THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary-April 22, 2017- Topic 2
French elections: At
the crossroads

Historically, French politics has been divided between the
conservatives and the socialists. This balance between the establishment
parties is being tested this time with three ‘outsiders’ among the four leading
candidates — independent Emmanuel Macron, the National Front’s Marine Le Pen
and leftist Jean-Luc Mélenchon. Some opinion polls still give a chance to the
conservative candidate, François Fillon, but he is mired in a corruption
scandal. The Socialists, directionless after five years of François Hollande’s
highly unpopular presidency, appear to be out of the race even before polling
for the first round begins. The four-way race offers a picture of the issues
that shape the election agenda.
While Mr.
Macron promises to launch gradual economic and labour reforms and retain the status quo in foreign policy, Mr. Fillon wants radical
reforms, including an overhaul of the labour code and sacking of public
servants en masse, and closer ties with Vladimir Putin’s Russia.
Ms. Le Pen, a eurosceptic, is consolidating her base on anti-immigration and
anti-globalisation rhetoric, much like Donald Trump did in the U.S. elections
last year. Mr. Mélenchon, who surged in the polls in the last weeks of the
campaign, stays focussed on economic issues with promises to raise public
spending and taxes on the rich. The country’s political and business
establishment might prefer the victory of Mr. Macron as as the other
pro-business candidate is facing corruption allegations. But the outcome is anything
but certain, given that a substantial chunk of voters remains undecided and
that the kind of anti-establishment anger that helped Mr. Trump and Britain’s
pro-Brexit camp remains strong in France as well. The unemployment rate is over
20% among the youth, while economic growth never really revived after the 2008
financial crisis. Besides, security concerns remain paramount after the terror
attacks in Paris and Nice over the past 18 months. Thursday night’s shooting in
Paris that killed a policeman, and was claimed by the Islamic State, exposes
how volatile the security situation is — something that Ms. Le Pen’s campaign
is trying to cash in on during the final stretch. In many ways this will be the
most crucial election in France’s modern history. Its results will have
profound implications not just on French politics but also on the future of the
European Union.
Vocabulary
Defied: openly
resist or refuse to obey.
Example: A woman
who defies convention
Synonyms: disobey, go
against, flout, fly in the face of, disregard
Fray: a
situation of intense activity, typically one incorporating an element of
aggression or competition.
Example: Nineteen
companies intend to bid for the contract, with three more expected to enter the
fray
Mired: cause to
become stuck in mud.
Example: Sometimes
a heavy truck gets mired down
Synonyms: bog down, sink down
Gradual: taking
place or progressing slowly or by degrees.
Example: The
gradual introduction of new methods
Synonyms: slow, measured, unhurried, cautious, piecemeal, step-by-step
En masse: in a group.
Example: The board
of directors resigned en masse
Synonyms: all together, as a group, as
one, en bloc, as a whole, wholesale
Rhetoric: the art of
effective or persuasive speaking or writing, especially the use of figures of
speech and other compositional techniques.
Example: Born into
a rich provincial family, he studied philosophy as well as rhetoric and law.
Synonyms: oratory, eloquence, command of
language, way with words
Volatile: liable to
change rapidly and unpredictably, especially for the worse.
Example: The
political situation was becoming more volatile
Synonyms: tense, strained, fraught, uneasy, uncomfortable, charged