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Alliot-Marie was the last President of the Rally for the Republic (1999–2002), an incarnation of the Gaullist party, and was the first woman to chair a major French political party. She has remained a leading Gaullist after the RPR merged into the UMP and was seen as a rival to Nicolas Sarkozy before and after his election as president in 2007, although direct confrontation was always avoided.
Alliot-Marie is a law and political science scholar. Her companion is Patrick Ollier, Minister in charge of Relations with Parliament in the Fillon II government; both were ministers simultaneously for a few months in 2010–2011, the first time a couple ever sat in a French government.
She also holds a Certificat d'aptitude à la profession d'avocat (English: "Certificate of Aptitude for Practicing Law"), also known as a CAPA; a certificate in African laws and economics; and a master's degree in ethnology. Before her career in politics, she was a senior lecturer at the Paris-I University (Panthéon-Sorbonne), and also spent some time practicing law. She is also a recipient of the Faculty of Law and Economics.[12]
University, private sector, and early political career
During her university studies, Alliot-Marie (then still known as Michèle Marie) began having a relationship with her then-law professor Michel Alliot [fr], who was also chief of staff to then-Education Minister (1968-1969) Edgar Faure. Marie and Alliot married in 1971, thus gaining her frequent access to academic and corporate environments; this also led to a name change from Michèle Marie to her name since then, Michèle Alliot-Marie.
Alliot-Marie started her electoral career in 1983 as Municipal Councillor for the Basque-area village of Ciboure (in the former province of Labourd and now in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department), located south of her father's political base of Biarritz, near Saint-Jean-de-Luz; she stayed on until 1988. In 1989, she was elected to another council, this time in Biarritz, alongside her father. In 1990, as part of the municipal majority behind the first Deputy Mayor Didier Borotra of the UDF-CDS, she passed draft legislation in opposition to build a hotel-casino on the front of the main beach of the town,[8] which caused a collapse of the council. Early municipal elections in 1991 were won by Didier Borotra, who united the local UDF, two elected Socialists, and Basque nationalists, who provided additional support.[14] She left the council at the same time that her father was defeated as Mayor. She then served as Mayor of Saint-Jean-de-Luz from 1995 until 2002, and as First Deputy Mayor since then. She was also a member and a Vice President of the General Council of Pyrénées-Atlantiques between 1994 and 2001.
In 1999, "MAM" entered the challenge for the presidency of the RPR against Chirac's candidate and, to most insiders' surprise, won by a landslide, becoming the first woman to lead a major French political party. She remained President of the party until 2002 when it merged with the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), a merger she opposed at first.
She remained a leading Gaullist after the RPR merger into the UMP, and created her own movement within the party, Le Chêne (The Oak). Although she publicly considered competing with Nicolas Sarkozy for the UMP nomination in the 2007 presidential election, she ruled herself out of the running in January 2007 and endorsed Sarkozy. Sarkozy and Alliot-Marie had a history of disagreements in the party's National Council.[1]
In November 2010, Alliot-Marie was appointed Minister of Foreign and European Affairs, remaining Minister of State and being again the first female holder of the office.
When civil unrest began in Tunisia in early 2011, Alliot-Marie came under scrutiny for going on vacation there during the events, as she had frequently done in the past. She further caused controversy when she told the National Assembly that French riot police could be offered to help restore order;[23] she was specifically criticised for allegedly sending teargas to Tunisia as late as January 2011.[24] Before leaving office, she proposed sending paratroopers to quell the protests.[25][26]
Her situation embarrassing the government, she resigned as Foreign Minister on 27 February 2011 after only a few months in office.[27] She was succeeded by outgoing Defense Minister and former Prime Minister Alain Juppé.
Minister of the Interior, Overseas Territories and Territorial Communities : 2007–2009.
Keeper of the Seals, Minister of State, Minister of Justice and Freedoms: 2009–2010.
Minister of State, Minister of Foreign and European Affairs: 2010–2011 (resignation).
Electoral mandates
European parliament
Member of the European Parliament : 1989-1992 (resignation); since 2014. Elected in 1989, 2014.
National Assembly
Deputy to the National Assembly for Pyrénées-Atlantiques (6th constituency): elected in March 1986 (became minister in March 1986) / 1988–1993 / elected in March 1993 (became minister in 1993) / 1995–2002 (became minister in 2002) / reelected in 2007 (remained a minister) / 2011-2012 (defeated). Elected in 1986, reelected in 1988, 1993, 1995, 1997, 2002, 2007.
Vice President of The Republicans National Council: since 2015.
