2014
DOI: 10.1080/09639489.2014.957960
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Mister Unpopular: François Hollande and the Exercise of Presidential Leadership, 2012–14

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Cited by 11 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…From 2012, the Socialist Party held the Presidency (under François Hollande), Parliament, Senate, and majority of regions (Kuhn, 2014). Leftist parties had gained power following waves of street protestsagainst austerity, unemployment, inequality, pro-business responses to the Great Recession, and Sarkozy's coziness with the wealthy elite (Béroud and Yon, 2012: 170;Hewlett, 2012;Lux, 2015).…”
Section: Centre-left Governmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From 2012, the Socialist Party held the Presidency (under François Hollande), Parliament, Senate, and majority of regions (Kuhn, 2014). Leftist parties had gained power following waves of street protestsagainst austerity, unemployment, inequality, pro-business responses to the Great Recession, and Sarkozy's coziness with the wealthy elite (Béroud and Yon, 2012: 170;Hewlett, 2012;Lux, 2015).…”
Section: Centre-left Governmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This was the only option for avoiding extra fiscal measures that would cause further domestic political turmoil following the unprecedented disaster of the 2014 midterm regional elections (Kuhn 2014). Central to this strategy-as mentioned in the letter to the Commission in November-was the ongoing plan of Emmanuel Macron, Minister of the Economy since August 2014, to shake up the labour market.…”
Section: The Reformed Eurozone and Post-democracymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The political context of the March 2015 departmental elections, however, was set not just by these spectacular recent gains for the FN, with its anti-immigration, anti-European Union, anti-establishment platform (Shields, 2014). The elections were held close to the midpoint of the most unpopular French presidency on record (Kuhn, 2014), with President Hollande's campaign promises of an end to austerity, a revitalized economy and a reversal of unemployment translating into public spending cuts, economic stagnation, relentlessly high joblessness (10.3%) and public debt exceeding 97% of GDP. 2 The spectacle in national politics was of a Socialist government split over its own economic recovery programme facing a UMP riven by leadership rivalries and divided over the best strategy to adopt against the FN.…”
Section: Electoral and Political Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%