Political
positions of Marine Le Pen
Marine Le
Pen is a French politician, who is the president of the National Rally (French:
Rassemblement National, pronounced [ʁasɑ̃bləmɑ̃ nɑsjɔnal]; RN). During her political career she has expressed her positions on
a wide range of political issues covering economics, immigration, social
issues, and foreign policy. She has stated that as the RN's immigration
policies are better known to voters, she focuses her campaigning on the party's
economic and social programme.
Described as
more democratic and republican than her nationalist father Jean-Marie Le Pen,
the previous leader of the party, then named the National Front FN), she has attempted to detoxify
and soften the party's image. This has been done via reformulation of policy
positions, and expulsion of members accused of racism, antisemitism, or Pétainism, including her father.Marine
Le Pen has also relaxed some political positions of the party, advocating for
civil unions for same-sex couples instead of her party's previous opposition to
legal recognition of same-sex partnerships, accepting unconditional abortion
and withdrawing the death penalty from her platform.
On economic
policy, Le Pen favours protectionism as an alternative to free trade. She supports economic nationalism, the separation of investment and
retail banking,and energy diversification, and is opposed to the privatization
of public services and social security, speculation on international commodity
markets, and the Common Agricultural Policy.
Le Pen is
opposed to globalization, which she blames for various negative economic
trends, and opposes European Union supranationalism and federalism, instead
favouring a loosely confederate 'Europe of the Nations'.She has called for
France to leave the Eurozone; however, it was reported in May 2019 that she no
longer wishes for France to leave the euro currency. She has called for a
referendum on France leaving the EU. She has been a vocal opponent of the
Treaty of Lisbon, and opposes EU membership for Turkey and Ukraine. Le Pen has
pledged to take France out of NATO and the US sphere of influence. She proposes
the replacement of the World Trade Organization, and the abolition of the
International Monetary Fund.
Le Pen and
the NF claim that multiculturalism has failed, and argue for the
"de-Islamisation" of French society. Le Pen has called for a
moratorium on legal immigration. She would repeal laws allowing illegal
immigrants to become legal residents, and argues for benefits provided to immigrants to be reduced
to remove incentives for new immigrants. Following the beginning of the Arab
Spring and the European migrant crisis, she called for France to withdraw from
the Schengen Area and reinstate border controls.
On foreign
policy, Le Pen supports the establishment of a privileged partnership with
Russia, and states that Ukraine has been "subjugated" by the United
States. She is strongly critical of NATO policy in the region, Eastern European
anti-Russian sentiment, and threats of economic sanctions.
Economy and
industry
Economic
programme
On 17
October 2011, in front of the French Dexia headquarters in La Défense, Marine
Le Pen holds a press conference about the systemic banking crisis
Le Pen
opposes free trade and autarky, and advocates protectionism as a middle way.
She has compared the economy to a raging river, using this metaphor to say that
free trade is like allowing the torrent to flow unchecked and autarky
equivalent to the erection of a dam, whereas protectionism is installing a
sluice gate.
In 2010, she
strongly criticized the pension plan proposed by the government of Nicolas
Sarkozy.
She paid
tribute to the French economist Maurice Allais, who died on 9 October 2010.[37]
A laureate of the Nobel Prize in Economics (1988), Allais had expressed
reservations about the 1992 Maastricht Treaty, the single European currency,
free trade and globalization and the 2004 European Constitution.
She favours
the repeal of the 1973 Pompidou-Giscard Law, which makes it illegal for France
to borrow at zero or a low rate of interest from the Banque de France and
forces the country to borrow at a higher rate on the international financial
markets. In her view, this law is the reason for the growth in national debt.
She claimed that in 2010 France had paid 1.355 trillion euros of accrued
interest on loans at a time when the national debt represented around 1.650
trillion euros.
She has
expressed support for French public utilities, civil servants, and the public
sector in general. She opposes the planned privatization of the French Post
Office (French: La Poste), saying that the move would "result in the
closure of post offices in rural areas where the relinquishment of the state is
already high". In October 2009, she claimed that three post offices had
disappeared each day in France since 1 January 2009. She said that the
liberalization of the French public utilities had been ratified by the former
Prime Minister Lionel Jospin during the Barcelona summit on 15 and 16 March
2002. She also stated
that the UMP government planned a "progressive privatization of the French
Social Security system from 2011", imposed by the financial markets.
