Gerard Depardieu Is Latest Refugee From French Millionaire Tax, Escapes To Belgium

Gerard Depardieu Is Latest Refugee From French Millionaire Tax; Escapes To Belgium (ZeroHedge, Dec 10, 2012):

Three months ago many were angry and surprised (or not at all, as realistically this was a perfectly logical move), when Bernard Arnault, head of LVMH and the richest man in socialist France, decided he had had enough, and would move to Belgium to avoid Hollande’s punitive taxes on France’s wealthiest. The indignant media’s mocking response in France was fast and furious, with many delighted to see the billionaire leave. We wonder how the media will respond as more and more wealthy Frenchmen decide, now that the seal has been broken, to do just that and leave France to its grassroots movement where it is only “fair” that those who have more income and/or wealth, pay more than everyone else to keep the myth of the ponzi scheme formerly known as the welfare state alive and well. Such as one of France’s most popular actors, Gerard Depardieu, who is the latest high profile departure to leave his native country and go to Belgium to avoid the second coming of the “fairness doctrine” (the first one of course, doing less than spectacularly with that whole USSR thing).

From The Independent:

Gerard Depardieu is to leave his French homeland for Belgium in order to pay less tax.

The actor is the latest high profile figure to leave France after a series of wealth tax hikes by President Francois Hollande.

Read moreGerard Depardieu Is Latest Refugee From French Millionaire Tax, Escapes To Belgium

France: The Time-Bomb At The Heart Of Europe (Economist)

France and the euro – The time-bomb at the heart of Europe (Economist, Nov 17, 2012):

Why France could become the biggest danger to Europe’s single currency

THE threat of the euro’s collapse has abated for the moment, but putting the single currency right will involve years of pain. The pressure for reform and budget cuts is fiercest in Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy, which all saw mass strikes and clashes with police this week (see article). But ahead looms a bigger problem that could dwarf any of these: France.

The country has always been at the heart of the euro, as of the European Union. President François Mitterrand argued for the single currency because he hoped to bolster French influence in an EU that would otherwise fall under the sway of a unified Germany. France has gained from the euro: it is borrowing at record low rates and has avoided the troubles of the Mediterranean. Yet even before May, when François Hollande became the country’s first Socialist president since Mitterrand, France had ceded leadership in the euro crisis to Germany. And now its economy looks increasingly vulnerable as well.

Read moreFrance: The Time-Bomb At The Heart Of Europe (Economist)

The French Great Socialist Revolution Will Be Homework-Free, And Very, Very Cold

The French Great Socialist Revolution Will Be Homework-Free, And Very, Very Cold (ZeroHedge, Oct 19, 2012):

Whereas some may have welcomed the latest development in the Great French Socialist Revolution chronicles, primarily those 8-16 year olds who would directly benefit from president Francois Hollande’s attempt to capture the vote of those still ineligible to actually vote, by promising to do away with homework (because it encourages “inequality” as homework apparently “favors the wealthy”), everyone else saw right through it for the sad attempt at populism it was. Luckily, the impact of this idiotic policy, if it were to actually pass, would not be visible for at least a decade at which point French society would be so dumb (not to mention poor) that few would actually care. However, another proposal being currently contemplated in France may have far more immediate terminal consequences to the life expectancies of those personally experiencing the reincarnation of wholesale of socialism. Because as Bloomberg notes, “Heating a French home could soon require an income tax consultation or even a visit to the doctor under legislation to force conservation in the nation’s $46 billion household energy market.” Congratulations Europe: in your ongoing crusade of wealth redistribution (when all this could have been averted if you, and the US, had simply allowed the banks who control your society to collapse), you are about to make heating one’s home a privilege for the despised Bourgeoisie, an act which must be monetarily punished, and socially ostracized.More on this sad and pathetic at the same time development, coming to broke socialist countries near you:

Read moreThe French Great Socialist Revolution Will Be Homework-Free, And Very, Very Cold

To Promote The Great European Socialist Revolution, France’s Hollande Will Ban Homework

To Promote The Great European Socialist Revolution, France’s Hollande Will Ban Homework (ZeroHedge, Oct 18, 2012):

Homework favors the wealthy. This is the position that the increasingly imbecilic President of France is taking in proposing a ban on homework as part of a series of educational reforms. As ABC reports, Hollande sees “education as a priority” but work should be done during school hours rather than at home “in order to establish equal opportunities.” But before the children of France rejoice, Hollande is unlikely to garner their future votes, as his proposal also looks to extend the French school week to nine half-days a week to be spread over four, five, or six days (as opposed to the current four days a week with Wednesdays off). Though we may sneer at this oh-so-socialist ideal of ‘sharing’ the homework load into the school-day, it is perhaps noteworthy that the US still lags France in Math (US 31st in the world vs France 22nd).

