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http://www.freakingnews.com/pictures/29000/King--29031.jpg
He's sure treated like one
The new royal family
http://www.nysun.com/pics/54705_main_large.jpg

2007-12-03 14:07:38 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Royalty

"note that this is just a humor/satire"

2007-12-03 14:15:43 · update #1

3 answers

It seems, France is going through troublesome months. Since his election in May, Nicolas Sarkozy has earned a reputation of being omnipresent (Super Sarko otherwise also know as Zorro Sarko). He visited the prisoners of the Arche de Zoë in Chad, he spoke to rioting fisherpeople in the Bretagne, he attended the funeral of two firemen who got killed in an accident. There’s no event, where you cannot expect Sarkozy to turn up. At the same time he doesn’t want to be seen as president whose only duty is to represent the state. His cabinet ministers are sidelined and the Prime Minister was caught talking off camera about his displeasure that he, a personal friend of Sarko, has nothing to say. That changed briefly during Sarkozy’s visit to China, but as soon as he touched ground back home again, he went straight to Villiers-le-Bel, were the latest suburban riots started. The question is: Will his presence calm or upset the rioters? As interior minister in 2005 Sarkozy fuelled the uprising with his remarks.

Sarkozy tries to control everything. That includes his own political friends. Instead of letting the government do its job, he keeps a “kitchen” cabinet separate from the official cabinet making the ministers in charge look like puppets, when they are allowed to accompany their master to one of his frequent trips to a country hot-spot.

With the ever rising ego of Sarkozy the day can’t be far that he will be proclaimed Emperor Nicolas 1er.

A real Monarchy would not face this dilemma. That’s why the number of Royalists is on the rise in France. Before Sarkozy’s election the Royalists got 20 percent of the population behind their ideas. Sarkozy’s Bonapartism will make people realize that there’s something wrong with Bonapartism as well as with republicanism. Vive le roi!

2007-12-03 15:27:00 · answer #1 · answered by MelbRoyalist 3 · 0 2

No. He is the président of the Republic of France. He will be the most important président since Charles DeGualle.

2007-12-03 22:12:00 · answer #2 · answered by Mark 7 · 2 0

no he's just the president of france

2007-12-04 13:57:49 · answer #3 · answered by demoskratos6991 2 · 0 0

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