Najat Vallaud-Belkacem – the new face of France & Minister for women’s rights

Najat Vallaud-Belkacem

Najat Vallaud-Belkacem (Photo: Wikipedia)

News for 22 June 2012 has been taken from The Guardian.

Under the chandeliers of a historic mansion on Paris’s left bank, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem closes the double-doors to her gilded office to lessen the sound of power-drills. Workmen are turning the building into a new ministry headquarters. In the corridors, talk is of the election results: after Socialist François Hollande‘s presidential win, his party secured an absolute majority in parliament. The left now has the biggest concentration of power in recent French history: both houses of parliament, most regions and big cities. Now it faces the massive task of trying to drag France, and Europe, out of dire economic crisis, resisting the one-size-fits-all austerity mantra, while promising to mend France’s social, class and race divide. “We musn’t disappoint,” says Vallaud-Belkacem.

The 34-year-old is known as the “face” of the new French government. She is both minister of women’s rights – a post resurrected after decades of absence – and government spokesperson, handpicked to embody Hollande’s reforms and firefight on the media frontline. In a country still shellshocked by a divisive election campaign, marked by the rise of the far right and its anti-immigration discourse borrowed by Nicolas Sarkozy, Vallaud-Belkacem’s appointment is symbolic. It is also part of a much-demanded reshaping of government. France’s new cabinet, with 50% women, is doing far better than the European average of 26% women, and in particular the UK, which has five women out of 23 cabinet members. In addition, 20% of the new French cabinet are from ethnic minorities (seven ministers out of 34), compared with just one minister in Cameron’s cabinet: Lady Warsi.

Born in rural Morocco, Vallaud-Belkacem arrived in France, aged four, with her mother to join her father, a construction worker. The second of seven children, she grew up on a poor estate on the outskirts of the northern town of Amiens in the Somme. Her parents, as foreigners, didn’t have the right to vote, and the family didn’t talk politics, except to tut when the far-right Jean-Marie Le Pen appeared on television. Vallaud-Belkacem “flourished” at school, as she puts it, swayed as much by Voltaire’s Zadig as the Berber songs of her parents. She got French nationality at 18. With scholarships, she studied at France’s Institute of Political Science and worked as a jurist. But when in 2002, Le Pen shocked France by getting through to the final round of the presidential election, knocking out the Socialists, she felt she had to go into politics. Elected councillor in Lyon and rising up the ranks of Lyon’s town hall and the Socialist party, she found herself on a plane in 2006 with Ségolène Royal, then running to be France’s first woman president. She offered to help Royal, who made her her spokesperson. This year, Hollande gave her the same post in his own presidential campaign.

She was shocked when, after she was appointed to government, the right and far right attacked her as a threat because of her double French and Moroccan nationality. “For 10 years I’ve been totally engaged in serving the public good. I feel totally French – I don’t feel half-French because of my dual nationality. For me, dual nationality just means I don’t deny my roots,” she says.

Now her desk is piled high with the latest tricky dossiers on equality rights. When Hollande appointed equal numbers of men and women to the French government for the first time, and then gave Vallaud-Belkacem prominence as women’s rights minister, the stakes were high. Feminist groups in France are increasingly vocal, clear that they won’t put up with persistent inequality on pay, family issues or sexual harassment. Since the 2011 arrest in New York of the one-time Socialist presidential hopeful Dominique Strauss-Kahn on criminal charges of alleged attempted rape against a hotel housekeeper, which were later dropped, there has been a public outpouring over sexism and harassment issues in France. Strauss-Kahn, who denies the allegations, still faces a civil suit in New York and and is under investigation for alleged complicity in pimping in a prostitution-ring inquiry in Lille. Non-stop media coverage has opened the debate on sexism and macho culture, and it won’t go back in its box.

Vallaud-Belkacem says she was often “observed like something from another planet” in her 10-year political career. She has never been sure whether that was down to her age (at 34 and in government, she is still 20 years younger than the average French MP), gender or foreign roots. In a book this year, Raison de Plus, she described hosting an election campaign dinner at home in Lyon. She opened the door and took a guest’s coat to find him looking around for Madame Vallaud-Belkacem, shocked that it was her. “Still today in our society a young woman with dark skin who opens the door in a bourgeois area must be a domestic,” she wrote.