Read moreTo Promote The Great European Socialist Revolution, France’s Hollande Will Ban Homework

The taxman cometh: Hollande sets France’s ‘toughest budget in 30 years’

The taxman cometh: Hollande sets France’s ‘toughest budget in 30 years’ (RT, Sep 27, 2012):

The French cabinet recently approved its “toughest budget in 30 years.” The budget is a major political test for President Francois Hollande, who is resorting to a 75% tax rate on the rich combined with spending cuts to shore up budget deficits. ­France needs to make an estimated 30 billion euro in savings in its next fiscal year to reach Hollande’s ambitious target of reducing the country’s deficit from 4.5 per cent in 2012 to three per cent by 2013. The three percent figure is the EU’s mandated deficit ceiling for member-states.

French Government Gets Whacked, Even The Left Is Angry, And BILDERBERG Hollande Gets Slapped In The Face

Flashback:

Francois Hollande Is Another Bilderberg Stooge (Video)


The French Government Gets Whacked, Even The Left Is Angry, And Hollande Gets Slapped In The Face (ZeroHedge, Sep 10, 2012):

France is mired in a stagnating economy. The private sector is under pressure, auto manufacturing is heading into a depression. Unemployment hit a 13-year high of 10.2%, leaving over 3 million people out of work. Youth unemployment of 22.7%, bad as it is, belies the catastrophic jobs situation for young people in ghetto-like enclaves, such as the northern suburbs of Paris. The “solution”—fabricating 150,000 jobs for the young at taxpayers’ expense—has been tried before, with little success. Gasoline and diesel prices are hovering near record highs. So there are a lot of very unhappy campers.

In a BVA poll, 55% of the respondents were dissatisfied with President François Hollande’s efforts to tackle the economic crisis. By comparison, only 31% were dissatisfied with Nicolas Sarkozy in 2007 at the end of his honeymoon. Devastatingly, for a socialist: 57% believed that he didn’t distribute the “efforts” equitably—same as Sarkozy, the president of the rich.

The problem with voters is Hollande’s “inaction,” after some initial half-measures, such as the partial reinstatement of retirement at 60 and raising back-to-school aid for families. Now people “seriously doubt his ability to change things.” They believe that the government spends its time trying to “unravel Sarkozy’s legacy” and “sitting around in meetings,” rather than making decisions.

Read moreFrench Government Gets Whacked, Even The Left Is Angry, And BILDERBERG Hollande Gets Slapped In The Face

Bilderberg Hollande Defends 75% Tax Rate To A Disillusioned France

Flashback:

Francois Hollande Is Another Bilderberg Stooge (Video)


Embattled Hollande defends his 75% tax rate to a disillusioned France (Daily Mail, Sep 9, 2012):

Francois Hollande last night tried to justify his plans for multi-billion-pound tax rises to an increasingly disillusioned France.

The Socialist president, whose popularity has slumped, appeared on live television to convince the public his policies could help turn the country’s economy around.

During the 25-minute appearance, he unveiled plans for tax increases of ‘between 15 to 20 billion euros’ (£12billion to £16billion), targeting wealthy households, savings and firms.

The money raised will be used for public services, including thousands of new civil servant jobs.

He confirmed that ‘all earnings over one million euros will be taxed at 75 per cent’, adding: ‘It’s symbolic, it will show an example.’

Read moreBilderberg Hollande Defends 75% Tax Rate To A Disillusioned France

Bernard Arnault, France’s Richest Man, Seeks Belgian Citizenship … The Socialist Counter-Revolution Begins

The Socialist Counter-revolution Begins: France’s Richest Man Seeks Belgian Citizenship (ZeroHedge, Aug 8, 2012):

few months ago when the new French socialist president gave details of his particular version of the “fairness doctrine” and said he would tax millionaires at 75%, we said that “we are rotating our secular long thesis away from Belgian caterers and into tax offshoring advisors, now that nobody in the 1% will pay any taxes ever again.” While there was an element of hyperbole in the above statement, the implication was clear: France’s richest will actively seek tax havens which don’t seek to extract three quarters of their earnings, in the process depriving France (and other countries who adopt comparable surtaxes on the rich) of critical tax revenues. It took three months for this to be confirmed, and with a bang at that. The WSJ reports that Bernard Arnault, the CEO of LVMH, and the richest man in France, has decided to forego hollow Buffetian rhetoric that paying extra tax is one’s sworn duty, and has sought Belgian citizenship.

