French center-right wants Sarkozy re-election despite legal woes: poll

Reuters

Published Jul 17, 2014 06:24AM ET

French center-right wants Sarkozy re-election despite legal woes: poll

PARIS (Reuters) - A clear majority of French center-right voters want former president Nicolas Sarkozy to seek re-election in 2017 and his support has grown despite legal troubles facing him and his party, an opinion survey showed on Thursday.

The Ifop poll published by the Atlantico news web site showed that 60 percent of UMP opposition party supporters want Sarkozy, who lost a re-election bid to Socialist President Francois Hollande in 2012, to try again in 2017.

Sarkozy's support has risen by 10 percentage points since early May. The poll was conducted after Sarkozy was placed under formal investigation in early July on suspicion that he tried to influence magistrates examining his 2007 election campaign finances.

The UMP itself is in the midst of a legal inquiry into whether party officials used its books to cover up millions of euros of overspending on Sarkozy's 2012 election campaign.

Sarkozy has denied all wrongdoing in both cases.

"Far from weakening Sarkozy, they (legal woes) have reinforced his domination over his camp, as if a large majority of UMP voters were standing behind the man they see as a last resort," said Ifop analyst Jerome Fourquet, referring to the 2017 presidential vote.

The UMP, rocked this month by an audit which revealed an 80-million-euro funding shortfall, is due to choose a new leader at a congress scheduled for November, with ex-prime minister Alain Juppe expected to bid for the post.

But while Juppe is popular with UMP voters, only 18 percent said they wanted to see him run for president.