France's Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin will be heading the 'Yes' campaign. Despite a voter environment which appears to be generally supportive of the new treaty, Mr Raffarin may not have an easy task. He had a weak election track record in 2004 after losing three votes at the local, regional and European levels. His approval rating currently stands at around 30 per cent.
'Yes' campaigners have the complex task of convincing the French public that the Constitutional Treaty will not decide on Turkish accession and that Europe is not taking a sharp turn in an overly liberal direction, which are the two main arguments coming from 'No' campaigners on the political right and left, respectively.
A few days ago the Commission decided to rewrite its proposal for a directive which aims to open up European services markets to internal competition, partly due to fear of a possible French 'No' to the Constitution.