She has fought to dodge the ethnic diversity pigeonhole in politics. “When I started out, it was rare to see elected representatives with foreign roots. Often I was relegated to my origins, put in the diversity box: ‘You’re the new face of diversity.’ That annoyed me, because I always felt French, and suddenly I was being made to feel I wan’t as French as others.” Aware of the argument that someone like her would “do well” in elections in “towerblock constintuencies”, she deliberately always fought for election in right-wing areas, worked on topics not linked to ethnicity, such as gay rights and bio-ethics. She now feels she has undone that label. “I’m no longer reduced to it. I’m seen as a politician in my own right, without having to qualify that I’m from France’s [ethnic] diversity.”

But hanging over her head is the persistent comparison with Rachida Dati, the one-time justice minister, whom Sarkozy made his own symbol of ethnic diversity. A magistrate and daughter of Moroccan and Algerian immigrants, Dati was the first woman of North African origin appointed to government, dominating the celebrity magazines, before she very publicly fell from favour and grace. “There’s no comparison,” says Vallaud-Belkacem. A ferocious critic of Sarkozy, she concedes that his appointment of three women of foreign origin was important, “but at the same time it was hugely lacking, because he didn’t go out and find elected representatives with foreign roots who had earned their legitimacy on the ground, in grassroots politics: he found those close to him, or people who he made and later undid. That is the trap François Hollande hasn’t fallen into.”

Once described by French Elle as a “smiling and tireless bulldozer”, Vallaud-Belkacem’s first challenge as women’s minister is to rush through a new sexual harassment law. Last month, women’s groups took to the streets after France’s constitutional council scrapped existing legislation when a deputy mayor who had been convicted of harassing three employees complained the law was too vague. Ongoing cases were immediately thrown out of the courts, leaving what she called a “dangerous void”.

“We’re creating a criminal law which will cover a maximum of possible situations,” she said. Based on the European directive, all types of sexual harassment will be taken into account, inside and outside the workplace: from jokes, insinuation and gestures to leaving a pornographic magazine on someone’s desk. A victim will no longer have to prove that a harasser was trying to secure a sexual encounter. When there are clear demands for sex, such as someone demanding sex at a job interview or for a housing contract – examples of which have dominated recent French media coverage of the issue – a single incident can be enough to go to trial.

There has been a lot of soul-searching about the extent of sexual harassment in France. Vallaud-Belkacem says she doesn’t feel it’s a particularly French issue, or worse in France than elsewhere. She glances at a Europe-wide study from 1999, in which 40% of women in the EU said they had experienced it at least once. “This shows a certain similarity of behaviour across Europe,” she says. “But the fact the French law stayed so imprecise for so long, despite a strong mobilisation by women’s associations, is proof the powers that be didn’t sufficiently take it in hand. So we have to fight to end the feeling of impunity that persists in our country on this issue.”

When the Strauss-Kahn story broke, the media reported a kind of break in the omerta on sexual violence and sexism in general. Women politicians spoke out about sexism, some complaining they no longer felt comfortable wearing a skirt in parliament. Other cases were reported, including against the then right-wing UMP minister and mayor Georges Tron, now under investigation for alleged rape and sexual assault against staff, which he denies.

Does Vallaud-Belkacem think women’s issues have been marked by a “before and after DSK” moment? She says the growing feminist awareness dates back to before the New York arrest, but has been boosted by several events. “First in 2009, when Sarkozy cut funds to family planning, abortion clinics began closing, making life difficult for women who wanted an abortion – some had to go abroad. People began realising things they had taken for granted were not as straight forward as they thought, and there were demonstrations and a petition of 150,000 signatures. Then in 2010, Sarkozy’s pension reform left women 40% worse off than men, and women took to the streets again. Then the DSK case allowed greater visibility and discussion of behaviours French society rightly judged unacceptable.”

All this heaps pressure on Vallaud-Belkacem and Hollande to deliver their promises on equal rights. She will be able to vet all new laws in terms of women’s rights and gender equality. “Everything will be looked at through the prism of gender equality. If we see an imbalance, we will readjust it,” she said.

She is planning a major conference of experts on prostitution in France and Europe. “Since the 19th century and the role of Josephine Butler [the Victorian feminist], Britain and France have been the core countries in the international mobilisation against prostitution. I really hope that these common roots are still alive.” She hopes to meet Theresa May to open discussions on “how we tackle women’s issues together, such as prostitution and human-trafficking”.

