French Socialists Hail Demise of DSK Case

The French diplomat will likely be free to go back home on Tuesday

France's Socialists are lauding a move by New York prosecutors to drop their attempted rape case against prominent party figure Dominique Strauss-Kahn, after a stormy two months for the ex-IMF chief that upended the French presidential race.

A New York judge is expected to dismiss the U.S. case Tuesday at the request of prosecutors, who expressed concerns about the credibility of the hotel chambermaid who accused him.

But few expect Strauss-Kahn — once considered a leading contender for France's top job — to jump back into politics very soon.

A civil case is still pending in New York, and investigators are probing another attempted rape accusation against him in France. His own political allies and some French voters appeared eager Tuesday to move forward with the presidential campaign and let Strauss-Kahn recover from the last few months in peace.

French Socialist Party chief Martine Aubry called it "an immense relief" that the prosecutors are abandoning the case.

"We were all waiting for this ... for him to finally be able to get out of this nightmare," she said on France-Info radio.

Harlem Desir, who is filling in for Aubry while she seeks the Socialists' presidential nomination, welcomed the "happy outcome" and wished Strauss-Kahn "all my wishes so that he can quickly rebuild his life."

Strauss-Kahn's arrest and images of him handcuffed in a New York courtroom stunned France, and many here questioned the way American prosecutors pursued the French politician. Strauss-Kahn quit as chief of the International Monetary Fund after the maid's accusations in May, which he denies.

His Socialist Party, which many hoped was ready to overcome years of differences and rally behind Strauss-Kahn, has scrambled for a new candidate who could unseat President Nicolas Sarkozy in April-May elections.

"He will always be stained by this affair, he will always have this, everyone will always make reference to this affair, it will stick to him," said insurance agent Veronique Colle, en route to work in Paris on Tuesday.

Banker Victor Diosi dismissed any notion of Strauss-Kahn returning to the presidential race. "There has been so much talk about what he did that we will now move on. Other candidates will materialize and political life will continue differently in France. ... Maybe he'll have a political future as a minister or something like that if the Socialists win but not as president, not as a candidate in the next elections."

Some commentators noted that the prosecutor didn't clear Strauss-Kahn, just said he didn't have enough of a case to persuade a jury to convict him.

The case "lifted the veil on aspects of his personality, his relations with women, and with money," Le Monde wrote in an editorial Tuesday. "As with Bill Clinton, whose presidency was tarnished by the Monica Lewinsky affair, (Strauss-Kahn) is above all a victim of his own imprudence."

The mother of Strauss-Kahn's French accuser was among those displeased with the move to drop the New York case. "I am revolted and indignant," Anne Mansouret, a regional Socialist official, said on Europe-1 radio.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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