- Philippe Séguin
Infobox Officeholder
order=President of theCour des Comptes
term_start=21 July 2004
term_end=
predecessor=François Logerot
successor=
order2=President of theFrench National Assembly
term_start2=2 April 1993
term_end2=12 June 1997
predecessor2=Henri Emmanuelli
successor2=Laurent Fabius
order3=President ofRally for the Republic
term_start3=1997
term_end3=1999
predecessor3=Alain Juppé
successor3=Nicolas Sarkozy (acting)
office4=French Minister for Social Affairs and Employment
term_start4=20 March 1986
term_end4=12 May 1988
predecessor4=Georgina Dufoix
successor4=Michel Delebarre
assembly5=French National
constituency_AM5=Vosges
term_start5=19 March 1978
term_end5=1 April 1986
term_start6=12 June 1988
term_end6=18 June 2002
birth_date=bda|1943|21|4
birth_place=Tunis ,Tunisia
nationality=FrenchPhilippe Séguin OQ (born
April 21 ,1943 ) is a former Frenchpolitician , and is now first president of France's "Cour des Comptes " (Court of Financial Auditors).He entered the Court of Financial Auditors in 1970, but he began a political career in the Neo-Gaullist party RPR. In 1978, he was elected to the National Assembly as a deputy for the Vosges "
département ".Representing the social tradition of the Gaullism, he was Minister of Social Affairs in
Jacques Chirac 's cabinet, from 1986 to 1988.After Chirac's defeat at the 1988 presidential election, he allied withCharles Pasqua and criticized the abandonment of Gaullist doctrine. He accusedAlain Juppé andÉdouard Balladur of wanting an alignment on liberal and pro-European policies.In 1992 he played a leading role in the No campaign against the
Maastricht Treaty . On the eve of the vote he opposed PresidentFrançois Mitterrand in a televised debate.As president of the National Assembly from 1993 to 1997, he supported the winning candidacy of Jacques Chirac at the 1995 presidential election. He inspired his theme of campaign, "the social fracture".
Their relations deteriorated when he took the lead of the RPR, after the right-wing defeat at the 1997 legislative election. He failed to change the name of the party to "The Rally". He criticized the ascendancy of President Chirac within the party, refusing to be the leader of a "Chirac's fan-club". He resigned in 1999 just before the European elections, leaving his deputy
Nicolas Sarkozy in charge.As the RPR's official candidate, he lost the 2001 mayoral election in
Paris . Refusing the merge of the Neo-Gaullist party with the right-wing classical forces in theUnion for a Popular Movement , he quit politics in 2002.External links
* [http://www.ccomptes.fr/Cour-des-comptes/presentation/organisation/cdc7.htm Official page] fr icon
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