From the WSJ:

Bernard Arnault, France’s richest man and chairman and chief executive of LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, is seeking Belgian citizenship, a move that comes as President François Hollande prepares to press ahead with a controversial tax on the country’s wealthiest citizens.

Read moreBernard Arnault, France’s Richest Man, Seeks Belgian Citizenship … The Socialist Counter-Revolution Begins

The Unvarnished Truth About Greece

The Unvarnished Truth About Greece (ZeroHedge, Aug 25, 2012):

While Belize is comfortable buggering bondholders, the Greeks (following this morning’s headlines) remain beholden to their euro-zone overlords – having survived a few more months on the back of reach-around ‘bailouts’ and ponzi-financing – all in the effort of providing more time for the ‘rest of Europe’ to figure out how to handle the ‘Athens moment’ that is surely coming. With September and October critical ‘event-rich’ months, Patrick Young, of DV Advisors, provides the clearest and least ‘rose-tinted’ perspective on where Greece has been, where they are now, and where this will all end. From the forged application for euro-zone membership to Oz-like fantasies of growth and austerity targets that remain pipe-dreams (and are constantly being missed), the bold Irishman in this brief clip explains “Greece has not done anything to really help itself, missed every deadline its been given” and the PM’s comments on their ‘spectacular come-back’ clarifies the ‘utter delusion’ among the Greek political class because “Greece is bankrupt; full stop; game over” and Merkel must agree to ‘let’ Greece leave the Euro (post Troika) – as the rise of civil unrest, since whatever new money flows their way exits right out the back door and never ‘helps’ the people, is inevitable. Especially following these mixed headlines (via Bloomberg):

  • *HOLLANDE: PEOPLE SHOULD STOP ASKING IF GREECE WILL STAY IN EURO
  • *HOLLANDE SAYS GREECE HAS TO DEMONSTRATE CREDIBILITY
  • *SAMARAS SAYS GREECE WILL STAY IN THE EURO ZONE
  • Alexander Dobrindt, general secretary of the Christian Social Union, said he sees no way around Greece leaving the euro area, Bild am Sonntag reported, citing an interview.
  • Dobrindt sees Greece out of the euro in 2013
  • Greece should receive EU support when it leaves the currency union and have the option of returning: Dobrindt


YouTube

The European Headlines Are Back: ‘The Euro Crisis May Last 20 Years’

“The Euro Crisis May Last 20 Years” – The European Headlines Are Back (ZeroHedge, Aug 18, 2012):

In Europe, the “no news” vacation for the past month was great news. The news is back… As is Merkel.

  • “The Euro Crisis May Last 20 Years” – Welt

The first five years of the global crisis are over, investors flee from complex financial products and into gold, silver and commodities. Experts warn against a false sense of security. “We should not give us the illusion that the crisis will soon be over,” says Patrick Artus of the French bank Natixis. Years of negative developments such as the growing debt, or the de-industrialization of specific sectors should now be reversed. “Such a process takes time.” Arthur looks to get politically and economically unstable savers years. “Investors have to live with depressed markets and considerable fluctuations learn.” In his view, it must not remain in a lost decade. “The euro crisis may also last 20 years,” says Arthur.

  • German finmin: no new aid programme for Greece – Reuters

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on Saturday that there were limits to the aid that could be granted to Greece and said the crisis-stricken country should not expect to be granted another programme.”It is not responsible to throw money into a bottomless pit,” Schaeuble said at a government open day in Berlin. “We cannot create yet another new programme.”

  • Euro Countries Plan Strategies to Prevent Break-Up: Sueddeutsche (via Bloomberg)

Euro-currency area countries are evaluating a multitude of reform options, Sueddeutsche Zeitung reports, citing unidentified people with knowledge of the plans.

These are to be whittled down into a coherent strategy in the “coming weeks”. If Greece exits, members will boost plans to support other vulnerable countries. Options include increasing aid to Ireland and Portugal. ECB would consider supporting Italy and Spain through bond purchases. Greece’s new start would be supported by EU funding. These questions will be discussed “in the autumn”.

