
          
          Chaques Chirac Hospitalized 
          Media and politicians start Chirac obituaries
            By Craig S. Smith The New York Times
          
          TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2005
          
            PARIS President Jacques Chirac is in the hospital recovering from 
            what doctors describe as a minor condition affecting his sight, but 
            the French are already writing his political epitaph.
            
            Though he has two years left in his current term and has left open 
            the possibility that he might run again, the news media, political 
            opponents and even his most loyal allies are acting as if he is already 
            gone.
            
            "Strictly speaking, nothing has happened," read an editorial 
            in the conservative daily Le Figaro. "But everyone feels somehow 
            that something has tipped over."
            
            The president, 72, was rushed to the hospital late Saturday after 
            suffering a severe headache and blurred vision. Though his office 
            played down the seriousness of the incident, he is expected to remain 
            in the hospital all week.
            
            His absence has not alarmed the French people, for many of whom Chirac 
            has been a has-been since he suffered a resounding defeat in his campaign 
            to ratify Europe's draft constitution in a national referendum in 
            May.
            
            It has, however, excited the media, which have filled the nation's 
            newspapers with pitiless analysis of Chirac's political impotence 
            and speculation of what lies beyond his presidency.
            
            "Now people say he's not only unpopular but he's aging, he's 
            irrelevant," said Pascal Perrineau, director of the Study Center 
            of French Political Life. "It reinforces all of the questions 
            in France about Chirac's leadership."
            
            The business daily Les Echos said a third term for the president, 
            already questioned before he entered the hospital, "became even 
            more improbable this weekend."
            
            The hospitalization came as Chirac's party, the Union for a Popular 
            Movement, met in the Atlantic resort of La Baule for its annual end-of-summer 
            convention.
            
            The two leading contenders for Chirac's job, Prime Minister Dominique 
            de Villepin and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, leaped into the 
            breach, competing for air time and newspaper ink in an effort to appear 
            presidential.
            
            Villepin, Chirac's protégé, cast himself as a man of 
            "change in continuity," while Sarkozy, Chirac's nemesis, 
            called for a "rupture with the past." The leftist daily 
            Libération ran a front page cartoon of the two men as vultures 
            on the railing of Chirac's sickbed.
            
            The event has been particularly invigorating for Villepin, a former 
            foreign and interior minister who has never run for elected office. 
            He had been constrained from openly campaigning for the presidency 
            by Chirac's own ambiguity about whether he would run for a third term.
            
            That had left the field open for the nakedly ambitious Sarkozy. But 
            no longer. With cameras rolling Sunday, Villepin went for a run on 
            the beach and swam in the chilly Atlantic while Sarkozy watched from 
            a terrace.
            
            "Until Saturday evening, Dominique de Villepin had the status 
            of prime minister," said a commentator on a French television 
            station, LCI. "Since Sunday morning, he is in the role of heir."
            
            Villepin's popularity has grown since he took the job of prime minister 
            in a government shakeup that followed the rejection of the European 
            constitution.
            
            He will preside in Chirac's place over the Ministers Council on Wednesday, 
            the first time Chirac will have missed the meeting in his ten years 
            as president.
            
            Sarkozy, whom Le Monde regularly depicts on its front page as a famous 
            French cartoon character whose comic ambition to become "Caliph 
            in the place of the Caliph," has worked aggressively to position 
            himself as the party's presidential candidate in 2007.
            
            Chirac forced Sarkozy out of the government last year, when Sarkozy 
            took over leadership of the party, but asked him back to help rescue 
            the government during the crisis touched off by failure of the constitutional 
            referendum.
            
            Chirac was deeply wounded by the referendum, which was largely seen 
            as a plebiscite on his administration. His popularity has subsequently 
            fallen below that of any recent French president: 26 percent, according 
            to a recent poll.
            
            He has long preferred to leave the running of the country to the prime 
            minister and his cabinet, focusing instead on foreign policy. But 
            even in that arena Chirac has been relatively inactive after limping 
            home from a disastrous EU summit meeting in June.
            
            He had been scheduled to meet Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in 
            Rheinsberg, Germany, on Tuesday, and was to have met Prince Albert 
            II of Monaco in Paris on Friday to mark the prince's first official 
            visit to France.
            
            Chirac's hospital stay is the first major health incident of his career 
            and although he is known for robust health, he has never released 
            his medical records despite past promises to do so. The French media 
            have traditionally avoided writing about the personal lives of its 
            politicians, including their health.
            
            Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said Monday that Chirac was 
            "very well" and insisted that the government was hiding 
            nothing about the president's condition.
            
            But government coverups of presidential ailments in the past have 
            made the public wary of official reassurances. President François 
            Mitterand suffered for years from prostate and bone cancer without 
            revealing it to the public despite releasing regular reports about 
            his health.
            
            Before him, President Georges Pompidou hid his battle with cancer 
            and died while in office in 1974.
            
            Under the French Constitution, if Chirac were to die in office, Christian 
            Poncelet, president of the Senate, would take his place until presidential 
            elections could be held.
            
            
            PARIS President Jacques Chirac is in the hospital recovering from 
            what doctors describe as a minor condition affecting his sight, but 
            the French are already writing his political epitaph.
            
            Though he has two years left in his current term and has left open 
            the possibility that he might run again, the news media, political 
            opponents and even his most loyal allies are acting as if he is already 
            gone.
            
            "Strictly speaking, nothing has happened," read an editorial 
            in the conservative daily Le Figaro. "But everyone feels somehow 
            that something has tipped over."
            
            The president, 72, was rushed to the hospital late Saturday after 
            suffering a severe headache and blurred vision. Though his office 
            played down the seriousness of the incident, he is expected to remain 
            in the hospital all week.
            
            His absence has not alarmed the French people, for many of whom Chirac 
            has been a has-been since he suffered a resounding defeat in his campaign 
            to ratify Europe's draft constitution in a national referendum in 
            May.
            
            It has, however, excited the media, which have filled the nation's 
            newspapers with pitiless analysis of Chirac's political impotence 
            and speculation of what lies beyond his presidency.
            
            "Now people say he's not only unpopular but he's aging, he's 
            irrelevant," said Pascal Perrineau, director of the Study Center 
            of French Political Life. "It reinforces all of the questions 
            in France about Chirac's leadership."
            
            The business daily Les Echos said a third term for the president, 
            already questioned before he entered the hospital, "became even 
            more improbable this weekend."
            
            The hospitalization came as Chirac's party, the Union for a Popular 
            Movement, met in the Atlantic resort of La Baule for its annual end-of-summer 
            convention.
            
            The two leading contenders for Chirac's job, Prime Minister Dominique 
            de Villepin and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, leaped into the 
            breach, competing for air time and newspaper ink in an effort to appear 
            presidential.
            
            Villepin, Chirac's protégé, cast himself as a man of 
            "change in continuity," while Sarkozy, Chirac's nemesis, 
            called for a "rupture with the past." The leftist daily 
            Libération ran a front page cartoon of the two men as vultures 
            on the railing of Chirac's sickbed.
            
            The event has been particularly invigorating for Villepin, a former 
            foreign and interior minister who has never run for elected office. 
            He had been constrained from openly campaigning for the presidency 
            by Chirac's own ambiguity about whether he would run for a third term.
            
            That had left the field open for the nakedly ambitious Sarkozy. But 
            no longer. With cameras rolling Sunday, Villepin went for a run on 
            the beach and swam in the chilly Atlantic while Sarkozy watched from 
            a terrace.
            
            "Until Saturday evening, Dominique de Villepin had the status 
            of prime minister," said a commentator on a French television 
            station, LCI. "Since Sunday morning, he is in the role of heir."
            
            Villepin's popularity has grown since he took the job of prime minister 
            in a government shakeup that followed the rejection of the European 
            constitution.
            
            He will preside in Chirac's place over the Ministers Council on Wednesday, 
            the first time Chirac will have missed the meeting in his ten years 
            as president.
            
            Sarkozy, whom Le Monde regularly depicts on its front page as a famous 
            French cartoon character whose comic ambition to become "Caliph 
            in the place of the Caliph," has worked aggressively to position 
            himself as the party's presidential candidate in 2007.
            
            Chirac forced Sarkozy out of the government last year, when Sarkozy 
            took over leadership of the party, but asked him back to help rescue 
            the government during the crisis touched off by failure of the constitutional 
            referendum.
            
            Chirac was deeply wounded by the referendum, which was largely seen 
            as a plebiscite on his administration. His popularity has subsequently 
            fallen below that of any recent French president: 26 percent, according 
            to a recent poll.
            
