French
football violence fires up far right ahead of 2027 election and World Cup
Riots
fuel right-wing demands for harsher stance on immigration.
The
outbreak of violence was an opportunity for the far right to play up its
differences and go to ideological battle with the far left.
June 2,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Clea
Caulcutt
https://www.politico.eu/article/far-right-france-football-violence-world-cup-tensions/
PARIS —
France’s far right is trying to capitalize on a wave of outrage that followed
football rioting across the country, as the sport takes center stage for the
next seven weeks.
Wild
celebrations in the wake of Paris Saint-Germain’s victory in the UEFA Champions
League final descended into violence on Saturday night, much of it driven by
groups of youths from the capital’s poorer suburban districts.
The
outbreak of violence has heightened concerns about potential unrest during the
World Cup, which kicks off in North America later this month. France, as well
as Algeria and Morocco — countries with complex and often fraught relationships
with their former colonial power — have qualified for the tournament,
increasing the risk of tensions spilling over.
Far-right
National Rally President Jordan Bardella slammed “scenes reminiscent of civil
war,” caused by “predators” who smashed up shops and clashed with the police at
the weekend. “I tell the French: Wake up because soon they will [be] breaking
into your apartments,” Bardella added, as he attacked perpetrators of the
disorder.
The
National Rally leader, who is currently leading in opinion polls ahead of next
year’s presidential election, laid the blame on France’s population of
immigrant descent, which includes people who “are physically in France, but
whose spirit and heart is elsewhere,” he said.
For the
French far right, the violence is a golden opportunity to return to its
strongest themes of security and immigration after floundering in recent weeks
over economic policy. Bardella and party stalwart Marine Le Pen have appeared
to clash over how best to reform France’s state pensions and how the government
should respond to the energy crisis.
The
outbreak of violence was also an opportunity for the far right to play up its
differences and go to ideological battle with the far left, which called on the
police to show restraint. Several recent polls show that far-left leader
Jean-Luc Mélenchon could qualify for the election’s second round against
Bardella or Le Pen next year.
“If
tomorrow we are at the head of the country, we will implement penal and
security policies that will put predators out of action,” Bardella said after
the violence, adding that his party would remove benefits from parents of young
criminals and toughen up sentences for minors.
Nearly
900 people were arrested in the riots, according to Interior Minister Laurent
Nuñez on Monday, an increase of 45 percent compared with last year when PSG
also won the Champions League.
Calls for
mass deportations
Senior
European far-right figures fueled the backlash over the weekend, calling for
the mass deportations of immigrants.
Dutch
far-right leader Geert Wilders tweeted “arrest and deport them all” in response
to video footage of the unrest posted by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk,
while Alternative for Germany (AfD) leader Alice Weidel simply wrote
“remigration” online, a key catchphrase in the anti-immigration movement
calling for the large-scale expulsion of foreigners.
In
France, far-right Reconquest party leader Eric Zemmour also called for
“remigration” and described the clashes as “the first signs of a guerrilla war
[between] civilizations.”
While
Bardella and Le Pen were first to blame immigration, they struck a less
incendiary note than many European counterparts and distanced themselves from
calls to deport legal immigrants, or descendants of immigrants, en masse.
Bardella
insisted the violence showed a failure of France’s “assimilation policies” and
argued in favor of a crackdown on violence at home and stronger measures to
deal with illegal immigration.
“Those
who are foreigners and who commit offenses or crimes will be deported, those
who are French will face a penal system that has been overhauled,” he
said.
But
neither did he condemn the harsher comments from Weidel and Wilders, which come
after far-right activists, including members of AfD and Spain’s Vox, gathered
in Portugal over the weekend to call for mass deportations.
It’s not
the first time that National Rally officials have struck a more conciliatory
note than other figures on the far right. In the 2022 presidential election,
Zemmour led an inflammatory campaign on immigration, raising speculation that
he would overshadow Le Pen, who was seeking to detoxify her party after its
numerous failed bids to win the top job.
At the
time, National Rally officials insisted that the party benefited from more
radical voices campaigning on their core topics. And, ultimately, Le Pen got
her highest ever share of the vote in her third presidential campaign, with
more than 41 percent in the second round.

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