During a
press conference in June 2011, she called for the reintroduction of the Havana
Charter and the establishment of an "International Trade
Organization" to replace the World Trade Organization, in order to reform
the world trade exchanges.Signed by 53 countries and rejected by the US in
1951, the Havana Charter was a trade agreement that would have established an
international currency known as the bancor.[44] She claimed that the
"Havana Charters's proposals perfectly fit into her economic
philosophy" and that "its first article conciliates international
trade and employment".
During her
speech at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. in November 2011, she
proposed "three essential solutions to stop the current world systemic
crisis and turn the world towards greater justice and greater prosperity":
reintroduction of a "polymetallic standard" in the international
monetary systems as a world standard of reference and exchanges in order to
establish a "free monetary system" and combat speculation; the
ratification of an updated Havana Charter by the 1948 signatory nations and
other countries, in support of "reasonable protectionism that encourages
cooperation in trade among nations through the end of 'unbridled free
trade'"; application of the 1933 Glass–Steagall Act, which legally
separated investment banking and commercial banking, to "the banking
system of each country". In her view, these solutions would aid the global
growth of employment, thanks to the inclusion of "full employment" as
one of the main targets of the Havana Charter, and industry, thanks to the
authorization of state aid in the Charter's Article 13.
In October
2011, she called for drastic reform of the banking sector, separating by law
deposit banks from merchant banks. She said that "deposit banks should be
rescued by temporary and partial nationalization". In her view, "the
balance sheet of the banks should be the object of a transparency
operation".
In October
2011, she proposed seven measures to save €30 billion per year, in order to
preserve France's AAA credit rating. The biggest savings were to come from
prevention of fraudulent welfare payments and the closing of tax loopholes
(together €18.5 bn), reducing local spending (€4bn), and ceasing payments to
the EU (€7bn).
Former
president of the Mouvement des Entreprises de France (MEDEF) Laurence Parisot
strongly criticises the FN's economic and social programme often. Le Pen
replied that "the FN is not a friend of the CAC 40 and is fighting the
social regression brought about by MEDEF and inflicted on the French people by
the allies of the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) and the Socialist Party
(PS)". After criticism from Parisot, she stated that the FN's economic
project was based on "construction of a strong, protective and strategist
state, reasonable protections at the borders, support for small and medium
enterprises, and reclaiming monetary sovereignty, only able to assure France's
recovery". She also described Parisot as "the exact opposite of her
democratic and republican project, a project of hope which puts back man and
nation in the centre of politics". After Parisot published a book
criticising the FN's economic policies, Le Pen proposed a "direct and
public debate" between them.
In 2021, Le
Pen said she wants to privatise public broadcasting and nationalise motorways.
Agriculture
and environment
In 2010, Le
Pen said that after 2013, the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) would be
"unable to protect our farmers from speculators and savage global
competition, or compensate for the excesses of the multinationals of the food
processing industry and large-scale distributors" and would "remain
wedged between the ultra-liberal and internationalist market logic of the
European Commission and a future 'green' CAP, in reality serving the
neo-capitalists of ecological business".
At the Paris
International Agricultural Show on 25 February 2011, Le Pen denounced the CAP
as an "unbearable bureaucracy" and called for it to be replaced with
a "French agricultural policy". She also claimed that leaving the EU
would allow 15 billion Euros to be allocated to the French agricultural sector.
She claims
that "internationalist organisations" such as the EU, Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO), United Nations and G-20 are directly
responsible for food crises such as the 2007-08 global crisis. She advocates
food independence with regard to multinationals, and "a realignment of
farm aid politics to the third countries to favour their food sovereignty, in
particular by the reintroduction of localized food crops".
She
advocates the implementation of the "autarky of big spaces" and an "economy in concentric
circles".She said that it is an "ecological heresy to consume
products grown 20,000 km away and recycle waste thousands km further". She
claims that we should "produce to the closest", "distribute on
the spot", "consume as a priority products of its region" and
then "in the nearby region" if not produced on the spot. She would
seek to implement "contracts of cooperation" for goods like coffee
which are not produced in Europe.