On France’s persistent male-female pay gap, the first step will be to enforce the existing law, which is often ignored. France has set quotas on women’s presence in boardrooms at 20% by 2012 and 40% by 2017. Many big companies have already nudged over the 20% objective, proof that the law can “spur companies on”. But she thinks the solution is not just quotas at the top, but training and opportunities at the bottom, where women are often forced into part-time work and limited in career progress.

France is often viewed by its European neighbours as a beacon for childcare provision for young babies. “Compared to some of our neighbours, it’s not frowned upon to be a mother and work in France,” she said, explaining why France has Europe’s highest birth rate after Ireland. She says there’s still huge work to be done, and wants to end the taboo around paternity leave.

But in French politics, the personal is becoming the political, and Vallaud-Belkacem is conscious of the example she sets as a working mother. Married to a civil servant who has just been appointed to another ministry, she has three-year-old twins. With an election campaign and setting up a new ministry, her working hours have been nudging 7am to 11.30pm seven days a week.

“I’m aware that beyond my own need to find a personal balance, I should be sending a signal to society as women’s minister about the importance of work-life balance.” But how? “It’s difficult,” she says, jumping up for the next meeting, but resolved to carve out time.

François Hollande delivers diversity and equality as first cabinet revealed.

Français : Francois Hollande - Mardis de l'ESSEC

Français : Francois Hollande – Mardis de l’ESSEC (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

News for May 16th taken from The Guardian.

François Hollande, France’s first left-wing president in nearly 20 years, has unveiled a government which for the first time features an equal number of women and men, and includes figures who reflect the country’s ethnic diversity.

Unlike the cabinet of Nicolas Sarkozy, who taunted the opposition by opening it up to different political backgrounds, Hollande’s cabinet is dominated by his allies on the left. It immediately faces the daunting task of redressing the issues of a highly indebted country, hit by crisis and economically on its knees.

Of 34 posts in government, 17 are for women. They include Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, 34, a local councillor in Lyon, who has been appointed minister for women’s rights, a position long missing from the French government. The former presidential campaign spokesperson is also likely to dominate the media, as she is now the government spokeswoman.

Vallaud-Belkacem was born in Morocco and came to France to join her immigrant father. She studied law and politics before joining the Socialist party, in part in reaction to the success of the far-right Jean-Marie Le Pen in the 2002 presidential elections. She has already been criticised by the French right for retaining joint Moroccan and French nationality.

Her appointment is a sign of the emergence of a new generation. Other ministers aged under 40 include Aurélie Filippetti, a former ecologist, novelist and MP in Lorraine, who was appointed culture minister. The Green party leader Cécilie Duflot becomes minister for housing.

Another significant appointment is Christiane Taubira, justice minister‚ an MP from French Guyana, and author on slavery. Marisol Touraine was made minister for health and social affairs, and the senator Nicole Bricq took ecology. George Pau-Langevin, who for years was the only black MP from mainland France in parliament took a junior education ministry.

Jean-Marc Ayrault, a veteran social democrat and German expert, was appointed prime minister on Tuesday. The sharing out of government posts is the clearest indication of Hollande’s priorities and way of working, with the public sector featuring prominently, and a “productivity” ministry to boost France’s declining industry.

Traditionally French governments start with a sugared pill, for example Sarkozy’s initial tax-breaks, but this time the pill will be bitter from the start as Hollande attempts to rein in the public deficit despite low growth predictions and high unemployment. The first cabinet meeting on Thursday will cut the president’s and minister’s salaries by 30%

The government was announced late, apparently after last-minute deals in a party that has long been dominated by back-stabbing and internal sparring, despite Hollande seemingly keeping a lid on ego-battles during the campaign.

The Socialists’ leader, Martine Aubry, on the left of the party, was notably absent from government after refusing to take a consolation prize post when she was not nominated prime minister. But in a sign that Hollande wanted to keep some of his former enemies close, the job of foreign minister went to Laurent Fabius, a former prime minister, who opposed the European constitution in 2005.

Pierre Moscovici, Hollande’s campaign director, a fluent English speaker and former minister for European affairs takes the crucial finance ministry job.

Manuel Valls, Catalan-born and seen as an ambitious rising star of the younger generation, on the right of the Socialist party, will take the interior ministry, which served as Nicolas Sarkozy’s launch pad for his presidential ambitions. Viewed as tough on law and order, he is an MP and mayor in a mixed Paris suburb, interested in diversity and the housing estates. When he competed for the Socialist presidential ticket last autumn he visited London to look at how the Tottenham riots had been handled.

