France Link

French public mood appears lifted by Olympics success

While recent political turmoil has resulted in parliamentary deadlock and a ghost-like caretaker government, and congestion in the capital during preparations for the Olympic games has for months been a source of frustration for inhabitants, the success of French athletes and the positive reception to the scenography of the games has succeeded in lifting the mood of some.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

The River Seine was at last clean enough for the triathletes to swim in, stadiums were full, fan zones were packed, the gold medals were rolling in, TV viewing figures were rocketing and a kind of sporting party-fever gripped the city-centre streets, reports The Guardian.

The first week of the Paris Olympics sprinkled its stardust over the hitherto grim public mood of deep political division, and the Games even appeared to have pushed to the back of many people’s minds the fact France had no new government after its recent snap parliament elections.

“When given a chance, sport can be extraordinary,” said the sports minister Amélie Oudéa-Castéra, who was part of a government that resigned weeks ago after the elections, but was staying put for the duration of the Games. “These Olympics are iconic – there’s a winning dynamic that is allowing French people to feel something they haven’t felt enough for years: pride. It’s a reminder that France is capable of great things. It has contributed to our happiness,” she told BFMTV.

The first week began with a dazzling, rain-soaked opening ceremony along the Seine — that more than 85% of French people agreed was a success according to a Harris Interactive poll — and ended on an extraordinary Friday night winning streak for France that helped the host country chalk up an unprecedented nine medals in one day. Not only were there golds for the national heroes, swimmer Léon Marchand and judo star Teddy Riner, but one BMX bike racing event saw France take all three medals on the podium: gold, silver and bronze.

After only one week, France was second in the medals table and had already won more medals than in the whole of the Tokyo Games. That position may begin to slip as the athletics events get started – an area the host country is not predicted to match the might of the US. But France is hoping to stay in the top five.

It wasn’t just the winners grabbing the country’s attention, it was the sheer grit of taking part. The French athlete, Aurélien Quinion, who was in the 20km race walk on Thursday, got a call from his wife the night before the event as she went into labour with their first child. “She was on the phone in tears,” he said. “I said the most important thing was bringing our little girl into the world in the best conditions.”

So he took a taxi out of Paris to the hospital in a town north of the city. “We spent the night together, the baby was born around 2am, it was really intense, but I saw the little one being born and that was what was important,” he said. He stayed up all night with the baby then took a taxi straight from the hospital to the Trocadero in central Paris, got out and joined the race – taking place in scorching heat – coming ninth and beating his personal best.

Other athletes shone a light on what it means to be French after the recent elections saw weeks of rows over national identity and Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally party pledged to bar dual-nationals from certain state jobs. 

Read more of this report from The Guardian.