozy presidency, it has been enforced less stringently. According to a 2007 opinion poll for Le Nouvel Observateur, 74% of French people disapprove of the principle of cumul des mandats. Reform of this aspect of French life would surely be appreciated by voters, but the principle is so well rooted in the French socio-political system, and so many decision-makers and advisors- of all political persuasions - have a vested interest in the system, that this is a reform that will likely prove very difficult to implement.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Cumul des mandats

  • 6 France Télécom

       Trading as Orange, France Télécom, is the former state telecommunications company in France, responsible for the upkeep of the national telephone and telecommunications network. Privatised in 1998 by Lionel Jospin's socialist government, it remains by far the largest fixed and mobile telecoms operator in France, and the largest ISP, with over 7 million broadband customers, well ahead of its biggest rival Free.fr (see below). FT is also one of the world's biggest telecoms corporations, operating phone services in over thirty countries, and is the leading Internet service provider in Europe.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > France Télécom

  • 7 Premier Ministre

       The role of Prime Minister in France is not the same as that of the Prime Minister of Britain. While the British Prime Minister is politically (though not constitutionally) Britain's head of state, the French Prime Minister is only the head of the French government, and nominated as such by the President. Weekly meetings of the French cabinet (see Conseil des Ministres) are therefore presided over by the President, not by the Prime Minister. When President and Prime Minister are of the same political leaning ("left" or "right"), government policy will tend to be lead by the two; when they are from different political families (a situation known as cohabitation), the Prime Minister's role and decision-making power are considerably strengthened. The Prime Minister is responsible for forming the government, but the list of names has to be approved by the President. See Balladur, Barre, Chaban Delmas, Chirac, Jospin, Raffarin, Rocard, etc.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Premier Ministre

  • 8 PS

       the French socialist party, formed betwen 1969 and 1971, from the fusion of existing non-communist left-wing parties in France. Since the seventies, and the fading of the Communist Party, the PS has been the principal party of the left in France, and has formed a number of governments, the most recent of which was the Jospin Government, from 2002 to 2007. One of the founding members of the party was François Mitterrand, who was President of France from 1981 to 1995. The current first Secretary is MartineAubry. See Political Parties in France

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > PS

  • 9 Strauss-Kahn, Dominique

       professor of economics, minister of economics in the government of Lionel Jospin, later appointed head of the IMF, and credited with very successful management of the post 2007 economic crisis. Popularly known as "DSK", Strauss-Kahn was widely tipped to win the French presidential election in 2012 as the candidate of the Socialist Party. But in May 2011, he experienced a total fall from grace after being accused in the USA or sexual assault on a hotel cleaner - a charge he strenuously denied. Photos of the handcuffed and dishevelled DSK being led by New York police caused outrage in France from DSK's friends and foes alike, since the publication of such photos of a person considered innocent until proved guilty is quite illegal under French privacy law. However in spite of DNA evidence of a sexual encounter, all charges against him were later dropped following evidence of inconsistencies in the allegations of the plaintif.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Strauss-Kahn, Dominique

  • 10 Trente-cinq heures, les

       (see also RTT) In the year 2000, the socialist government of Lionel Jospin reduced the statutory working week in France from 39 hours to 35 hours - without loss of salary. Though the measure was accompanied by other changes in workplace legislation, including greater flexibility for employers and employees, and though the productivity of labour in France increased by over 4% as a result, the introduction of the 35-hour working week was not a good move for the French economy, particularly at a time of increasing globalization, and the rapid development of imports manufactured in low-labour-cost countries. The conservative Raffarin andVillepin governments tinkered with reform of the system that was much decried by employers, but failed to take any major action for fear of the trade unions and of hostile public reaction. It was not until the Sarkozy presidency that the official 35-hour working week legislation was to all intents and purposes rendered obsolete.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Trente-cinq heures, les