Controversy
In 1972, a guard prevented Alliot-Marie from entering the National Assembly chamber because she was wearing pants; women were not allowed to wear pants to work in white-collar government jobs until the late 1960s and not in the Assembly until some years later.[29]
In early 2009, Alliot-Marie received an anonymous death threat accompanied by a 9mm-calibre bullet.[30]
In 2016, French investigating judge Sabine Kheris requested that a case involving Dominique de Villepin, Michel Barnier and Michèle Alliot-Marie be referred to the Court of Justice of the Republic. These former ministers were suspected of having allowed the exfiltration of the mercenaries responsible for the attack on the Bouaké camp in 2004, killing nine French soldiers. The operation was allegedly intended to justify a response operation against the Laurent Gbagbo government in the context of the 2004 crisis in Ivory Coast.[31]
Personal life
Michèle Marie married anthropologist Michel Alliot [fr] in 1971, taking the name Michèle Alliot-Marie. They divorced in 1984.
In the French media, she is nicknamed "MAM".
Since 1988, her life partner has been Patrick Ollier, who briefly served as President of the National Assembly in 2007 and subsequently chaired the Assembly's Economy Committee. In November 2010, he was appointed Minister in charge of Relations with Parliament in the Fillon II government. Both were ministers simultaneously for a few months in 2010–2011, the first time a couple ever sat in a French government. Due to her higher public profile, he has been nicknamed "Patrick Ollier-Marie" or "POM".
Prix de la révélation politique de l'année (English: "Price for Political Revelation of the Year") 1999 - Trombinoscope - being elected as President of the Rally for the Republic party[33]
Ministre de l'année (English: "Minister of the Year") 2005 - Trombinoscope
References
^ abcAriane Bernard (translation) (23 August 2007). "Excerpts From 'Dawn Evening or Night'". New York Times (in the International Herald Tribune). Retrieved 1 August 2013.
^Nedelec, Candice (9 May 2009). "Michèle Alliot-Marie ouvre son jardin secret: Le ministre de l'Intèrieur lève le voile sur son intimité" [Michèle Alliot-Marie opens her secret garden: The Minister of Interior unveils her private life]. Gala (in French). Prisma Media (then Prisma Presse). Google Translate
^Latrous, Neila; Marteau, Jean-Baptiste (2012). "Des jeunes pires que leurs aînés (English: 'Young worse than their elders')". UMP - un univers impitoyable (English: 'UMP - A Ruthless World') (Paperback) (in French). France: Flammarion. p. 250. ISBN978-2081277106.
^ abcGuiral, Antoine (8 May 2002). "Michèle Alliot-Marie : Ministre de la Défense et des Anciens Combattants (English: 'Michèle Alliot-Marie, Minister of Defence and Veterans Affairs')". Libération (in French). Retrieved 3 August 2013. Grande collectionneuse de décorations exotiques (commandeur de l'Etoile équatoriale du Gabon, du Mérite de l'Education nationale de Côte-d'Ivoire ou des Palmes magistrales de 1re classe du Pérou), elle va désormais pouvoir en distribuer elle-même. (English: 'A collector of exotic decorations (Commander of the Equatorial Star of Gabon, Merit National Education Ivory Coast or masterful 1st class Peru Fins), it will now be able to distribute itself.')
Darmon, Michaël (2006). Michèle Alliot-Marie, la grande muette [Michèle Alliot-Marie, the Great Mute] (in French). France: L'Archipel. ISBN2-84187-831-7.
Publications
Le salarié actionnaire [Employee Shareholders] (PhD in law thesis) (in French). Panthéon-Assas University. 1973.
Les Décisions politiques et structures administratives [Policy Decisions and Administrative Structures] (PhD in political science thesis) (in French). Paris I. 1982.
La Décision politique - Attention ! Une République peut en cacher une autre [Political Decision - Attention! A Republic Can Hide Another] (in French). Paris, France: PUF. 1983. ISBN2-13-038008-5.
La Grande Peur des classes moyennes [The Great Fear of the Middle Class] (in French). Paris, France: La table ronde. 1996. ISBN2-7103-0768-5.
Les boursiers étrangers en France: errements et potentialités [Foreign Scholars in France and Potential Mistakes] (Report) (in French). Rapport parlementaire au nom de la commission des affaires étrangères (English: 'Parliamentary Report on behalf of the Committee on Foreign Affairs'). 1997.
La République des irresponsables [Republic of Irresponsibles] (in French). France: Odile Jacob. 1999. ISBN2-7381-0727-3.
Le Chêne qu'on relève [The Oak Notes That] (in French). France: Odile Jacob. 2005. ISBN2-7381-1690-6.
Une femme au cœur du pouvoir d'état [A Woman at the Heart of State Power] (in French). Paris, France: Plon. 2013. ISBN978-2-259-21824-5.