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Socialists attack Sarkozy for racially-charged rhetoric against ministers

Former French president Sarkozy came under fire for singling out two non-white female ministers in a largely white government as incompetent.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

France's ruling socialists have accused conservative former president Nicolas Sarkozy of appealing to racist sentiments in criticising the country's Morocco-born education minister, reports GlobalPost.

Sarkozy, expected by many to run for election in 2017, used no explicitly racist words but came under fire for singling out two non-white female ministers in a largely white government for charges of gross incompetence.

Sarkozy's main target was Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, a young Franco-Moroccan minister in charge of a post-primary schooling reform plan that has irked many teachers and been slammed by many in Sarkozy's UMP opposition party.

UMP chief Sarkozy weighed in at a political rally north of Paris last Monday, saying: "In the unrelenting quest for mediocrity, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem is in the process of overtaking Christiane Taubira."

Taubira is justice minister and was pilloried by political opponents when shepherding a bill through parliament to legalize same-sex marriage in 2013, with some of the invective mocking the racial origin of the French Guiana-born justice minister.

Contacted about the accusation of racism, a UMP official said Sarkozy did not intend to comment.

Regarding the attack on education minister Vallaud-Belkacem, socialist Party head Jean-Christophe Cambadelis accused Sarkozy of resorting to racially-charged rhetoric.

"It's got a certain connotation," Cambadelis told RTL radio. "This attack is slightly xenophobic, I believe."

Several other Socialists joined the riposte against Sarkozy, who ruled from 2007 to 2012. He failed to secure re-election in 2012 when he waged a markedly more right-wing campaign in what many political analysts read as an attempt to appeal more to voters of the anti-immigrant National Front party.

Read more of this Reuters report published by GlobalPost.