http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-08-25/france-political-turmoil-after-hollande-unexpectedly-dissolves-governmentEarlier this morning, those expecting an out of control European deflationary tumble got one step closer to their goal when French President Francois Hollande asked his prime minister, who only assumed the post a few short months ago in March, to form a new government, following what Reuters reported was him "looking to impose his will on the cabinet after rebel leftist ministers had called for an economic policy U-turn" spearheaded by economy minister Arnaud Montebourg demanding an end to French "austerity." The Guardian is somewhat more direct and to the point: "France has entered uncharted political waters after the prime minister, Manuel Valls, presented his government's resignation amid a political crisis triggered by his maverick economy minister who called for an end to austerity policies imposed by Germany."
8/26/2014 12:32:21 PM
not reading all of that
8/26/2014 1:12:54 PM
Yea I saw this on CNN. In fine print. About 4 of 5 lines down from the main headline. I guess CNN doesn't consider dissolution of a major European player a big deal.
8/26/2014 1:50:39 PM
Hollande deserves whatever he gets. He campaigned on turning away from austerity but hasn't followed through at all. I give this Montebourg cat credit. As finance minister he thinks he knows how to help France , and probably thought Hollande was on board (as his campaign rhetoric indicated) until he wasn't. Rather than toe the party line he criticized what he thought was wrong (albeit in a slightly underhanded way). Takes some spine IMO.[Edited on August 26, 2014 at 2:00 PM. Reason : Lol at zerohedge being worried about a deflationary tumble, something I never thought I'd see]
8/26/2014 1:50:45 PM
8/26/2014 5:47:01 PM
Heh, agreed on a politician being disingenuous, but this seems a little above and beyond. The primary way Hollande distinguished himself was his anti-austerity views, it was almost the entirety of his platform, at least that's how it was reported in the US (I really don't follow EU politics that closely).After a little reading this afternoon, I've got to reduce some of my credit for Montebourg too. It seems that a large part of his outspokenness is due to his ambitions for the French Presidency.The austerity situation is the ECB (which has done some, but not nearly enough) and a few other countries demanding budget cuts in order to finance France and the other EU states that are having trouble. You're correct that raising taxes in a country like France could possibly do more harm than good in this situation with already high tax rates. But there are still some things a president can do, primarily by growing a spine and advocating for your country instead of just lapdogging for Merkel. First close loopholes on tax avoidance as much as possible (although I agree this won't solve their problems). Every ECB meeting the president needs to be there screaming at the bankers, throwing IMF white papers in their and Merkel's face, just constantly make them defend their actions. Threaten to leave the EU when necessary, and have your Government begin making preparations to do so. As a last resort just spend the money you don't have and ask for financing after the fact.Yes I realize those last two items could totally backfire and sink France, the EU, or likely both. But it seems as though that will happen regardless. Is it better to go down guns blazing or just slowly limping along , shackled to a bunch of other zombie countries, headed toward a deflationary spiral?
8/26/2014 7:39:54 PM
Weird. I've never seen overhyped news on Zero Hedge before.
8/26/2014 8:04:50 PM
^ Granted. But there's other news sources as well, the financial problems are very well known, even Hollande's own party hates him and he has 3 years left in office, and the government that was just dissolved did just last 5 months.^^ France threatening to leave the EU would be a bit like Virginia threatening to leave the U.S.Re the lapdogging to Merkel, true. But you actually have to change Merkel's point of view and Germany are the ones with the money in this situation and are the power. Ultimately it'll come down to the ECB and everyone is expecting them to do Fed-style QE, which is going to be a respite for a bit but won't fix the underlying problems.Hollande went from "typical politician that slimes his way up the leadership" to "really, this guy was put in charge?" when I found out him and Segolene Royal were partners (as in married but they never got the piece of paper on purpose, and they had multiple children together). Royal was the Socialist Party's candidate for president in the preceding election (has the political incest here hit you yet?). Hollande had his own political ambitions for the French presidency though as well as a mistress that was a journalist for a major French newspaper. This mistress ripped Royal to shreds in that election every chance she got while hyping Hollande to the moon. The American equivalent of this would be say Hillary ran for president in 1988, Monica Lewinsky was a top-notch national journalist on CNN that attacked Hillary every chance she got, Hillary lost, it comes out Lewinsky and Bill Clinton were sleeping with one another, and Bill goes on to win the election in '92.[Edited on August 26, 2014 at 9:26 PM. Reason : /]
8/26/2014 9:17:08 PM
Damn, didn't know that about hollande. It's hard to think of a more French origin story than that.Germany has all the power but they have to realize: they are gonna have to take some lumps if they want the EU to survive, the fate of their economy is closely linked to their neighbors and it's starting to falter anyways
8/27/2014 7:46:54 AM
8/27/2014 8:44:10 AM
8/27/2014 10:20:03 AM
but does he play golf
8/27/2014 10:49:21 AM
^^it makes lying about hiking the App trail or texting cock pics seem pretty tame. Crazy
8/27/2014 7:19:55 PM
Got to give credit to the French, when their senior politicians do sexual scandal, they do it in style. We seem pretty crude or amateurish in comparison.
8/28/2014 10:22:13 AM