  • Deutsche Bank Among Four Said to Be in U.S. Laundering Probe – Bloomberg

Deutsche Bank AG (DBK) is among four European banks being investigated by U.S. regulators for alleged money-laundering violations, according to an attorney with knowledge of the matter. Federal regulators, including the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, the Federal Reserve, the Justice Department and the New York District Attorney’s office are all involved in the probe of Deutsche Bank and three other European banks, said the attorney, who asked not to be identified because the investigations are confidential.

  • German Industry Group Head says No Place for Greece in Eurozone: WiWo (via Bloomberg)

If Greece doesn’t meet IMF and EU requirements, it must leave the euro, Hans-Peter Keitel, president of Germany’s BDI industry federation, says in an interview with Wirtschaftswoche magazine. Keitel previously said Greece must stay in the euro at all costs: WiWo

Keitel says clear progress is being made in combating the euro crisis. The German federal government is not ambitious enough in its savings program, Keitel says.

  • German Taxpayer Association Head Criticises ESM: Euro am Sonntag (via Bloomberg)

Rainer Holznagel, head of German taxpayer association, says payment of Spanish bank debt would require 3% VAT increase in Germany, Euro am Sonntag reports, citing interview.

ESM reduces the rights of the German parliament and the independence of nation states, Holznagel says: Euro am Sonntag

  • Bundesbank Vice-Head Opposes Schaeuble’s Banking Proposal: WiWo (via Bloomberg)

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble’s proposal to separate traditional banks from their investment banking units isn’t possible, Bundesbank Vice- President Sabine Lautenschlaeger tells Wirtschaftswoche magazine.

Both types of banks would still be dependent on market confidence, Lautenschlaeger says. Lautenschlaeger favors an investigation into the relationship between lenders and those banks which trade in unregulated financial products.

  • Westerwelle Opposes Relaxing Greek Aid Terms: Tagesspiegel

Relaxation of the agreed on terms for Greek assistance would be misunderstood by countries such as Spain, German Foreign Minister and FDP member Guido Westerwelle told Tagesspiegel am Sonntag in interview.

Spanish prime minister would have difficulty passing reforms in parliament if terms were eased for Greece, Westerwelle says. Westerwelle gives his “solidarity” to the people of Greece. Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras to visit Berlin on Friday

And just to prove that Europe’s beggars continue to refuse to get the memo…

  • Spain says there must be no limit set on ECB bond buying – RTRS

The European Central Bank must take forceful and unlimited steps to buy sovereign debt to help Spain reduce its refinancing costs and eliminate doubts over the euro zone’s future, Spain’s economy minister said in comments published on Saturday. “There can be no limit set or at least (the ECB) can’t say how much they will use or for how long,” when it buys bonds in the secondary markets, Luis de Guindos told Spanish news agency EFE.

and:

  • France Favors Greece Rescue Package, Opposing Germany: Welt (via Bloomberg)

France and southern European nations are in favor of a third rescue package for Greece should it prove necessary, Welt reports, without saying where it got the information. Germany rejects a new rescue package. Germany opposes giving Greece more time to enact cost cuts. Preparations underway for Greece possibly leaving the euro. Main consideration is how to protect other euro crisis countries from the fallout.

French Central Bank Admits The Obvious: France Back in Recession

French Central Bank Admits the Obvious: France Back in Recession (Global Economic Analysis, Aug 8, 2012):

For those who who view matters on a practical basis, France has been in recession the entire year. For those who need to see two quarters of negative growth first, France slides back in recession.

France is headed back into recession for the second time in just over three years, the country’s central bank warned on Wednesday.

Read moreFrench Central Bank Admits The Obvious: France Back in Recession

President Francois Hollande Vows To Impose 75 Percent Tax On Income Above €1 Million Per Year (New York Times)

Flashback:

Francois Hollande Is Another Bilderberg Stooge (Video)

French Front-Runner Pledges 75% Tax Bracket (Wall Street Journal):

PARIS—French presidential front-runner François Hollande said taxpayers earning over €1 million ($1.35 million) a year would be subjected to a special 75% tax bracket should he be elected, underscoring heightened interest across Europe in raising taxes on the wealthiest individuals.


