Home About Chat Users Issues Party Candidates Polling Firms Media News Polls Calendar Key Races United States President Senate House Governors International

New User Account
"A collaborative political resource." 
Email: Password:

  Jospin, Lionel
  CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationSocialist   
NameLionel Jospin
Address
Haute-Garonne, Midi-Pyrénées , France
EmailNone
Website[Link]
Born July 12, 1937
Died Still Living (87 years)
Contributor411 Name Removed
Last ModifedLa Fayette
Mar 02, 2012 06:33am
Tags Caucasian - French - Divorced - Married - Christian - Protestant - Straight -
InfoLionel Jospin is a French statesman.

Lionel Jospin was educated at the École nationale d'administration.

Entering the French Socialist Party in 1971, he became the leader of the party when François Mitterrand was elected president in 1981, then minister of education between 1988 and 1992.

Member of the National Assembly, first as a representative of Paris (1978-86), then of Haute-Garonne (1986-88), he was defeated in 1993.

In 1995, he lost the presidential election against Jacques Chirac, but became Prime Minister in 1997 when Chirac called an early election for the National Assembly — and his party lost.

Despite his previous image as a rigid socialist, he went on selling state participations, lowered the VAT rate, income tax and company tax.

His government also introduced the 35-hour week, provided additional health insurance for the poorest, promoted the representation of women in politics, and created the PACS (a civil partnership or union between two people, whether of opposite genders or not). During his term, with the help of a favorable economic situation, unemployment fell by 900,000.

Jospin was a candidate in the presidential campaign of 2002. While he appeared to have momentum in the early stages, the campaign came to be focused mainly on law-and-order issues, in which, it was argued, the government had not achieved convincing results; this coincided with a strong focus of the media on a number of egregious crime cases. The prime minister was also strongly criticized by the far left for his moderate economic policies, which, they contended, was not sensibly different from that of a right-wing government favoring businesspeople and free markets. Many left-wing candidates contested the election, gaining small percentages of the vote in the first ballot, chipping away at Jospin's support. As a result, Jospin narrowly polled in third place, behind Front National leader Jean-Marie Le Pen, and thus did not go through to the run-off second round of voting. The story of the campaign is told in the documentary Comme un coup de tonnerre.

Following his defeat in April 2002, he declared his decision to leave politics. He has since made episodic comments on current political affairs; for instance, he declared his opposition to same-sex marriage.

During his school years in the 1960s, Jospin joined the Internationalist Communist Organization, a secretive group dedicated to an unreconstructed Trotskyist program of overthrowing France's parliamentary democracy for the "dictatorship of the proletariat". He remained active in it during the 1970s while also serving as a trusted member of the Socialist Party.

Jospin concealed this relationship, and specifically denied it when asked about it later. In 2001, investigative journalists and successive revelations by former Communist associates showed him to have been lying, and he confessed the truth. Having lied hurt him politically more than having been in a cell of the revolutionary left, but the political damage was not severe or long-lasting in France — various other left-wing or right-wing politicians having had stints with radical groups in their youth, then later denying them or blaming them on youthful indiscretion (Alain Madelin for instance).

[Link]

JOB APPROVAL POLLS
DateFirmApproveDisapproveDon't Know

BOOKS
Title Purchase Contributor

NEWS
Date Category Headline Article Contributor
Jun 12, 2005 12:00am Poll French Seem Ready for Jospin’s Comeback  Article Ralphie 
Jan 25, 2005 12:00am Poll Not Much Support For Jospin In France  Article 411 Name Removed 
Jun 27, 2001 12:00am Scandal Lionel Jospin and Trotskyism: the debate over the French prime minister’s past  Article 411 Name Removed 

DISCUSSION
INFORMATION LINKS
RACES
  04/21/2002 French President Lost 16.18% (-3.70%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Nord First Round Lost 16.81% (-2.62%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Haute Saône First Round Lost 13.42% (-8.89%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Pas-de-Calais First Round Lost 17.47% (-0.94%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Corse du Sud First Round Lost 15.00% (-12.65%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Seine-Maritime First Round Lost 16.78% (-2.29%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Haute Corse Lost 15.70% (-11.80%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Eure First Round Lost 13.91% (-5.67%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Territoire de Belfort First Round Lost 9.91% (-12.55%)
  04/21/2002 French President Lost 11.17% (-12.21%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Jura First Round Lost 13.45% (-4.83%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Dordogne Lost 17.43% (-4.22%)
  04/21/2002 French President - Doubs First Round Lost 14.58% (-4.45%)
  04/21/2002 French President - First Round - Limousin - Corrèze Lost 16.44% (-17.79%)
  04/21/2002 French President - First Round - Languedoc Roussillon - Gard Lost 13.84% (-11.01%)
  06/03/1997 French Prime Minister Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  06/01/1997 French National Assembly - Haute-Garonne - 7th Circonscription Won 63.38% (+26.75%)
  05/07/1995 French President Lost 47.36% (-5.28%)
  04/23/1995 French President Won 23.30% (+2.46%)
  02/05/1995 FRA President - PS Primary Won 65.85% (+31.70%)
  03/18/1990 French PS Secretary General Won 28.95% (+0.10%)
  05/12/1988 French Education Minister Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  10/13/1985 French PS Secretary General Won 71.49% (+42.99%)
  10/30/1983 French PS Secretary General Won 77.20% (+59.09%)
  10/25/1981 French PS Secretary General Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  06/21/1981 French National Assembly - Paris 27th - 2nd Round Won 54.64% (+9.29%)
  06/14/1981 French National Assembly - Paris 27th - 1st Round Won 39.61% (+0.57%)
  01/24/1981 French PS Secretary General Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  03/19/1978 French National Assembly - Paris 26th - 2nd Round Lost 44.38% (-11.23%)
  03/12/1978 French National Assembly - Paris 26th - 1st Round Won 20.98% (+0.00%)
ENDORSEMENTS
French President - Runoff - Apr 24, 2022 RE Emmanuel Macron
ÃŽle-de-France Regional President - Runoff - Jun 27, 2021 EELV Julien Bayou
French Socialist Party - First Secretary - Initial Election - Nov 06, 2008 PS Bertrand Delanoë
French PS Secretary General - Nov 23, 1997 PS François Hollande
Get Firefox!