Is It Time For a
Sixth Republic?
There is a whiff of fin
de régime hovering over France these days. The usual excitement of a
presidential election campaign has given way to boredom and contempt. In a
recent poll, Le Monde has shown that nearly 60% of the French say they
have little interest in the presidential elections of 2007 and pollsters are
predicting possibly the lowest voter turnout in the 44-year history of the
Fifth Republic.
The current constitution made for and
by Charles de Gaulle in 1958, is based on a strong, popularly elected
President. As long as he is backed by a legislative majority, the President
remains clearly in charge and the Prime Minister serves at his pleasure. That
is how things worked until 1986, when the right swept mid-term legislative
elections and confronted Socialist President François Mitterrand with a
so-called cohabitation — a bizarre two-headed arrangement whereby a President
of one party shared power with a Prime Minister from an opposing party.
Contrary to many predictions, cohabitation did not destroy the republic.
It was awkward and sometimes embarrassing because France became the only major
country in the world to send two chief executives to international summits, but
the system more or less worked. Some French voters even came to see it as a
healthy form of checks-and-balances that prevented one camp from wielding too
much power. The experiment has been repeated twice more, from 1993 to 1995, and
from 1997 to 2002. But the politicians, and the bulk of public opinion, now
view cohabitation as an unstable, paralyzing arrangement. "The French
don't really like cohabitation," says Guy Carcassonne, a constitutional
expert. "They have never consciously chosen it." In an attempt to
make it less likely in the future, a bipartisan reform in 2000 reduced the
presidential term from seven to five years, the same as the National Assembly,
and synchronized the voting dates. The theory was that voters would not be so
perverse as to elect a new President and, one month later, a parliamentary
majority to his opponents. But nothing guarantees that it could happen again.
Then things could one day get dangerous. Lets imagine… Unlike previous
cohabitations, in which a sitting President was sanctioned by a mid-term vote,
a split vote represent a conscious choice in favour of divided government. Both
the President and the Parliament could claim, for instance, equal legitimacy.
The President could dissolve the assembly and call new elections. But if his
forces lost again, he would face strong pressure to resign. The result could be
institutional gridlock. "If unity of power is not quickly restored,"
says constitutionalist Olivier Duhamel, "it could be the end of the Fifth
Republic."
What then? There has been talk for years of changing France's anomalous
two-headed system. That debate has intensified during the latest five-year
cohabitation marked by bitter skirmishes between Jospin and Chirac. Some
observers call for an American-style presidential system. Others, including a
pressure group called the Convention for the Sixth Republic, want to eliminate
the presidency and embrace a European-style parliamentary system. Such talk may
be premature. French voters could well make coherent choices in the upcoming
contests, rendering the idea of constitutional change less urgent. But a major
crisis over power sharing seems inevitable. And when it comes, France will have
little choice but to return to the drawing board and reinvent its fundamental
law. With 15 constitutions since 1791, few countries in the world can boast so
much experience in that domain.