Indigestion for ‘les Riches’ in a Plan for Higher Taxes (New York Times, Aug 7, 2012):

PARIS — The call to Vincent Grandil’s Paris law firm began like many others that have rolled in recently. On the line was the well-paid chief executive of one of France’s most profitable companies, and he was feeling nervous.

Some rich citizens have already left. In recent years, the actress and model Laetitia Casta, the chef Alain Ducasse and the singer and actor Johnny Hallyday all moved away to avoid high taxes.

President François Hollande is vowing to impose a 75 percent tax on the portion of anyone’s income above a million euros ($1.24 million) a year. “Should I be preparing to leave the country?” the executive asked Mr. Grandil.

Read morePresident Francois Hollande Vows To Impose 75 Percent Tax On Income Above €1 Million Per Year (New York Times)

Spain’s Not Getting a Bailout… Neither is Italy… It’s the END GAME Folks

Spain’s Not Getting a Bailout… Neither is Italy… It’s the END GAME Folks (ZeroHedge, July 7, 2012):

Spain got a “bailout” or so the media claimed. Because I cannot find any entity in Europe with the funds to actually bailout Spain (the EUFN is tapped out, the ESM has major political issues, and Germany is risking a credit downgrade and insolvency based on its backdoor EU props).

As one would expect in this situation, things are rapidly going into hyper-drive in Spain. The weekend before last the country implemented capital controls including

  • A minimum fine of  €10,000 for taxpayers who do not report their foreign accounts.
  • Secondary fines of  €5,000 for each additional account
  • No cash transactions greater than €2,500
  • Cash transaction restrictions apply to individuals and businesses

Does this sound like the actions of an economy with a sound banking system?

On a related note, Italy is once again back on the brink: in the last 2 weeks Italy’s Prime Minister Mario Monti has said that the country is “flirting with economic disaster… [and] in a crisis.” He, like Spain’s PM Rajoy, has pushed for the ESM to buy sovereign bonds. He’s also asked the ECB to implement a mechanism through which it would buy Italian sovereign bonds whenever the spread between them and German bunds grows too large (a type of bailout).

Indeed, things are so desperate that he invited German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande, and Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to an emergency meeting in Rome over the weekend. His goal was to convince EU leaders to allow Italy to receive funding directly from the EFSF and ESM.

The ECB and Germany have already rebuked this idea:

Read moreSpain’s Not Getting a Bailout… Neither is Italy… It’s the END GAME Folks

French Government Considers Extending TV Licence Fee To Computer Screens

France may extend TV licence fee to computer screens (Guardian, July 1, 2012):

Culture minister says government is considering making those who own a computer screen but no television pay up

The French government is considering extending the television licence fee to include computer screen owners to boost revenues for public-sector broadcasting operations, the culture minister said on Saturday.

President François Hollande’s Socialist government aims to raise an extra €7.5bn (£6bn) this year through tax rises included in an amended budget bill to be unveiled next week.

Read moreFrench Government Considers Extending TV Licence Fee To Computer Screens

Bilderberg Hollande Goes The ‘Full Obama’ As The Second Great October Socialist Revolution Takes Place In June

See also:

Francois Hollande Is Another Bilderberg Stooge (Video)


Hollande Goes The “Full Obama” As The Second Great October Socialist Revolution Takes Place In June (ZeroHedge, June 22, 2012):

With every passing day, we learn that those pesky socialists in charge of the “Evil Empire” were right all along:

  • HOLLANDE SAYS THOSE WHO BENEFITTED MOST IN PAST 5 YRS WILL PAY
  • HOLLANDE CALLS ON `PATRIOTIC’ FROM WHO EARNED MOST TO CONTRIBUTE

In other words, Obama’s “Fairness Doctrine” has just gone airborne. And judging by history is very contagious. Only this time the “other people’s money” has run out as the ECB’s announcement of condom wrappers as collateral, showed us this morning.

Italy’s PM Mario Monti: We Have A Week To Save The Eurozone

International Advisor Of Goldman Sachs, Chairman Of The European Branch Of The Trilateral Commission And Bilderberg Member Mario Monti:

We have a week to save the eurozone

“The Italian leader is to hold talks with Bilderberg Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, the Bilderberg French president, François Hollande, and Spain’s prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, in the hope that the single currency’s big four countries can pave the way for a breakthrough at next week’s meeting.

Problem, reaction, solution … coming your way.


