“Mr Hollande. When you lie so shamelessly, do I have to accept it?” he asked
when his opponent said the president was always happy with his record.
“It’s a lie. It’s a lie. It’s a lie,” Mr Sarkozy said.
“I’ll take that as a complement coming from you,” Mr Hollande shot back.
“The example I want to follow is Germany and not Spain or Greece,” the
President said, declaring that he and German Chancellor Angela Merkel had
saved Greece and the euro.
“Europe has got over it,” Mr Sarkozy said of the crisis .
Mr Hollande replied: “Europe has not got over it. Europe is today facing a
possible resurgence of the crisis with generalised austerity, and that’s
what I don’t want.”
He accused Mr Sarkozy of failing to stand up to Germany, saying: “You didn’t
compromise, you failed to hold your own”, promising if elected to “re-orient
Europe towards growth”.
Mr Sarkozy sounded convincing when he said: “I haven’t heard you speak of a
single saving, not one, notably with 60,000 new posts in education. He said
his rival’s “spending madness” would be the ruin of France.
But Mr Hollande responded that he would make savings, the difference being: “I
protect the children of the Republic, you protect the most privileged.”
“You want less rich people, I want less poor people,” said Mr Sarkozy.
Mr Hollande hit straight back: “With you, there are more poor people and the
rich have got richer.”
In a sign of desperation and sensing he was losing the fight, Mr Sarkozy said:
“I have no lessons to learn from a party that wanted to rally behind
Dominique Strauss-Kahn,” the disgraced former IMF leader.
The stakes were high for Mr Sarkozy as defeat in the second round runoff on
Sunday would make him the first president since Valery Giscard d’Estaing in
1981 to fail in a bid for re-election.
“Sarkozy needs to swing 1.5 million people to his side. It won’t be easy, but
that doesn’t mean it’s impossible,” said Bernard Sananes, head of the CSA
polling institute.
Every detail had been meticulously planned, right down to the temperature of
the TV studio – between 19 and 20 degrees. Each rival his own air
conditioning system and a height-adjustable chair.
Twenty TV cameras scrutinised the contenders’ every move as they sat eight
feet apart across a table, with rivals agreeing that there should be no
cutaways of one candidate listening while the other speaks.
Presidential debates can be game changers but only in a close race. The best
put-down to date was in 1988 when Jacques Chirac, then Mr Mitterrand’s prime
minister, told his rival: “Tonight you are not the President and I’m not the
Prime Minister. We are two equal candidates…You will thus allow me to call
you Mr Mitterrand.”
“But you are totally right, Mr Prime Minister,” came Mitterrand’s withering
reply.
Mr Sarkozy hazarded one line, saying: “Being president is not a normal, your
normality is not up to the task.” But Mr Hollande looked confident enough
to take up the job.
The two candidates are due to hold final mass rallies – Mr Hollande in the
Socialist bastion of Toulouse, and Mr Sarkozy in Right-leaning Toulon.
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