            He has long preferred to leave the running of the country to the prime 
            minister and his cabinet, focusing instead on foreign policy. But 
            even in that arena Chirac has been relatively inactive after limping 
            home from a disastrous EU summit meeting in June.
            
            He had been scheduled to meet Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in 
            Rheinsberg, Germany, on Tuesday, and was to have met Prince Albert 
            II of Monaco in Paris on Friday to mark the prince's first official 
            visit to France.
            
            Chirac's hospital stay is the first major health incident of his career 
            and although he is known for robust health, he has never released 
            his medical records despite past promises to do so. The French media 
            have traditionally avoided writing about the personal lives of its 
            politicians, including their health.
            
            Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said Monday that Chirac was 
            "very well" and insisted that the government was hiding 
            nothing about the president's condition.
            
            But government coverups of presidential ailments in the past have 
            made the public wary of official reassurances. President François 
            Mitterand suffered for years from prostate and bone cancer without 
            revealing it to the public despite releasing regular reports about 
            his health.
            
            Before him, President Georges Pompidou hid his battle with cancer 
            and died while in office in 1974.
            
            Under the French Constitution, if Chirac were to die in office, Christian 
            Poncelet, president of the Senate, would take his place until presidential 
            elections could be held.
            
            
            PARIS President Jacques Chirac is in the hospital recovering from 
            what doctors describe as a minor condition affecting his sight, but 
            the French are already writing his political epitaph.
            
            Though he has two years left in his current term and has left open 
            the possibility that he might run again, the news media, political 
            opponents and even his most loyal allies are acting as if he is already 
            gone.
            
            "Strictly speaking, nothing has happened," read an editorial 
            in the conservative daily Le Figaro. "But everyone feels somehow 
            that something has tipped over."
            
            The president, 72, was rushed to the hospital late Saturday after 
            suffering a severe headache and blurred vision. Though his office 
            played down the seriousness of the incident, he is expected to remain 
            in the hospital all week.
            
            His absence has not alarmed the French people, for many of whom Chirac 
            has been a has-been since he suffered a resounding defeat in his campaign 
            to ratify Europe's draft constitution in a national referendum in 
            May.
            
            It has, however, excited the media, which have filled the nation's 
            newspapers with pitiless analysis of Chirac's political impotence 
            and speculation of what lies beyond his presidency.
            
            "Now people say he's not only unpopular but he's aging, he's 
            irrelevant," said Pascal Perrineau, director of the Study Center 
            of French Political Life. "It reinforces all of the questions 
            in France about Chirac's leadership."
            
            The business daily Les Echos said a third term for the president, 
            already questioned before he entered the hospital, "became even 
            more improbable this weekend."
            
            The hospitalization came as Chirac's party, the Union for a Popular 
            Movement, met in the Atlantic resort of La Baule for its annual end-of-summer 
            convention.
            
            The two leading contenders for Chirac's job, Prime Minister Dominique 
            de Villepin and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, leaped into the 
            breach, competing for air time and newspaper ink in an effort to appear 
            presidential.
            
            Villepin, Chirac's protégé, cast himself as a man of 
            "change in continuity," while Sarkozy, Chirac's nemesis, 
            called for a "rupture with the past." The leftist daily 
            Libération ran a front page cartoon of the two men as vultures 
            on the railing of Chirac's sickbed.
            
            The event has been particularly invigorating for Villepin, a former 
            foreign and interior minister who has never run for elected office. 
            He had been constrained from openly campaigning for the presidency 
            by Chirac's own ambiguity about whether he would run for a third term.
            
            That had left the field open for the nakedly ambitious Sarkozy. But 
            no longer. With cameras rolling Sunday, Villepin went for a run on 
            the beach and swam in the chilly Atlantic while Sarkozy watched from 
            a terrace.
            
            "Until Saturday evening, Dominique de Villepin had the status 
            of prime minister," said a commentator on a French television 
            station, LCI. "Since Sunday morning, he is in the role of heir."
            
            Villepin's popularity has grown since he took the job of prime minister 
            in a government shakeup that followed the rejection of the European 
            constitution.
            
            He will preside in Chirac's place over the Ministers Council on Wednesday, 
            the first time Chirac will have missed the meeting in his ten years 
            as president.
            
            Sarkozy, whom Le Monde regularly depicts on its front page as a famous 
            French cartoon character whose comic ambition to become "Caliph 
            in the place of the Caliph," has worked aggressively to position 
            himself as the party's presidential candidate in 2007.
            