Italian prime minister warns that there is no room for failure in talks between single currency’s big four countries


Italian prime minister Mario Monti has spoken of the potentially disastrous consequences of the collapse of the eurozone. Photograph: Edgard Garrido/Reuters

Mario Monti: we have a week to save the eurozone (Guardian, June 22, 2012):

Italy’s prime minister, Mario Monti, has warned of the apocalyptic consequences of failure at next week’s summit of EU leaders, outlining a potential death spiral that could threaten the political and economic future of Europe.

The Italian leader is to hold talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, the French president, François Hollande, and Spain’s prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, in the hope that the single currency’s big four countries can pave the way for a breakthrough at next week’s meeting.

Speaking to the Guardian and a group of leading European newspapers, Monti said that, without a successful outcome at the summit, “there would be progressively greater speculative attacks on individual countries, with harassment of the weaker countries”. The attacks would be focused not only on those who had failed to respect EU guidelines, but also on those like Italy, which he said had abided by the rules “but which carry with them from the past a high debt”.

Monti warned: “A large part of Europe would find itself having to continue to put up with very high interest rates that would then impact on the states and also indirectly on firms. This is the direct opposite of what is needed for economic growth.”

Read moreItaly’s PM Mario Monti: We Have A Week To Save The Eurozone

Bilderberg Merkel Prepares To Strike Back Against Bilderberg Hollande

Related info:

Bilderberg Power Masters Meet In The US (The Last Time They Met In The US Was In 2008 – And The World Got Obama)

Francois Hollande Is Another Bilderberg Stooge (Video)


Merkel Prepares to Strike Back Against Hollande (Spiegel, May 26, 2012):

France’s new president, François Hollande, has put the German chancellor on the defensive with his growth agenda. Now Angela Merkel is planning to strike back. She is calling for structural reforms to save the euro with a six-point plan aimed at harmonizing austerity and growth in Europe once again.

The more European leaders talked at a dinner last Wednesday, the grimmer Angela Merkel looked. One after another, they spoke out in favor of the joint assumption of debt and against the strict austerity course Berlin is calling for. The chancellor stared silently at the man who was responsible for this change of mood — France’s new president, François Hollande, who noted with satisfaction that there was “an outlook for euro bonds in Europe.”

Read moreBilderberg Merkel Prepares To Strike Back Against Bilderberg Hollande

Francois Hollande Is Another Bilderberg Stooge (Video)


Change!


YouTube Added: 07.05.2012

Description:

The mass media is promulgating the notion that the election of Socialist French President Francois Hollande represents some kind of massive sea change and is a direct challenge to the European Union, and yet Hollande’s past and the people he surrounds himself with confirms the fact that he is merely another committed globalist and an enthusiastic supporter of the dictatorial EU’s sovereignty-stripping ethos.

“In the whole of Europe it’s time for change,” Hollande told cheering crowds who gathered to hear his victory speech in Paris early Monday,” reports the L.A. Times.

Read moreFrancois Hollande Is Another Bilderberg Stooge (Video)

Eurozone Crisis: Bilderberg Angela Merkel Tells Bilderberg Lucas Papademos And Bilderberg Francois Hollande To Stick To Spending Limits

Change!


Efforts to save the euro under threat after EU leaders’ strategies collide with the wishes of voters in Greece and France


German chancellor Angela Merkel has insisted Athens must comply with the stringent terms of its €130bn (£100bn) bailout. Photograph: Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters

Eurozone crisis: Merkel tells Athens and Paris to stick to spending limits (Guardian, May 7, 2012):

Europe’s 30-month effort to save the euro by slashing spending and debt levels risks turning into a crisis of political legitimacy after EU leaders’ strategies collided spectacularly with the wishes of voters in Greece and France.

The impasse was most graphically demonstrated when Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, insisted Athens must comply with the stringent terms of its €130bn (£100bn) bailout even though more than 60% of the Greek electorate had voted for parties rejecting those terms.

Following a French election campaign in which she strongly backed the loser, Nicolas Sarkozy, and snubbed the president-elect, François Hollande, Merkel stressed her opposition to Hollande’s central campaign pledge: reopening the euro’s new rulebook, or fiscal pact.

“That’s just not on,” she told a Berlin press conference called to address the huge shift from right to left in France.

Read moreEurozone Crisis: Bilderberg Angela Merkel Tells Bilderberg Lucas Papademos And Bilderberg Francois Hollande To Stick To Spending Limits