Quantcast
Latest Stories

Sarkozy resurfaces at New York bank conference

 (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

NEW YORK– Five months after losing re-election, an unshaven French ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy appeared Thursday at a New York banking conference and reportedly said he looked forward to a “new life.”

Sarkozy spoke for about 50 minutes at the invitation of Brazil’s BTG Pactual bank in Manhattan’s luxury Waldorf Astoria Hotel, where tight security kept the event well out of the public eye.

Sarkozy has stayed out of the limelight since losing the presidency to his Socialist challenger Francois Hollande in May, spending much of his time on holiday in Canada, Morocco and on the French Riviera with his wife, ex-supermodel Carla Bruni.

He has made just one public statement, criticizing Hollande’s policy on the war in Syria.

French Morning, a website for the French community in New York, published what it said was Sarkozy’s closely guarded speech in which he told the audience he was interested in the business world.

“I want a new life, but not just to go to conferences,” he said in French, according to the text. “What I like isn’t politics, it’s doing — doing in politics or something else.”

“I would so like to show that one could have been a politician and can understand business,” he was quoted as telling the bankers.

At the start of the text, Sarkozy was quoted as quipping in English: “I am a new retiree. Young, maybe, retiree certainly. I haven’t worked for five months. I never had so long vacations in my life. And the worst thing is I was very happy with the situation.”

“I used to do speeches everyday. Today is my first speech since the presidential election,” he added.

The text could not be immediately confirmed.

Participants at the conference said Sarkozy had seemed relaxed and mostly discussed European politics and history.

“He put the European crisis in the historical context that investors forget and also talked about emerging economies,” one said. Another participant said Sarkozy was “very charismatic.”

Sarkozy, wearing a blue suit and sporting a light beard, declined to take questions from waiting journalists as he arrived at the event. Earlier in the day, he’d gone jogging in Central Park, out of sight of cameras.

He was due to leave New York on Saturday.

“He’s very honored to have been invited to this conference,” an aide said.

Former statesmen can earn large speaking fees, but it was not immediately clear how much Sarkozy might have been paid for the New York appearance, particularly given his limited English proficiency.

Back in France, opinions were split on whether the US trip marked the start of a post-presidential career on the lecture circuit or if the French right-winger had secret plans to make a political comeback.


Follow Us

Follow us on Facebook Follow on Twitter Follow on Twitter


Recent Stories:

Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step out? Get breaking alerts on your mobile.phone. Text ON INQ BREAKING to 4467, for Globe, Smart and Sun subscribers in the Philippines.

Tags: Brazil BTG Pactual bank , Election , France , Government , Politics , Sarkozy



Copyright © 2013, .
To subscribe to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper in the Philippines, call +63 2 896-6000 for Metro Manila and Metro Cebu or email your subscription request here.
Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate. Or write The Readers' Advocate:
c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer Chino Roces Avenue corner Yague and Mascardo Streets, Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines Or fax nos. +63 2 8974793 to 94
Advertisement

News

  • Student enrolls–using 41 names
  • Comelec chief smells watchdog conspiracy
  • Suspended party-list canvass resumes
  • Elated over foe’s loss, Digos City radioman does a ‘monty’
  • Drilon vs Cayetano in Senate
  • Sports

  • Aces pull off 3-game title sweep of Kings
  • Tenorio snares BPC award over Abueva
  • Cabrera Asian Karting Open junior champ
  • Calla second twice, paces Aboitiz tour
  • Divine Eagle tops TC first leg by a nose
  • Lifestyle

  • Evoking in line and color the most popular devotion in the Philippines
  • National Heritage Month revives traditional Santacruzan
  • Philippine ballet’s finest from here and abroad take centerstage in rare one-night gala
  • ‘Pioneers of Philippine Art’ exhibit draws from various collections
  • Poet Fidelito Cortes makes the everyday extraordinary
  • Entertainment

  • The way of a clown: Vice Ganda sets tears aside
  • Kids make tough guy Vin Diesel a ‘softie’
  • Film on old age wins in Jeonju
  • Night and Day: Promenading near the Palais
  • Buboy on his 7th Power and family
  • Business

  • Elated stakeholders reelect stock exchange board
  • Save more, Filipinos urged
  • A riverine venture in Pangasinan
  • N. Luzon fiesta maker to market former US military property
  • PSE board gets new mandate
  • Technology

  • Free Inquirer tablets for lucky INQSnap readers
  • Hong Kong launches first electric taxis
  • DepEd website now up and normal
  • Report: Yahoo nearing $1.1B acquisition of Tumblr
  • ‘Sonic’ video games coming to Nintendo
  • Opinion

  • Editorial cartoon, May 20, 2013
  • Keep them safe
  • Game changer
  • Vote-buying in last polls raised inflation rate
  • Of discouraged foreign investors
  • Global Nation

  • Filipinos in Taiwan told: Limit activities
  • Santiago: Harassment of Filipinos in Taiwan may warrant MECO abolition
  • Boracay hotels, resorts hit by Taiwan tourist cancellations
  • ‘Patronage politics not an offshoot of PH culture, grew during US colonial period’
  • Philippines waiting for Taiwan anger to cool
  • Marketplace
    Advertisement
    Azure Skin Ad
    Azure Skin Ad
    © Copyright 1997-2013 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved