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Europe
Le Pen and French far Right achieve record popularity
2006-05-21
As the French government tears itself apart amid a trumped-up corruption scandal, and the socialist opposition fails to capitalise on the chaos, Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of the far-Right National Front (FN), has gained record levels of support - without saying a word in public.

According to a survey in the news magazine Le Point last week, 22 per cent of the French population has a "favourable opinion" of Mr Le Pen - up five per cent from the previous month.

The rating is far higher than the 16 per cent popularity which Mr Le Pen scored in polls four years ago, just before the presidential elections in which he shocked France by beating the socialist prime minister, Lionel Jospin, in the first round. He lost to Jacques Chirac in the second round and political commentators insisted his success was a blip that would never happen again.

"His ideas have never been so popular," said his daughter and likely successor, Marine. She is "very, very optimistic" about her father's chances in next year's presidential election. "He will be in the second round, the only question is who he will be against," Miss Le Pen said.

"It's a case of people realising that reality is reflecting what we have been saying for the past 30 years. It is also because the political system is caving in on itself."

The swing to the extreme Right has been attributed to a series of events, during a period of economic gloom, that have crippled the government: last autumn's rioting in the suburbs; student violence over a proposed employment law; and now the Clearstream dirty tricks scandal.

Polls have shown the FN relentlessly on the rise since last November's violence in the immigrant ghettos on the outskirts of France's biggest cities. In October, eight per cent of French people said they would vote for Mr Le Pen's party.

By December that had risen to 11 per cent, and by February it was 12 per cent. In March, at the height of the student riots, would-be FN voters increased to 13 per cent and in April they were 14 per cent.

Before 2002, the highest point for the FN, which was created in 1972, was in the mid-1990s, when the party took over six mayoral posts, capitalising on increasing concerns over immigration.

Supporters believe that Mr Le Pen's silence over the Clearstream scandal has helped to distinguish him from the tarnished crowd.

Most critics of the French government have had a field day over the scandal, which has pitted President Chirac and the prime minister, Dominique de Villepin, against Nicolas Sarkozy, the foreign minister - all members of the same right-of-centre party.

But Mr Le Pen has made a point of keeping out of the political mudslinging, telling friends that Clearstream is nothing more than a "sordid masquerade".

"There's no reason for me to attack these people with my little hammer when they're smashing each other up with a road drill," he said privately, according to Le Figaro newspaper.

Both Mr Sarkozy and Mr Chirac have attempted to win over FN supporters, offering increasingly hardline immigration policies.

But Miss Le Pen dismissed Mr Sarkozy's tough new immigration bill, which was passed by the lower house of parliament last week, and his declaration that foreigners in France could either "like it or leave".

She said: "Either he has changed and is convinced by our ideas, in which case why insult us, or he is obsessed with getting into power no matter what. "Personally I believe it is the latter." Pollsters who have been studying voting intentions - separate from popularity ratings - suggest it would be unwise to write off the FN leader in next year's vote.

In April - before the Clearstream scandal - a survey by the Sofres polling company predicted that Mr Le Pen could finish third in the first round of voting for the presidency.

It put him behind Mr Sarkozy and the Socialist contender Ségolène Royal, but ahead of Mr de Villepin.
Posted by:Sheling Unomons1998

#3  And let's not forget: France's "far right" is somewhere to the left of Ted Kennedy.
Posted by: xbalanke   2006-05-21 17:54  

#2  IMO, Le Pen is just a scarecrow of the French establishment.
Posted by: gromgoru   2006-05-21 17:42  

#1  Big deal... even if he goes to 2nd turn (quite possible, the FN score is always and probably willingly minored by polls), he will lose 80/20... and even in the remotely probable possibility he's elected, he's 80 and will have not a snowball in hell chance of governing, having ALL of the Establishment up in arm against him.

Anyway, he's very ambigouus when it comes to islam, and while I like him for he is something of a monkeywrench in the machinery (though he's been instrumentalized by the System, and he perfectly knows it), he's anti-US, most probably antisemite (that didn't prevent about 20% of french jews to vote for him in 2002, more than his overall 18%, based on his anti-immigration/anti-arab stance), pro-Saddam, he thinks Iran should have the Bomb,...
I prefer De Villiers, but he will do about 5%.

Still, there are talks of a common front for the national right (Pépé Le Pen, De Villiers, and Mégret). who knows?

France is an oligarchy, backed by an another oligarchy (Brussel), it *won't* change, reform, anything,... until there is some kind of "paradigm shift", to use big words I don't fully understand. And this will come after say a real crisis, brought either by external event (this is how our Republics fall), or a State bankruptcy.
Then, all bets are open on what come next, with the caveat that leftists and their ideas are well supported by the public (endocrination by the national education system) and are well-organized.
And of course, there is the muslim minority, which is now placated by welfare and an unhinged underground economy. When th emoney dry off, anything can happen.
The same is true for the EU I think. It won't reform, it will fall.
Posted by: anonymous5089   2006-05-21 06:43  

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