Energy and
transport
Marine Le
Pen is a frequent critic of sharp rises in energy prices, such as gas, gasoline, and electricity, which reduce the
purchasing power of working and middle-class families. She has blamed these
rises on the liberalization of the European energy sector since 1996.
She supports
an immediate 20% reduction of the domestic tax on oil products (TIPP), a
windfall tax on the profits of the largest gas and oil companies and measures
to combat international speculation on basic products such as food and energy.
According to Le Pen, the state "has the authority to be the guarantor of
public utilities, being the exclusive owner of the strategic companies of
public utility and the regulator of tariffs".
After a
deadly incident on 12 September 2011 in the Centraco nuclear installation on
the Marcoule Nuclear Site, she said that the accident "illustrated the
danger of this energy and the necessity to consider a progressive and
well-thought-out exit from nuclear power". She added that the government
"must secure the 58 French nuclear power plants and invest in research to
process nuclear waste". She supports energy diversification in France,
including research into hydrogen.
She favours
accompanied combined transport (ferroutage) and public transport.
In October
2021, she stated that she supports the construction of new nuclear reactors,
including small modular reactors. She also said that she opposes subsidies to
solar power and wind power, claiming that they are "not renewable"
and "intermittent".She stated, "I will put a stop to all
construction of new wind parks and I will launch a big project to dismantle
them".
Taxation
Le Pen has
described corporate tax as "a crying injustice", claiming that the
corporations of the CAC 40 pay 8% corporate tax whereas small offices/home
offices, small and medium enterprises, craftsmen and shopkeepers pay 33.33%.
She supports a corporate tax which varies according to the destination of
profits: heavier when the profits benefit shareholders and lighter when the
profits are used for profit sharing, salaries, employment and productive
investment.
European
Union and globalization
European
Union
Le Pen has
blamed globalization, intergovernmental organizations, 'euro-mondialism', free
trade and ultra-liberalism for the decline of the agriculture and fishing
sectors,[68][69] deindustrialization, offshoring and structural unemployment.She
opposes supranationalism (in favour of a 'Europe of the nations' as a loose
confederation of nation states),the euro and the eurozone, the Brussels
technocracy, and EU federalism.
She opposes
the direct European tax favoured by the leaders of the European Parliament and
European Commission, claiming that an indirect European tax already exists
since France is a net annual contributor to the EU budget by up to 7 billion
euros annually.
She has
described the Treaty of Lisbon as the "gravedigger of the independence and
identity of European nations" and the "executioner of public
utilities in the name of a cult of profitability and free competition – both
mortal enemies of public interest". In her view, the Treaty of Lisbon is
identical to the European Constitution rejected by voters in referendums in
France and in the Netherlands, and therefore should not have been passed by the
French parliament without another referendum. She also criticised amendments
made to the treaty by the EU leaders, which she viewed as aimed at
"solving the euro" and "forever eliminating the budgetary
sovereignty of the states to institute a kind of supranational European
monetary fund".
She is
opposed to the EU membership for Turkey, in favour of a "privileged
partnership", and also opposes the accession of Ukraine to the European
Union, while supporting association status. She previously campaigned for a
referendum on France leaving the EU. Despite have previously sought France
leaving the body, she no longer supports a Frexit, preferring instead a
restructuring.
Euro and
eurozone
She is a
vocal critic of the Euro and calls for France to leave the single currency,
claiming that the adoption of the Euro caused prices to rise, and leaving the
Euro would lead to an increase in purchasing power.Citing economic data from
Eurostat on annual average growth, unemployment, and GDP gap, Le Pen noted that
"the European countries which did not join the euro have performed better
than countries in the Eurozone for ten years". Interviewed in October 2011
by Adam Boulton on Sky News, she cited the UK's relative stability as an
example of how France's economy would not necessarily suffer from leaving the
euro.
She argues
that France should leave the euro gradually, with a new conversion rate fixed
to 1 euro = 1 franc, and should negotiate a "grouped departure" from
the euro and eurozone, at the same time as other European countries
experiencing economic problems due to the single currency. After widespread
criticism of her economic plans from the government and other commentators, she
published a new document describing the successful departure of the United
Kingdom, Spain and Italy from the European Monetary System (EMS) in September
1992.
