President Francois Hollande said on Thursday he would not let France's image deteriorate "over the coming months or coming years", his clearest indication yet that he intends to run for a second term in office next year.
In an hour-long speech on "democracy and terrorism",
Hollande, a Socialist, took a swipe at his right-wing opponents, saying
their hardline reactions to a wave of militant attacks demonstrated an
intent to destroy France's social model.
"I won't let the image of France, the influence of France, deteriorate over the coming months or coming years," said Hollande, who opinion polls show is the most unpopular French leader of modern times.
Hollande
has come under attack from right-wing opponents, in particular former
president Nicolas Sarkozy, over his track record on security. More than
230 people have been killed in militant Islamist attacks on French soil
since January 2015.
Sarkozy, who announced last
month his candidacy for the April 2017 presidential poll, has said
France needs to be "merciless" in its response to the attacks and that
there is no place for "legal niceties" in the fight against terrorism.
Without mentioning Sarkozy by name, Hollande said: "Constitutional principles are not legal niceties."
"Is
the freedom to come and go a legal nicety? Is freedom of expression a
legal nicety? Is freedom to worship a legal nicety? Is being presumed
innocent - something that's useful when defending one's self - a legal
nicety?" Hollande said at the left-wing Jean Jaures Foundation, drawing warm applause.
FEARS
Hollande,
who defeated Sarkozy in the 2012 presidential race, was speaking on
Thursday amid lingering security fears and this summer's debacle over a
burkini ban, a saga which encapsulated secular France's difficulties
responding to the threat posed by homegrown jihadists and foreign
militants.
Worryingly for Hollande, an opinion
poll published by Elabe on Wednesday showed almost nine in 10 voters did
not want the president to seek a second five-year term.
Further
underlining the uphill battle Hollande would face in winning
re-election, respondents were damning in their assessment of his
performance on the two key themes set to dominate the campaign: security
and the economy.
With
seven months to go until the election's first round, the fractures
within the Socialist Party are deepening and the list of left-wing
candidates to replace Hollande is growing.
Hollande's
economy minister, Emmanuel Macron, a 38-year-old investment banker
whose place in the government had become increasingly awkward after he
repeatedly criticised left-wing totems such as the 35-hour working week,
resigned last week, clearing the way for an anticipated presidential
bid.
A poll this week showed Macron winning more votes than Hollande in the first round of the election.
Hollande's conservative opponents were quick to hit back at the president after his speech.
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