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Friday, May 29, 2015

Sarkozy Renames Opposition as "Republicans" ( Republicains) BBC

Sarkozy renames French opposition The Republicans

  • 51 minutes ago
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  • From the sectionEurope
A file photo taken on November 28, 2004 shows former French President Nicolas Sarkozy, leader of the opposition Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), addressing a party congress in Le Bourget, outside Paris
More than 80% of UMP members backed the name change on Friday
Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy has changed his party's name from Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) to The Republicans.
Members of France's main opposition party voted to support the rebranding on Friday, with 83% of members approving the move.
The move has sparked widespread debate in France, with critics arguing that all French people are Republicans.
Mr Sarkozy is widely expected to try for the presidency again in 2016.
According to one opinion poll, almost 70% of the public - and 40% of UMP supporters - said that no political party had the right to use the Republican label.
In an editorial in Le Monde (in French), a group of three writers and politicians said: "For Nicolas Sarkozy to name his party in such a way that pretends to represent all Republicans, as though there is no-one else apart from him, is insulting and irresponsible."
Left-wing sympathisers had challenged the plan in court, arguing that - thanks to the French Revolution - every citizen of France is a Republican, not just those who vote for Mr Sarkozy, the BBC's Lucy Williamson in Paris reports.
However, the court rejected their call for a ban.
A handout photo released on May 29, 2015 by the UMP press service shows the new party logo after former French President Nicolas Sarkozy announced that the opposition party would from now on be known as "The Republicans"
The UMP's new logo
Mr Sarkozy says that the rebranding was a "rallying call to all who are distressed to see the Republic decline day after day and who want to stop this decline".
The former French president is expected to try for the presidency again in 2017, having lost to Francois Hollande in 2012.

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