She asserted
that a competitive devaluation (J curve) would "quickly have a positive
effect on employment and purchasing power, stimulating industry, international
trade and enabling the fight against offshoring". Quoting extracts from a
book by French economist Alain Cotta, she claimed that devaluation of the franc
would not bring about inflation.
She predicts
a "total economic federalization of the eurozone". In her view, this
option "which is favoured by the European technostructure, presents all
the features of a totalitarian utopia". She claims that a "monstrous
superstructure, already named 'European Ministry of Finance', would opaquely
decide our policies on education, health and security". In her view,
"the federal headlong rush also supposes a massive financial transfer of
our countries towards Southern and Eastern Europe, to the detriment of the most
vulnerable French people".
Opposing
successive bailout plans, she expressed regret that "the contributing
countries, France in particular, throw in the hole of European debt billions
which worsen their deficits and bring them closer to the eye of the
cyclone".[86] In her view, "the hundred of billions paid did not
produce any result, will not solve any problem, will not rescue a eurozone
already in bankruptcy" and increased France's debt, already substantially
increased during Nicolas Sarkozy's presidency. Fearing further debt for France,
she opposed any new bailout plan for struggling Eurozone members.
She claimed
that despite the expansion of powers for the European Financial Stability
Facility, declarations of support from the EU, and new austerity plans, Greece
was "sinking", societal devastation was intensifying and public anger
was increasing. In July 2011, she claimed that "after the seventeen
billions of the first Greek bailout plan, the fifteen billions of the new
assistance plan to Greece will load [France's] own already huge debt". In
a press conference in front of the National Assembly on 6 September 2011, she
denounced the approval by MPs of the second Greek bailout plan.
It was
reported in May 2019 that Le Pen no longer wants France to leave the euro
currency. It was reported that she instead wants to reform the EU through
policies such as abolishing the unelected European Commission to transform the
union in what she calls "a union of national states".
Geopolitics
and intergovernmental organizations
Interviewed
in October 2011 by Kommersant, Le Pen stated that she believed in a
"multipolar world".She regularly denounces France's bandwagoning
towards the USA. She has pledged to pull France out of NATO, and wants France
to revise its geostrategic relations with the US, to regain the geopolitical
independence promoted by Charles de Gaulle.
In May 2011,
she claimed that the "old institutions" such as the World Trade
Organization (WTO), World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) were
"expired", and advocated the replacement of the WTO by an
'International Trade Organization', founded on the principles of protectionism,
and support for small and medium enterprises.
She has
described the IMF as "an infernal machine at the service of the
ultraliberal ideology" and "an extremely harmful institution",
arguing that the IMF's structural adjustment plans "systematically result
in privatization of public utilities, dismantling of the state, a drop in
salaries and pensions, and removal of protections at borders". She
expressed the view that "citizens are always the first victims of the
IMF", using the examples of Argentina in 2001 and Greece in 2010-11. She
argued that the IMF is responsible for "disastrous results" including
"rising debts and a sharp increase in the rate of financial crises for two
decades". She thus advocates the abolition of the IMF.[26] On 28 July
2011, she responded to the publication of the IMF's annual report on France by
writing to IMF managing director Christine Lagarde, proposing four measures to
get France out of debt and fix its public accounts.
Immigration
Illegal
immigration
In July
2011, she wrote an open letter to policemen, gendarmes and customs officers
regarding illegal immigration, criticizing the "passivity and inactivity" of the
UMP government and its "blind submissiveness to very questionable European
injunctions". Denouncing a "sharp fall in deportations since the
beginning of 2011 after a decrease of almost 5% in 2010", she claimed that
"most of the detention centres are almost empty in 2011", and called
for the deportation of all illegal immigrants in France to their country of
origin. Le Pen supports repealing the law allowing the regularization of
illegal immigrants.
She calls
for a "radical change of politics in order to drastically reduce upstream
the influx of illegal immigrants towards France", meaning cutting the
"suction pumps" of illegal immigration, such as the aide médicale
d'Ėtat (AME), which grants free medical care to illegal immigrants. Describing
the AME as a "state scandal" and a "financial black hole for the
French social security system", she promised to repeal the AME if
elected.[15][31] She accused Nicolas Sarkozy of imposing health-care
immigration on the French people.
In February
2011, she predicted that in the wake of the Arab Spring, Europe and
particularly France would experience a surge in illegal immigration, and
criticised the EU's "tragic helplessness to respond to this new migratory
challenge" and inability to control numbers of migrants.
Le Pen
travelled to Lampedusa on 14 March 2011 with FN vice-president Louis Aliot and
Mario Borghezio MEP (Lega Nord), meeting the island's mayor Bernardino De
Rubeis (Movement for the Autonomies) and visiting a housing center for illegal
immigrants. She said: "Europe can't welcome everyone... We would be
pleased to take them all in our boat, but it's not big enough. We'll all go to
the bottom. We would be adding one misery to another" and expressing her
support to the inhabitants of Lampedusa who "have had the feeling of being
completely abandoned". Around 9,000 migrants had travelled to Lampedusa by
boat since protests in Tunisia began in mid-January 2011. During a press
conference in Rome on 15 March 2011, she said the situation in Lampedusa showed
"the helplessness of the EU" and how "each nation is more
efficient at dealing with the issue", and proposed some solutions.
Le Pen
called for France to withdraw from the Schengen Area and reinstate border
controls, accusing the UMP government of covering up its inaction and deceiving
the public.She criticised a technical adjustment to the Schengen Agreement
proposed by Nicolas Sarkozy and Silvio Berlusconi during a French-Italian
summit on 26 April 2011, saying it would not achieve anything, and that only
withdrawal from the Schengen Area would be sufficient to stop immigration. She
claims that traffickers and smuggling networks "thrive when a country does
not control its borders".
Le Pen
blamed the 2017 social unrest in French Guiana on illegal immigration.
Legal
immigration
Marine Le
Pen has called for a moratorium on legal immigration.[29][105] In a press
conference on 21 February 2011, she released alternative figures for 2010
immigration, based on data she said had been transmitted by officials of the
Minister of the Interior, commented on the welfare benefits to which legal and
illegal immigrants are entitled, and announced some proposals based on measures
implemented in the UK and the Netherlands.[106] In July 2011, she criticised
the UMP government for allocating 203,000 residence permits in 2010, an
increase since 2000.
Le Pen
expressed her approval at the results of a Swiss referendum of 28 November
2010, when voters approved a popular initiative to deport foreign nationals
convicted of crimes, describing the result as the "great victory of the
Swiss people against the ruling elite".
Interviewed
by The Daily Telegraph in 2010, she praised David Cameron's pledge to cut net
annual immigration to UK from around 200,000 to "tens of thousands".
In February 2011, after Cameron expressed a rejection of multiculturalism
during a speech at the Munich Security Conference, Le Pen congratulated him
again for what she claimed was an endorsement of the FN's views on the failure
of multiculturalism and immigration.
Citizenship
and nationality
Le Pen has
argued that citizenship is indivisible from nationality and rests on the
equality of all people before the law; the latter should preclude preferential
treatment based on the membership of a social, ethnic or religious category. As
a result, she opposes affirmative action in favour of "republican
meritocracy".
She has said
that filiation should be the normal route to French nationality, with
naturalization the exception, saying that "nationality is inherited or
merited".[Instead, naturalization should only be possible after checks to
ensure assimilation to republican principles. She supports the abolition of
dual citizenship and the automatic acquisition of French nationality.[105] On
30 May 2011, she wrote to Members of Parliament about dual citizenship,
describing it as "one of the main ferments of breach of the republican
cohesion that France needs more than ever and a potent brake on the
assimilation of French people from immigration".
She favours
stripping of French nationality for foreign nationals who break the law in
France, and deportation to their country of origin for foreigners committing
serious crimes and offences in France. She favours a 'French first' policy with
regard to employment, welfare and accommodation.
Communitarianism
and secularism
Emphasising
that the FN is a non-denominational party, Le Pen regularly states her
commitment to secularism in French society. She vigorously defends the 1905
French law on the Separation of the Churches and the State, which stipulates
that the French republic does not recognise, grant a salary to, or subsidise
any form of religious worship.
