This September 30, Nicolas Sarkozy was the guest of Sonia Mabrouk, in The Great Interviewon CNEWS and Europe1. Among the subjects discussed, there was obviously the despicable murder of Philippine, a nineteen-year-old whose only mistake was to cross paths with a rapist under OQTF – an OQTF who, like tens of thousands of others , was obviously never applied.
Nicolas Sarkozy, who was once described as excited, now appears wise. A kind of noble father, like Nestor in the Iliada center of calm and stability. We would almost laugh about it. Perfectly comfortable in his new role (a role that he has played, let us do him justice, for several years), the former President of the Republic began by stating the sad truth: “It’s not inevitable, this little girl should never have come across this individual”. And to drive the point home by speaking of the purely rhetorical obligation to leave the territory: “It is a triple administrative, political and judicial error”. Indeed, we couldn’t say it better. Administrative and judicial error, certainly, therefore joint failure of the regulations and the human intervention of the judge, who, despite a proven risk of recurrence, took the decision to release the murderer. As for the political error, if it is indeed proven, perhaps Nicolas Sarkozy is not in the best position to talk about it…
The former President, who won with Buisson and governed with Kouchner
We remember the theatrical effects he skillfully performed to ensure his election in 2007, in a France which already wanted more order. He had promised to ” rid “ the France of its “scum”to pass the suburbs “Karcher®”. Seventeen years later, lawless zones subject to drug trafficking proliferate, illegal entries number in the hundreds of thousands and, under his very mandate, he had precipitously retreated by establishing an open government, that is to say a left-wing government.
“Immigration is a problem”said the former president, for whom “the migration crisis has only just begun” : it’s Jean-Marie Le Pen in the text or we don’t know it. These are the words that the founder of the National Front made forty years ago, words for which he was called a Nazi, words against which Sarkozy himself spoke out when he confronted him in debate in 2005.
What a waste of time! What hypocrisy! A hypocrisy of a completely different nature than that which Nicolas Sarkozy still criticizes against Sonia Mabrouk, when he criticizes the left and its anti-racist hysteria. Because the left has not draped itself in the trappings of firmness to leave the borders wide open. She did not move forward in disguise…unlike the former president, never short of serious declarations, never late to forget them when he is in charge. Basically, the indecency is not only that of the demonstrators who disrupted the minute of silence observed by a few elected officials in tribute to Philippine. She is also on the side of those who promised so much and delivered so little. At the forefront of which we find Sarkozy, former top cop of France, former President, who won with Buisson and governed with Kouchner. A bit easy to play conservative ideologues from deep in retirement.
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