            Chirac forced Sarkozy out of the government last year, when Sarkozy 
            took over leadership of the party, but asked him back to help rescue 
            the government during the crisis touched off by failure of the constitutional 
            referendum.
            
            Chirac was deeply wounded by the referendum, which was largely seen 
            as a plebiscite on his administration. His popularity has subsequently 
            fallen below that of any recent French president: 26 percent, according 
            to a recent poll.
            
            He has long preferred to leave the running of the country to the prime 
            minister and his cabinet, focusing instead on foreign policy. But 
            even in that arena Chirac has been relatively inactive after limping 
            home from a disastrous EU summit meeting in June.
            
            He had been scheduled to meet Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in 
            Rheinsberg, Germany, on Tuesday, and was to have met Prince Albert 
            II of Monaco in Paris on Friday to mark the prince's first official 
            visit to France.
            
            Chirac's hospital stay is the first major health incident of his career 
            and although he is known for robust health, he has never released 
            his medical records despite past promises to do so. The French media 
            have traditionally avoided writing about the personal lives of its 
            politicians, including their health.
            
            Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said Monday that Chirac was 
            "very well" and insisted that the government was hiding 
            nothing about the president's condition.
            
            But government coverups of presidential ailments in the past have 
            made the public wary of official reassurances. President François 
            Mitterand suffered for years from prostate and bone cancer without 
            revealing it to the public despite releasing regular reports about 
            his health.
            
            Before him, President Georges Pompidou hid his battle with cancer 
            and died while in office in 1974.
            
            Under the French Constitution, if Chirac were to die in office, Christian 
            Poncelet, president of the Senate, would take his place until presidential 
            elections could be held.
            
            
            PARIS President Jacques Chirac is in the hospital recovering from 
            what doctors describe as a minor condition affecting his sight, but 
            the French are already writing his political epitaph.
            
            Though he has two years left in his current term and has left open 
            the possibility that he might run again, the news media, political 
            opponents and even his most loyal allies are acting as if he is already 
            gone.
            
            "Strictly speaking, nothing has happened," read an editorial 
            in the conservative daily Le Figaro. "But everyone feels somehow 
            that something has tipped over."
            
            The president, 72, was rushed to the hospital late Saturday after 
            suffering a severe headache and blurred vision. Though his office 
            played down the seriousness of the incident, he is expected to remain 
            in the hospital all week.
            
            His absence has not alarmed the French people, for many of whom Chirac 
            has been a has-been since he suffered a resounding defeat in his campaign 
            to ratify Europe's draft constitution in a national referendum in 
            May.
            
            It has, however, excited the media, which have filled the nation's 
            newspapers with pitiless analysis of Chirac's political impotence 
            and speculation of what lies beyond his presidency.
            
            "Now people say he's not only unpopular but he's aging, he's 
            irrelevant," said Pascal Perrineau, director of the Study Center 
            of French Political Life. "It reinforces all of the questions 
            in France about Chirac's leadership."
            
            The business daily Les Echos said a third term for the president, 
            already questioned before he entered the hospital, "became even 
            more improbable this weekend."
            
            The hospitalization came as Chirac's party, the Union for a Popular 
            Movement, met in the Atlantic resort of La Baule for its annual end-of-summer 
            convention.
            
            The two leading contenders for Chirac's job, Prime Minister Dominique 
            de Villepin and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, leaped into the 
            breach, competing for air time and newspaper ink in an effort to appear 
            presidential.
            
            Villepin, Chirac's protégé, cast himself as a man of 
            "change in continuity," while Sarkozy, Chirac's nemesis, 
            called for a "rupture with the past." The leftist daily 
            Libération ran a front page cartoon of the two men as vultures 
            on the railing of Chirac's sickbed.
            
            The event has been particularly invigorating for Villepin, a former 
            foreign and interior minister who has never run for elected office. 
            He had been constrained from openly campaigning for the presidency 
            by Chirac's own ambiguity about whether he would run for a third term.
            
            That had left the field open for the nakedly ambitious Sarkozy. But 
            no longer. With cameras rolling Sunday, Villepin went for a run on 
            the beach and swam in the chilly Atlantic while Sarkozy watched from 
            a terrace.
            
            "Until Saturday evening, Dominique de Villepin had the status 
            of prime minister," said a commentator on a French television 
            station, LCI. "Since Sunday morning, he is in the role of heir."