  • 11 Verts, les

       the French Green Party, founded in 1984 from the amalgamation of two ecology parties. The French Green Party has deputies in the National Assembly, Eurodeputies (MEPs), and also a strong presence in local government in France, notably in towns or other authorities where the Greens are allied with the Socialists. As allies of the Socialists, the Greens even had two ministers in the first Jospin government from 1997 to 2002, in particular the most prominent of their leaders, madame Dominique Voynet.
       The Greens came to prominence in the1990s, when "red-green" alliances with the Socialists in local politics and national politics led to the election of deputies, of a number of Green mayors, and to the appointment of a number of Greens as deputy mayors in many French cities, notably including Paris. After the 2008 municipal elections, the Greens officially controlled 42 municipalities in France; however, their place in the political landscape of France was weaker than it was a decade earlier, and with the environmental issue being seized by most of France's mainstream political parties, the party faced an uncertain future as a force in French politics. However, under the inspiration of Daniel Cohn Bendit, the French Greens surged back in the 2009 european elections, coming third, just a few thousand votes behind the socialist Party.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Verts, les

  • 12 Voynet, Dominique (Madame)

       former leader of the French Green Party (see above, les Verts), and minister of the environment in the 1997 Socialist government of Lionel Jospin.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Voynet, Dominique (Madame)

См. также в других словарях:

  • JOSPIN (L.) — Lionel JOSPIN (1937 ) Le 3 avril 1993, lorsqu’il annonce son retrait de la vie politique, Lionel Jospin n’est plus rien. Ou presque. Simple conseiller général de Cintegabelle, en Haute Garonne. «Sainte Gamelle», ironise t on alors. Il vient… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Jospin — Jospin, Lionel …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Jospin — (Lionel) (né en 1937) homme politique français. Premier secrétaire du Parti socialiste (1981 1987 et 1995 1997), battu au second tour de l élection présidentielle (1995) par J. Chirac, il est nommé Premier ministre par celui ci après les… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Jospin —   [ʒɔs pɛ̃], Lionel, französischer Politiker, * Meudon 12. 7. 1937; Beamter im Außenministerium, Hochschullehrer, ab 1973 Parteifunktionen im Parti Socialiste (PS), nach der Wahl F. Mitterrands zum Staatspräsidenten 1981 dessen Nachfolger als… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Jospin — Nom originaire du Nord. C est un diminutif de Josse (voir ce nom), formé à l aide du suffixe picard epin …   Noms de famille

  • Jospin — Lionel Jospin Pour les articles homonymes, voir Jospin (homonymie). Lionel Jospin …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Jospin — Lionel Jospin [ljɔˈnɛl ʒɔsˈpɛ̃] (* 12. Juli 1937 in Meudon) ist ein französischer Politiker der Sozialistischen Partei Frankreichs (Parti socialiste français). Er war während der dritten Cohabitation von 1997 bis 2002 Premierminister der Fünften… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Jospin, Lionel — born July 12, 1937, Meduon, France French Socialist Party politician who served as the country s prime minister (1997–2002). He was educated at the elite École Nationale d Administration. He joined the foreign service and later taught economics… …   Universalium

  • Jospin (homonymie) — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Patronyme Lionel Jospin, né le 12 juillet 1937 à Meudon (Hauts de Seine), est un homme politique français, Premier ministre de 1997 à 2002; Voir… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Jospin, Lionel — (1937 )    political figure, prime minister Born into a Protestant Socialist family in Meudon, near Paris, Lionel Jospin was the son of a teacher and a midwife. in 1961, he entered the Ecole nationale d administration and, upon finishing in 1965 …   France. A reference guide from Renaissance to the Present

  • Jospin, Lionel — ► (n. 1937) Político francés. Sucedió a F. Mitterrand como primer secretario del Partido Socialista (1981 87). En 1997 2002 ocupó el cargo de primer ministro. * * * (n. 12 jul. 1937, Meduon, Francia). Político del Partido Socialista Francés que… …   Enciclopedia Universal

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