PARIS - French police searched Nicolas Sarkozy’s offices and home Tuesday as part of their probe into claims the former president was involved in illegal political campaign financing, his lawyer said, whereas France’s new left-wing government under Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault won a vote of confidence in the National Assembly.
Magistrates are investigating claims that staff for Liliane Bettencourt, heiress to the L’Oreal cosmetics empire and France’s richest woman, gave envelopes stuffed with cash to Sarkozy aides to finance his 2007 campaign.
Around ten police officers accompanied investigating magistrate Jean-Michel Gentil on the raid on his home and on offices he has recently rented in Paris, a source close to the enquiry said.
Sarkozy’s lawyer Thierry Herzog said that the president, who was defeated in his re-election bid in May by the Socialist Francois Hollande, is currently in Canada with his family. Le Monde newspaper’s website said that investigators had also searched the lawyers’ offices where Sarkozy was once an associate.
Sarkozy, who has denied any wrongdoing and whose presidential immunity from prosecution expired last month, has supplied his diary to judges to disprove claims from witnesses that he attended meetings in the Bettencourt household.
The witnesses, whose testimony was reported in the French press, claimed that Sarkozy held meetings on at least two occasions in the Bettencourt home ahead of his presidential election win in 2007.
Herzog has said that the detailed diary, from the time Sarkozy was interior minister and under strict security restrictions, will prove that claims of him attending meetings at the household were “materially impossible”.
Sarkozy is facing potential questioning in a slew of legal probes into corruption and campaign financing violations.
Out of the 527 votes cast in the 544-seat assembly, 302 were for and 225 against the new government, said the legislature’s president Claude Bartolone.
Deputies of the Socialists, ecologist EELV and radical left voted for the government while the Left Front abstained. The Conservative UMP and the UDI or Union of Democrats and Independents voted against.
In a brief speech, Ayrault thanked MPs for “trusting the government”.
“The government can’t move forward if it does not have the confidence of the majority: you have clearly expressed it,” he said. “Now we have our roadmap and together we will succeed.”