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A speaker's podium at UMP's headquarters in Paris. Photo: Reuters

France's right-wing UMP party close to collapse after talks fail to end leadership dispute

Quarrel splits ex-President Sarkozy's party as talks fail to resolve disputed internal ballot

AFP

France's main right-wing opposition party is close to collapse after talks failed to resolve a bitter leadership dispute and an ex-prime minister vowed to take the battle to the courts.

The contested leadership vote has thrown into turmoil ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy's UMP -- still reeling from its loss of the presidency and parliament this year -- and raised the spectre of an unprecedented split on the right.

Called in to mediate the damaging dispute, party heavyweight Alain Juppe threw in the towel after only 45 minutes of talks between ex-prime minister Francois Fillon and party secretary general Jean-Francois Cope late Sunday.

Fillon quickly blamed his rival and raised the stakes by promising to turn to the courts.

"Jean-Francois Cope holds sole responsibility for a failure that hurts our party and, furthermore, undermines the image of political activity," Fillon said in a statement.

"Anxious to break the deadlock into which Jean-Francois Cope's successive power grabs have plunged our party, I will refer the matters to the courts to restore the truth of the results and give a voice back to (party) activists," he said.

Cope held his ground, saying he was awaiting the decision of a party electoral appeals commission. He did not want to "mix the judicial process with the political process," he added.

Fillon, 58, and Cope, 48, have traded accusations of fraud and bad faith since last Sunday's party vote ended with Cope ahead by a handful of votes.

Cope was declared the winner of the leadership battle by a margin of just 98 votes in a contest in which more than 150,000 party members voted.

The party electoral commission has since said that ballots cast in France's overseas territories that were not counted would have reversed the result.

The Cope camp meanwhile has claimed he would have won by a clear margin but for vote-rigging in the Mediterranean city of Nice.

The party has faced ridicule over the debacle, at a time it could be taking advantage of Socialist President Francois Hollande's falling popularity over his handling of France's struggling economy.

And Sarkozy himself waded into the debate on Sunday, when he was attending a conference in Shanghai. A source close to the ex-president said he had telephoned Juppe and was "in favour of all initiatives that could resolve the situation".

Juppe, a former prime minister and Sarkozy-era foreign minister, had expressed pessimism he could resolve the conflict.

On Sunday evening, after the talks broke up, he said he would give up efforts to mediate the dispute because the conditions for such work had not come together.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Right-wing UMP party close to collapse
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