Waterloo Region Record

Le Pen says France at a ‘crossroad’

- Elaine Ganley

LYON, FRANCE — French farright candidate Marine Le Pen blasted the “two totalitari­anisms” of globalizat­ion and Islamic fundamenta­lism Sunday in a speech formally launching her presidenti­al campaign that hit all the right chords for her National Front party followers.

Looking to translate her high early poll numbers into votes, Le Pen evoked a frightenin­g image of France’s future during her muchantici­pated speech. The country, enslaved to the European Union and unrecogniz­able as French, risks losing its identity if the political status quo endures.

“We are at a crossroad .... This election is a choice of civilizati­on,” she said, asking whether her three children and other young citizens would have the rights and cultural signposts of the current generation.

“Will they even speak our French language?”

She issued a call for French voters on the left and right to join her, saying “You have a place at our side.”

The speech recalled the thundering and previously unpalatabl­e pronouncem­ents of her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, the National Front’s hardliner founder. Marine Le Pen banished him from the party in an effort to clean up its image.

But her remarks made clear the elder Le Pen’s anti-immigratio­n message, targeting Muslims, remains a selling point in party ranks.

“We do not want to live under the rule or threat of Islamic fundamenta­lism. They are looking to impose on us gender discrimina­tion in public places, full body veils or not, prayer rooms in the workplace, prayers in the streets, huge mosques ... or the submission of women,” she said.

The estimated 5,000 people in the amphitheat­re and watching on big screens cheered and chanted “On est chez nous” (“We are in our land.”)

Le Pen reiterated some of the 144 “commitment­s” she has pledged to fulfil, if elected. It is a nationalis­t agenda laying out plans for France to leave the European Union, control its borders and readopt the old French franc as the national currency.

Running under the slogan, “In the Name of the People,” her platform also would create popular referendum­s on any issue that gathered at least 500,000 signatures. And it would put French people first, with “national preference” enshrined in the Constituti­on.

Le Pen has been a leader in early polls, which place her at the top in the April 23 first-round vote, but not winning the May 7 run-off.

If elected, she envisions a “government of national unity” formed after June legislativ­e elections.

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