French President Francois Hollande (centre), his partner Valerie Trierweiler (left) and actress Julie Gayet. AFP PHOTOS / FILE
PARIS, Wednesday
French
President Francois Hollande has indicated that the status of his
long-term girlfriend Valerie Trierweiler will be clarified before a
scheduled trip to the United States next month.
Looking
stiff and stressed at a packed press conference, the Socialist leader
admitted the couple were going through "painful moments" and vowed to
deal with the fallout from his affair with an actress in private,
defiantly batting away questions over her future.
Trierweiler,
France's de facto First Lady, has been invited to accompany Hollande on
an official visit including an overnight stay at the White House.
She
has been in hospital since Friday with stress linked to last week's
revelation that Hollande, 59, has been having a secret liaison with
Julie Gayet, 41
.
.
FIRST LADY
Asked directly if Trierweiler was still France's First Lady, Hollande insisted on the troubled couple's right to privacy.
"I understand your question and I'm sure you will understand my response," he said.
"Everyone in their personal lives can go through tough times. That is the case (for me). These are painful moments.
"But
I have one principle: these private affairs are dealt with in private.
This is neither the time nor the place to do it so I will not be
responding to any questions about my private life."
SEVERE CASE OF BLUES
The
instruction did the trick and Hollande visibly relaxed as it became
apparent he was not going be given the kind of grilling a leader in
Britain or the United States could have expected in similar
circumstances.
After the opening question, Hollande was
not asked directly about Trierweiler until questioned on her state of
health nearly two hours later. "She's resting and I have no further
comment to make," he replied.
In Washington, White
House spokesman Jay Carney would not be drawn on whether Trierweiler
would be visiting and simply said US President Barack Obama was looking
forward to seeing Hollande.
Trierweiler, 48, was admitted to hospital hours after glossy magazine Closer
published a series of photos showing Hollande and Gayet arriving
separately for trysts at a flat close to the presidential Elysee Palace.
Media reports claimed the former journalist was suffering from low blood pressure, exhaustion and a "severe case of the blues".
Hollande
reiterated his "total indignation" over Closer's intrusion into his
private life but said he would not be taking legal action over the
report, which he has not denied.
Friends and political
allies of Hollande had urged him to move quickly to clarify the
situation by stating clearly whether he is still in a relationship with
Trierweiler.
Instead, he opted to put off a public announcement of any decision the couple have made about their future.
VALERIE WILLING TO FORGIVE
Friends
of Trierweiler have been quoted in French media as saying she is
willing to forgive Hollande if he ends things with Gayet.
As
well as the position of Trierweiler, who has a staff of five funded by
the taxpayers, the affair has raised questions about whether Hollande
risked his own safety by visiting the actress at a borrowed flat close
to the Elysee.
Sebastien Valiela, the photographer who
took the incriminating pictures, said it was obvious that Hollande was
inadequately protected.
But the president insisted his security had never been compromised. "No one needs to have any worries about that," he said.
Hollande,
whose approval ratings were already the lowest of any president of
recent times, appears to have avoided any significant political damage
from the scandal.
Polls suggest just over three in four
voters believe Hollande's love life is his own business and one survey
even showed a slight upturn in support for the beleaguered leader.
France's
shoulder-shrugging reaction left British newspapers in disbelief,
chastising their counterparts for their "deferent" attitude at the press
conference.
FOUR CHILDREN
"Would
he get away with this in Britain or America? Possibly not," said The
Guardian's Jon Henley. "But, outraged tweets by Anglo-Saxon hacks
notwithstanding, this was France."
Twice-divorced
Trierweiler has officially been Hollande's partner since 2007, when he
left Segolene Royal, a fellow heavyweight in the Socialist Party with
whom he has four children.
Dressed in a sombre navy
blue suit and matching tie, the Socialist leader made no mention of the
turmoil in his private life during an opening 45 minutes dedicated to
outlining a new pro-business economic policy aimed at spurring growth
and creating jobs.
A centrepiece of the plan is a 30
billion euro ($40 billion) cut in payroll taxes by 2017 through the
abolition of so-called family contributions paid by companies and
independent workers.
Hollande vowed that the reduction in company taxation would not be balanced by a corresponding increase in taxes on households.
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