Late French leader Chirac had steely will with a human touch

PARIS (AP) — Affable but armed with a steely will, Jacques Chirac was a consummate politician who served as Paris mayor, lawmaker, prime minister and then president of France for 12 years, always championing the nation's sense of its own grandeur.

Chirac's ambition and determination, which won him the nickname "Le Bulldozer, kept him in office but alienated France's oldest ally when he opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

His death on Thursday at age 86 marked a nation feeling sorely in need of a leader with Chirac's staying power. During 40 years in public life, he weathered political failures and corruption scandals but emerged as a president with a human touch. No French head of state since Chirac has lasted two terms.

Foreign leaders hailed Chirac's statesmanship, while French President Emmanuel Macron said the conservative leader so familiar to the nation "embodied a certain idea of France."

"Whether or not you shared his ideas, his combat, we all recognized ourselves in him, this man who resembled us, assembled us," Macron said in a solemn homage on national television.

"Jacques Chirac was a great Frenchman ... in love with our land, steeped in our history and in love ... with our culture," Macron said.

In a highly unusual move, Macron, a centrist, threw open the doors of the Elysee presidential palace Thursday night through Sunday so citizens could sign a condolence book. They streamed in after dark.

A lifelong conservative, Chirac fashioned himself as the political successor of Gen. Charles de Gaulle, the World War II Resistance hero turned president who even today is a national icon in France.

Chirac founded the party meant to carry on de Gaulle's legacy, the Rally for the Republic. Its name has changed twice as it became tainted by corruption and other scandals, and today is a shadow of its former itself.

Corruption charges dating from his nearly two decades as Paris mayor dogged Chirac himself, but immunity from prosecution protected him. He finally was snared in 2011, four years after leaving the presidency, and found guilty on multiple charges and given a two-year suspended jail sentence.

France's political long-distance runner, Chirac won the presidency on his third try in 1995. He was reelected to a second term in 2002 after a showdown with then-far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen. An exceptional groundswell of support from the left and right buoyed Chirac to a 82% landslide victory against Le Pen, a political pariah linked to racism and anti-Semitism.