Pierre Lellouche | |
Office: | Member of the National Assembly for Paris's 1st constituency |
Term Start: | 20 June 2012 |
Term End: | 20 June 2017 |
Predecessor: | Martine Billard |
Successor: | Sylvain Maillard |
Office2: | Member of the National Assembly for Paris's 4th constituency |
Term Start2: | 12 June 1997 |
Term End2: | 23 July 2009 |
Predecessor2: | Gabriel Kaspereit |
Successor2: | Edwige Antier |
Office3: | Member of the National Assembly for Val d'Oise's 8th constituency |
Term Start3: | 2 April 1993 |
Term End3: | 21 April 1997 |
Predecessor3: | Bernard Angels |
Successor3: | Dominique Strauss-Kahn |
Birth Date: | 3 May 1951 |
Birth Place: | Tunis, Tunisia |
Nationality: | French |
Profession: | Lawyer |
Alma Mater: | Sciences Po Harvard University |
Party: | The Republicans |
Pierre Lellouche (pronounced as /fr/; born on May 3, 1951), is a lawyer and geopolitics specialist, recognized as a right-wing political figure in France. He is also known for his work as a columnist and author. Elected as a deputy in Sarcelles in 1993, he subsequently represented the 4th constituency of Paris from 1997 until his appointment as Secretary of State for European Affairs in June 2009. In November 2010, Lellouche was appointed Secretary of State for Foreign Trade in the Fillon III government, a position he held until the end of Nicolas Sarkozy's presidency in May 2012. He was re-elected as a deputy for the 1st constituency of Paris in June 2012, serving until April 2017, when he retired from elective politics.[1] Since then, he has continued his career as a lawyer, geopolitics consultant, member of influential think tanks, and columnist.
Pierre Lellouche was born in Tunis (Tunisia), among the Jewish community.[2] He is one of four children of Noël Lellouche, who had fought in the Free French Forces during World War II.[3] Following Tunisia's attainment of independence in 1956, the family relocated to Paris.[4] There, Noël Lellouche initially worked for Renault before opening his own restaurant.
He pursued higher education at Lycée Condorcet in Paris. A few years later, he graduated with a higher degree from the Faculty of Law of Paris X-Nanterre (1972) and from the Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris (1973), holding a Master of Laws (LLM) and a Juris Doctor degree from Harvard Law School and graduated in Masters in Public Law Advanced studies (1973) from Paris Nanterre University
In 1973, he attended Harvard Law School on an Arthur Sachs fellowship.[5] He briefly paused his academic pursuits to serve in the French Army from 1976 to 1977. Resuming his studies, he earned his LLM in 1974, followed by an SJD in 1978. His doctorate dissertation focused on the Internationalization of the nuclear fuel cycle as a non-proliferation strategy,' under the guidance of Professor Abram Chayes.[6] [7] Concurrently, he was a fellow at the Harvard Center for Science and International Affairs, studying under the mentorship of Joseph Nye and Stanley Hoffmann.
In 1978 worked with Raymond Aron at the Maison des Sciences de l’Homme, within the Study and Research Group on International Problems (GERPI).[8]
In 1979, he co-founds the French Institute of International Relations (IFRI)[9] with Thierry de Montbrial. Until 1988, he was Deputy Director of IFRI, in charge of Politico-military studies.
At the same time, he taught International Relations at several institutions, including INSEAD Business School, the École Supérieure de Guerre Military Academy, and Galatasaray University in Istanbul.
From 1980 to 1995, he served as a columnist for the news magazines Newsweek and Le Point.[10] He continues to contribute thought-provoking articles to various newspapers and magazines, and as of 2023, he remains an active writer and publisher.
In 1988, he was assistant editor-in-chief of quarterly journal Politique Étrangère.[11] From 2020, he serves as a regular guest commentator on the French TV channel CNews.[12]
In 1986, he became a part of the consulting team for Jacques Chirac. He then served as Chirac's diplomatic adviser from 1989 to 1996 during which time Chirac held various positions: Mayor of Paris, President of the RPR party, and, from 1995 onwards, President of the French Republic.
Lellouche was a member of the National Assembly of France, first for Val d'Oise's 8th constituency (1993-1997) and later for Paris' 4th constituency (1997-2009).In parliament, Pierre Lellouche served on the Defense Committee (1993-1994 and 1997–2002) and the Committee on Foreign Affairs (1995-1997 and 2002–2007).[14] In addition to his committee assignments, he was a member of the French delegation to the NATO Parliamentary Assembly from 1997 until 2009; he served as the Assembly's president from November 2004 to November 2006.
