'The
nation state is back': Front National's Marine Le Pen rides on global
mood
Ahead
of 2017 French presidential election, head of far-right party is
confident Brexit and Donald Trump have helped her cause
Angelique Chrisafis
in Fréjus
Sunday 18 September
2016 17.42 BST
In an aircraft
hangar on the French Riviera, as thousands of supporters waved French
tricolour flags, France’s far-right Front National leader, Marine
Le Pen, boomed proudly from the stage: “The time of the nation
state is back!”
She praised
Britain’s vote to leave the European Union and said plans to build
walls across the world – including one to keep out migrants and
refugees at Calais — showed a return to “the time of borders”.
Complaining of the
dangers of mass immigration and multiculturalism that she said the EU
was forcing on France, she vowed to defend French identity and
restore national sovereignty. The crowd chanted “Marine President”
and “This is our home”.
With only seven
months until the French presidential election, the question of who
will lead France remains tantalisingly open. While France’s
mainstream parties on the left and right are yet to choose their
candidates, Le Pen, who will stand for the FN, calmly claims to have
the upper hand.
A glitterball lit up
the hangar on Saturday night as she hosted a gala dinner at the party
conference to mark the preparations for her 2017 French presidential
bid, at one point parading with a trained eagle on her arm.
All polls show that
she will easily make it into the final round run-off in May. The
tense mood in French society is seen as favourable: more than 230
people have been killed in Islamist terror attacks since January
2015; mass unemployment and economic stagnation hang over daily life;
and parties on both the right and left have anxiously appropriated Le
Pen’s key preoccupations of immigration, national identity and the
place of Islam in France.
Crucially, Le Pen
believes the international mood will work in her favour –
specifically the campaign by the US Republican candidate Donald Trump
and the UK’s Brexit vote, which she sees as patriotic people rising
up against ruling elites. Le Pen has been alone among French
political leaders in loudly backing both Brexit and Trump.
The nationalist,
anti-immigration, anti-European Union FN, which wants to leave the
euro and favours French people over immigrants in giving out state
benefits, remains the most significant far-right party in western
Europe and has made big electoral gains in recent years. In the past
five years, it has gone from from no presence in parliament to seats
in both the lower house and the senate, 11 mayors and hundreds of
local councillors at different levels. It has expanded its
traditional voter base to new groups, including senior public sector
workers in the police, hospitals and schools.
And yet it was clear
Le Pen faces major difficulties in the presidential race as party
members and supporters gathered in the traditional heartlands of the
Côte d’Azur for her party conference this weekend, where many sat
in straw hats and boaters bearing ribbons marked “Marine 2017”.
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Even if Le Pen does
reach the final round, all polls show she would be defeated. Despite
Le Pen’s sidelining of her father and party co-founder, Jean-Marie
Le Pen, and her long quest to “detoxify” her party of the racist,
jack-booted, antisemitic imagery of the past, a majority of French
voters still question whether the party is capable of governing
France.
Outside Le Pen’s
heartlands there is a widespread fear of the party, which many
continue to associate with the old tags of demagoguery, xenophobia or
racism. The party still faces a barrage of tactical voting by the
right and left to stop it winning final-round votes – described by
one Lille party worker as “the onslaught of an armada”. This
clubbing together of right and left parties against the FN prevented
it from winning any constituencies in last year’s regional
elections despite taking a historic 6.8m votes.
Smiling, Le Pen
chatted to journalists backstage at her party conference, saying she
was confident she could expand her electorate far enough to win. Her
aim in this pre-campaign period is to present herself as credible, to
move away from divisive positions and to re-position herself as a
kind of calm, unifying authority. She said she would run a “joyous”
campaign. Her aides said she felt her chances were better than ever.
“With the designation of Trump in the US, and Brexit, analysts
should be a bit more modest, there’s a global awakening,” Le Pen
said.
Above all, if Le Pen
makes it through to the second round, she wants to avoid the fate
that befell her father when he shocked France by reaching the final
round in 2002.More than a million angry demonstrators took to the
streets in protest against Le Pen senior who was subsequently
squarely beaten when 82% of voters from all parties opted for Jacques
Chirac, in order to keep the FN at bay.
This time, if Marine
Le Pen makes the second round, she is likely to seriously narrow the
gap. The parliamentary elections that will follow the presidential
vote could also see the FN make historic gains in the national
assembly.
Le Pen feels she has
already won what has been called “the battle of ideas”. Nicolas
Sarkozy, the former rightwing president who is seeking his party’s
nomination to run again in 2017, has lurched so far right that he has
appropriated, or outdone, certain of Le Pen’s ideas on immigration,
security and Islam. This serves to legitimise FN ideas, party members
argue.
While Sarkozy has
controversially called for the locking up of anyone suspected of
radicalisation even if they have committed no crime, Le Pen has sat
back and argued for protecting the rule of law, aiming to show she is
less divisive than him.
David Rachline, the
young FN mayor of Fréjus who will serve as Le Pen’s campaign
director, said her ideas were now “majority-held views in France”.
Gilbert Collard, one
of Le Pen’s MPs, said: “Who in France can say that everything’s
going well, that the economy’s good, that there’s security, that
terrorism has been controlled, the nation preserved? If you look at
our whole diagnosis of society’s ills – you can hate us, but
everyone knows that our ideas are being taken up and reproduced by
everyone else.”
Nicolas Bay, the
party’s secretary general, said Trump and Brexit helped Le Pen’s
cause. “It shows French people that there’s a patriotic dynamic
that goes well beyond France. There’s a springtime of the people.”
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