France is in a kind of political limbo until the parliamentary elections on June 10 and June 17. Hollande needs a leftwing majority in parliament if he is to put his programme into action. But there is a question mark over whether the Socialist party would have an absolute majority or need support from the Communists or the Greens to pass legislation. The government might have to be slightly reshuffled after the parliamentary elections, depending on how well the left fares and whether it needs to bring in coalition partners.

French election: François Hollande vows to rid politics of sexism

News for 4 May 2012 has been taken from The Guardian.

François Hollande during Ségolène Royal and Jo...

François Hollande (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

He has promised an equal number of men and women in cabinet, and to reintroduce a ministry of women’s rights. But will François Hollande be the president who finally took on the pervasive sexism in French politics, if as polls predict he wins Sunday’s presidential election?

The Socialist frontrunner, who was on Friday leading by at least five points in the final opinion polls of an increasingly vitriolic campaign, is under pressure to prove he will shake up his image of a middle-aged man surrounded by middle-aged men. Voting in the first round showed women favoured the incumbent, Nicolas Sarkozy, over the man bidding to become the first Socialist to win a presidential election since 1988.

Hollande has sought to portray himself as a feminist, and recently won the backing of a petition of more than 150 feminists. He has said he will reintroduce a ministry of women’s rights and has promised an equal number of women and men in government if he wins. This would be historic. It was something Sarkozy promised in 2007, but never achieved, despite the media spotlight on figures such as the justice minister Rachida Dati.

Sarkozy retorted this week that it is not the number of women in government that matters but their seniority. “I appointed the first woman finance minister in France,” he said of Christine Lagarde, now head of the International Monetary Fund. It is a charge Hollande is vulnerable to. In March, he told women at his campaign headquarters: “It would be good in principle to have as many men as women in a government.” He then added: “That is not to say the responsibilities would be the same.”

Marie-Jo Zimmermann, an MP for Sarkozy’s UMP party, and head of the women’s rights delegation in parliament, described the comments as “scandalous”, warning women could not simply be relegated to junior cabinet posts.

Several women in Hollande’s team are being tipped for key positions. Martine Aubry, the first woman leader of the Socialist party and a former minister for employment and solidarity, had been touted as a possible prime minister but is now seen as more likely to take a ministry. France has only had one woman PM, the Socialist Edith Cresson, who served for less than a year.

New faces, who were children when the last Socialist president, François Mitterrand came to power, include Aurélie Filippetti, a former ecologist and MP in Lorraine, who heads the culture team in Hollande’s campaign, and Delphine Batho, an MP in western France, both of whom could take posts. Fleur Pellerin, a state auditor, who was born in South Korea, is Hollande’s adviser on digital issues and is seen as an important diversity figure, as is Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, one of Hollande’s spokeswomen, who hopes to run for parliament in Lyon in June.

Ségolène Royal, Hollande’s ex-partner, who was defeated by Sarkozy in 2007, has had an increasing presence in the campaign and is tipped as a possible head of parliament, the first time the post would have gone to a woman.

Hollande has also promised to clamp down on equal pay for men and women, and vowed to enforce the law on political parties fielding equal numbers of men and women in parliamentary elections. Women MPs make up 18.5% of the French parliament, compared with 21% in the UK, 33% in Germany and 46% in Sweden.

Despite two men facing each other in Sunday’s runoff, the campaign has not been devoid of the kind of creeping sexism that France had hoped to put behind it. Sarkozy raised feminist hackles this week when he observed “a woman’s life is more difficult than a man’s because she has three lives: a mother’s life, a working life, and a sentimental life” – as if men had no need to juggle the same responsibilities.

One MP in Sarkozy’s ruling rightwing party called Hollande’s partner, Valerie Trierweiler, a rottweiler, before adding that was “unfair to the dog” and commenting on the comparative ugliness of former women ministers in Sarkozy’s government. Trierweiler was furious when her employer, the magazine Paris Match, put her on its cover under the headline “Hollande’s charming asset”. The Green candidate Eva Joly complained she had been the victim of ageism, sexism and xenophobia, calling herself the “Menopausal Norwegian woman”. Sarkozy, when attacked over his bling habits at the start of his presidency, blamed his ex-wife.

Women’s groups have been pleased to find equality issues on Hollande’s agenda but will be holding him to account. He has now promised one of his first priorities will be to pass a law on sexual harassment.