From 2002, Lellouche was also a member of "The Reformers" within the UMP group, which advocated deep reform of the administration and liberalization of the economy.
In 2002, Pierre Lellouche authored a bill to increase penalties for racist and anti-Semitic offenses. This proposal was unanimously adopted by the National Assembly on December 10, 2002, and became known as the "Lellouche Law".[15]
2002-09 - Negotiator, mandated by Jacques Chirac, for France on the ITER experimental reactor (thermonuclear fusion) at Cadarache, against the competing Japanese location at Fukushima. [16]
After the 2007 French legislative elections, Pierre Lellouche received backing from his political allies, Nicolas Sarkozy and François Fillon, for the role of chair of either the National Assembly's Committee on Foreign Affairs or the Defence Committee. However, Edouard Balladur, who had been defeated by Chirac in 1995, secured the position as a form of "compensation."
On the local level, Lellouche was also a municipal councillor of Cannes (1995-2001) and a councillor of Paris (since 2001; reelected in 2008).
In 2008, Pierre Lellouche was appointed by French President Sarkozy as special advisor on Franco-Turkish affairs during a period of heightened diplomatic tensions between the two countries. In 2009, he was appointed as special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[17] In this role, he collaborated closely with Richard Holbrooke of the United States, Bernd Mützelburg of Germany, and Sherard Cowper-Coles of the United Kingdom.[18]
As State Secretary for European Affairs, Lellouche was involved in the negotiations on the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) in 2010.[19] In response to the 2010 Russian wildfires, he told Le Figaro that the EU should pool assets to create a European emergency force and build mutual assistance capabilities to deal with emergencies.[20]
Upon returning to parliament, Pierre Lellouche served on the Committee on Foreign Affairs again from 2012 until 2017.[14] In this capacity, he joined a delegation led by François Fillon, on an official trip to Iraq in September 2014.[21]
In 2016, Lellouche's call for the impeachment of President Hollande for allegedly disclosing classified information to journalists,[22] was dismissed by a cross-party steering committee.[23]
Ahead of the Republicans' 2016 presidential primary, Lellouche endorsed François Fillon as the party's candidate for the 2017 French presidential election. Amid the Fillon affair, he resigned from the campaign team.[24] In an open letter, he also announced his plans to leave politics.[25]
Pierre Lellouche called the UK Conservative Party's policy on the EU "pathetic" and a kind of political autism,[26] claiming "They have essentially castrated your UK influence in the European parliament."[27]
Pierre Lellouche is considered to be a supporter of strong cooperation with the United States of America.[28] After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, he explained Crimea would stay Russian because no one will go to war for Ukraine[29] and asked in 2023 if it is not time to wonder about a way out of this war ?.[30]
In October 1999, Pierre Lellouche defended a traditional view of the family during the discussions concerning the Pacte civil de solidarité (PACS), a contractual form of civil union. Several observers pointed out some of his "homophobic" arguments.[31] [32] However, later on in 2003 he was in favor of a law introducing harsher punishments for abuses against homosexuals.
He was also a strong opponent of the solidarity tax on wealth (ISF) first voted under François Mitterrand.
In 2015, Lellouche opposed a parliamentary decision to create a $60-million fund to compensate Holocaust victims deported by French state rail firm SNCF to Nazi concentration camps in a move also intended to protect the company from future U.S. litigation.[33]
In response to the January 2015 Île-de-France attacks, Pierre Lellouche publicly opposed a bill proposed by Prime Minister Manuel Valls to let France's intelligence services deploy fly-on-the-wall spying devices more easily against suspected terrorists.[34]
In 2003, he declared in the French newspaper Libération, "a new antisemitism, is linked to the crisis in the Middle East, which appeared about twenty years ago".[35] In 2014, it is opposed to the socialist resolution on the recognition of a Palestinian state, but protested "against the unbearable and unacceptable interference of the Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the vote of the French Parliament".[36] In 2015, he discovers having been monitored by the NSA.[37] In 2017, he reaffirms his position on “the necessary halt to the construction of new settlements”, but declares himself against a “strategy of one-upmanship against Israel”.[38]