Delphine Batho

Delphine Batho

Delphine Batho in 2013
Member of the French National Assembly for Deux-Sèvres
Assumed office
August 2013
French Minister of the Ecology
In office
2012–2013
President François Hollande
Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault
Preceded by Nicole Bricq
Succeeded by Philippe Martin
Personal details
Born (1973-03-23) 23 March 1973
Paris, France
Political party Socialist Party
Education Lycée Henri-IV

Delphine Batho (born 23 March 1973 in Paris) is a French Socialist Party politician. She was France's minister of ecology, sustainable development, and energy between 21 June 2012 and 2 July 2013. She had to leave the government because she openly criticized the government and the budget restrictions for her own ministry.[1] She was previously named ministre délégué at the French Ministry of Justice. She was elected to the National Assembly of France from the 2nd constituency of Deux-Sèvres on behalf of the Socialist, Radical, Citizen, and Miscellaneous Left grouping. It had been rumoured that the relationship between Delphine Batho and Christiane Taubira, her Senior Minister for Justice, was tense, leading to her removal from the Ministry of Justice.

President of the FIDL

Batho began her militant activity in the high-school students' union FIDL (Fédération indépendante et démocratique lycéenne) while attending the Lycée Henri-IV in Paris. She was elected president of the union in 1990 and became well known for her activism on behalf of students' rights and for the means to study. Following nearly two months of strikes the movement obtained from Lionel Jospin, the Minister for Education, a pledge to spend 4.5 million francs[2] on renovating high schools and to protect certain student rights.[3] In 1992 she left high school, and thus the FIDL, to study history.

Vice-President of SOS Racisme

Batho joined the anti-racist movement SOS Racisme and when its leadership was renewed in September 1992 Fodé Sylla, aged 29, became president and Batho, a representative of the "second generation SOS" in the words of Le Monde,[4] was elected vice-president.

The Socialist Party

Batho joined the French Socialist Party (Parti Socialiste – PS) in the mid-1990s as a militant in the Grigny (Essonne) section. She participated, together with Julien Dray, in the party's Socialist Left tendency. At the party's Grenoble Congress she was elected to the national executive committee of the PS. In 2003, during the breakup of the socialist left, she remained loyal to Dray, who employed her at the Île-de-France Regional Council, where she was responsible for security matters. In 2004 she became National Secretary of the PS in charge of security, where she defended the policy of preventative sanctions.

Her thoughts on security matters were taken into account by Ségolène Royal, the PS candidate in the French Presidential Election of 2007, who incorporated them into her "just order".[5]

Election to the National Assembly in 2007

In the parliamentary elections of 2007 Batho was the PS's candidate in the 2nd constituency of Deux-Sèvres, which Ségolène Royal had represented before running in the presidential election of that year. In the PS internal nomination contest, she received 54.75% of the vote as against 45.25% for Éric Gauthier, Ms Royal's former suppléant (reserve).

In the first round of the elections, held on 10 June, she received 20,690 votes (a 44.55% share), ahead of the second-placed Jean-Pierre Griffault, who received 16,131 votes (34.73%) for the UMP. In the second, run-off round, Griffault gained a 42.58% share (19,669 votes), and Batho was elected with 57.42% of the total ballot (26,524 votes).

Controversy regarding her housing

In March 2012, Delphine Batho was criticised when Le Monde revealed that she was the tenant of an apartment reserved for low-income families despite her own relatively high income.[6]

References

Translator's note: These are in French.

  1. L'Elysée met fin aux fonctions de Delphine Batho. In: Le Monde du 2.7.2013 (retrieved on 2. .7. 2013)]
  2. There is some disagreement on the figure involved. AFP (Agence France Presse), quoted in Le Figaro 21/11/2007, article "40 ans de contestation étudiante en France", consulted 4/11/2012, gives the sum as 4.5 million francs; whereas the student organisation FIDL, in a timeline of actions, states it to be 4.5 billion,, consulted 04/11/2012.
  3. "History" (in French). FIDL. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  4. Bernard Philippe, Passage de témoin chez les « potes »
  5. Cf. la séries d'articles de Libération : Les 30 visages du réseau Ségolène Royal, dans la rubrique Les Nouvelles un article de Jacky Durant intitulé Delphine Batho, paru dans l'édition du 2 mai 2007, page 13.
  6. http://www.lemonde.fr/election-presidentielle-2012/article/2012/03/21/delphine-batho-ps-refuse-de-quitter-son-logement-du-parc-social-parisien_1672924_1471069.html
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