(screenshot BFMTV report) |
His statement suggested he wanted a "clean" government; one beyond reproach and whose ministers would set a moral example to the rest of the country.
Hey, once the government had been named, Hollande even made them all sign a charter of ethics or code of conduct which, although it didn't explicity make reference to past "misdemeanours", stressed the importance of transparency and "good behaviour".
Among the pledges each minister made were that there would be no conflict of interests, no accepting private presents or invitations that could be called into question, the respect of collective responsibility for decisions taken by the government, to give up any other local or regional political offices they might hold.
And on the more "normal" level they were obliged to travel by train rather than 'plane whenever possible and ensure that they respected the rules of the road when driving or being driven.
Wonderful stuff, isn't it?
But back to that initial undertaking - the one to be surrounded by those with an unblemished past - legally speaking.
How's he doing?
Well for starters there's the prime minister Jean-Marc Ayrault who, back in 1997 when he was mayor of Nantes was handed down "a suspended prison sentence for favouritism in the allocation of a city hall contract".
Then there's the foreign minister Laurent Fabius who was tried but acquitted of manslaughter in 1999 in the tainted blood scandal which took place when he was prime minister in the 1980s.
Let's not forget Christine Taubira, the newly-installed justice minister who back in 2004 was found guilty by an industrial tribunal in an unfair dismissal case brought against her by a former parliamentary assistant.
And bringing us bang up to date of course is the case of Arnaud Montebourg the minister of industrial renewal who has been found guilty this week of publicly insulting the management of the ferry company SeaFrance last year.
All right, they can all be "explained" - they have - and justification made to show that in each case the minister has been "legally rehabilitated" (what?) or the case brought against them didn't have an impact on their "personal integrity".
But - phew.
Barely two weeks into a new government.
What the heck was that campaign pledge all about?
Hot air, it would seem.
And the charter of ethics? Well let's see just how many exceptions are made to that as the days, weeks, months, years roll by.
Gouvernement Hollande : polémique autour des... par BFMTV
1 comment:
Well we can't all be as saintly as Mother Theresa. I myself have been caught speeding in my 2CV on the tiny roads of Dordogne, and with I must confess, a little too much alcohol in my blood streams, courtesy of my friend's Felicity's G&T habits. So I say, a little indulgence for this new government, and let's distinguish between small and large sins!
Deirdre
Post a Comment