20 November 2014, The Tablet

Sarkozy pledge on same-sex marriage


Former President Nicolas Sarkozy has caused an uproar in his conservative UMP party by saying he would repeal France’s same-sex marriage law if elected again in 2017, writes Tom Heneghan.

Mr Sarkozy announced his plan at a UMP rally as he campaigned for the post of party president, the first step in his comeback after his defeat in 2012. The decision came under pressure from party members opposed to same-sex marriage. A candidate speaking before him was booed when he said he would not repeal the law.

The law would be “rewritten from top to bottom”, Mr Sarkozy told the rally. As anti-gay marriage activists demanded a pledge to repeal it he finally uttered the word “abrogate” that they wanted.

Two other leading contenders, former allies Alain Juppé and François Fillon, criticised him for the announcement, saying the party could not afford to roll back what a majority voted for.

The governing Socialists  accused Mr Sarkozy of opportunism, but some leading UMP figures backed him. The anti-gay marriage movement, strongly supported by the Catholic Church when it took to the streets to oppose the law, now makes up a sizeable minority within France’s main conservative party.


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