She supports
a ban on any communitarian or religious requirements in schools, and an
amendment to the Constitution stating that the French republic does not
recognize any community (denominations and ethnic groups).She is opposed to the
financing of mosques with public funds, and would also prohibit their financing
from foreign assets. She considers the construction, maintenance and funding of
places of worship to be a matter for groups of worshippers operating within a
regulated framework. She has called for the "separation of the mosque and
the state" and opposes the training of Imams by the French republic.
Le Pen
congratulated the Swiss people following the 2009 referendum when Swiss voters
approved a popular initiative banning the construction of new minarets.
In February
2010, Le Pen criticised the fast food chain Quick, after it announced that
eight of its franchises would offer exclusively halal meals, in what Le Pen
described as an "accelerated policy of Islamisation". She added that
she considered it a "breach of the constitutional principle of
secularism", as Quick had been owned by the French state since October
2006 and that the government was the owner of Quick through the Caisse des
dépôts et consignations (Qualium Investissement subsidiary), which held 99.63%
of its capital.
In an
interviewed with Dutch station Radio 1 in June 2011, she said that unlike the
leader of the PVV Geert Wilders, she was not "waging war against
Islam", but "fighting the Islamisation of French society".
Emphasizing her differences from Wilders, she said: "That's the difference
between Geert Wilders and me. He reads the Qur’an literally: you can’t
interpret the Qur’an – or indeed the Bible – literally. I resist
fundamentalists who want to impose their will and law on France. Sharia Law is
not compatible with our principles, our values or democracy."
Social
issues
Marine Le
Pen supports abortion remaining legal, and opposes attempts to abolish public
subsidies for abortion. However, she has commented that abortion is a serious
moral issue that she feels is too often regarded as trivial by French
society.[citation needed] Le Pen's support for liberal abortion laws has drawn
her into conflict with her niece, Marion Maréchal-Le Pen, who is more actively
opposed to abortion.
Le Pen
opposes the repeal of the 1975 Veil Law (French: Loi Veil). She claims that an
unfavourable socio-economic background is a determining factor for the majority
of women who have had an abortion. Consequently, she has called for a policy
more conducive to the nurturing and raising of children. She also favours
policies aimed at increasing the birth rate.
She is
strictly opposed to euthanasia.
Her party's
2017 program stated being in favor of civil unions for same-sex couples. During
the debate on same-sex marriage, the FN was neutral and allowed its members to
have their own stance, contrary to the other major right-wing party, the UMP,
that was opposed.
She
supported a referendum on whether to reinstate capital punishment in France,
which was abolished in 1981, until 2017.[126] However, she rescinded the
party's traditional support for the death penalty with her February 2017
campaign launch, instead announcing a policy of life imprisonment for the most
serious crimes.
In 2022, she
again repeated her support for a referendum on whether to reinstate capital
punishment in France.
National
politics and overseas
In a press
conference at the NF's headquarters to mark the 70th anniversary of the Appeal
of 18 June, Le Pen denounced the weakening of the nation state, German
domination within the EU and subservience to Atlanticism, drawing a parallel
with the fall of France in June 1940. She stated that her goal was to become
"the personification of national ambition and to return to France a spirit
of greatness and an awareness of its place in history".
She has
emphasised her commitment to France's territorial sovereignty, including
overseas departments and territories. During a debate on Radio Cité Genève with
Éric Bertinat, an SVP member of the Grand Council of Geneva, she vehemently
opposed his proposal that the French departments of Ain and Haute-Savoie be
incorporated into Switzerland.
In a speech
at the FN congress in Tours in January 2011, she noted that France is present
in three oceans and is the second largest Exclusive Economic Zone in the world,
covering 11 million km2. She also emphasized the importance of the French language and
Francophonie, saying that "our national language is spread across the five
continents, a privilege that it shares only with English" and that
"the Francophonie has to vibrate in the lands of Asia, Americas, Europe
and Africa again".
In April
2011, she wrote a letter to all the prefects of France, denouncing "the
weakening of the state", "the discouragement of its personnel"
and "the ineffectiveness of its governance". She argued that the
history of France indicated that as soon as there is a gap in the state, the local
baronies reconstruct. She proposed a policy of re-establishment of the state
which she said would rely on high-ranking civil servants.

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