French far right still all-in on Marine Le Pen
National Rally leader told supporters party would not
backtrack on decision to become more mainstream despite recent setbacks.
BY CLEA
CAULCUTT
July 4,
2021 9:50 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/le-pen-far-right-macron-france-election/
PERPIGNAN,
France — The National Rally’s disastrous recent regional election results had
many asking: Is this the end for Marine Le Pen?
The answer
from a party conference this weekend was an emphatic no.
At the
meeting in the southern town of Perpignan, there wasn’t the faintest hint of
mutiny. Instead, the party rank and file issued a chorus of support for their
leader.
“She is the
only candidate for us, we completely support her,” said Léo Camus, a student
and party member. “Marine Le Pen has never been higher in the polls and her
third go at the presidency will be the right one.”
“She is
frank, not a turncoat like others,” said Annie, a retired shop owner who did
not want to give her surname for fear of criticism from neighbors. “She is in a
good place right now.”
In regional
elections last month, Le Pen’s allies failed to gain control of any region,
prompting questions about whether her attempts to bring the party closer to the
mainstream were putting off traditional far-right voters.
Polls put
Le Pen and French President Emmanuel Macron neck and neck in the first round of
the presidential election next year, but have Macron winning in a run-off, just
like in 2017.
Staying the
course
In her
closing speech to party members on Sunday, Le Pen insisted the RN would
continue to “open up” to those beyond the far right in a bid to widen its
appeal.
“We won’t
go back, with all the respect we have for our own history, we will not return
to the National Front,” she said, referring to the former name of the party,
which was dropped in 2018. Last week, her father and longtime National Front chief
Jean-Marie Le Pen called on the RN to “regain its virility” or face
“extinction.”
His
daughter was having none of it.
“We were
right on immigration, on the loss of decency and on globalization. We have won
on the ideological front, now we have to win in the ballots,” she said.
A day
before the party conference began, Le Pen had issued a reminder of her stance
on the EU, signing a declaration along with the Continent’s leading populist
parties — including Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz, Poland’s
governing Law and Justice and Italy’s League, led by Matteo Salvini — against
the bloc’s political direction.
“The EU is
becoming more and more a tool of radical forces that would like to carry out a
cultural, religious transformation and ultimately a nationless construction of
Europe, aiming to create … a European Superstate,” the parties wrote.
But back
home, some are quietly asking questions about the strategy of Le Pen’s party.
Romain
Lopez, mayor of the town of Moissac, thinks the regional election campaign
could have been better managed. “Maybe we should have relied more on local
councilors who have developed a local network,” he said. “There’s a ripple
effect, when you damage the rank and file of a party, you hurt the management
of the party.”
Speaking to
reporters Sunday, Le Pen defended her decision to ditch many local councilors
seeking to renew their mandates.
“When
somebody has been fired, it’s usually because either the quality or the
necessary psychological balance was lacking,” she said.
An RN
staffer who worked on the regional campaign said Le Pen’s personality was a
problem in the election race. “She’s a warhorse, a born actress on stage who
can campaign tirelessly,” he said, “but she struggles to connect to people.”
Leader-in-waiting
The
weekend’s meeting also featured votes for the party’s top jobs.
Le Pen, the
sole candidate for the leadership of the party, was re-elected with 98.35
percent of votes cast.
And there
was also some unexpected news.
Le Pen’s
protégé Jordan Bardella was named first vice-president and is set to run the
party when Le Pen steps away to start her presidential campaign in September.
“We have to
trust the young,” said Le Pen when introducing Bardella’s new role. “A young
general who has earnt his stripes during election battles,” was how she
described him despite his poor performance in the recent election battle for
the greater Paris region — he finished a humiliating third.
But
Bardella’s promotion should not necessarily be read as a signal that Le Pen is
grooming him as her successor. “It’s not sure that I will give up, it’s not in
my character,” she said when asked whether the next presidential election would
be her last if she fails.
Observers
also note that Bardella could act as a buffer against possible rivals, in
particular against Le Pen’s niece Marion Maréchal, who has retired from
politics but remains popular among the far right. If that is the case, Le Pen
would be taking a leaf out of her father’s playbook, who for years played his
daughter off against his heir apparent Bruno Gollnisch.

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