The Sun (Malaysia)

Don’t rejoice Macron won – ask why Le Pen almost did

- BY SEAN O’GRADY

ALTHOUGH Marine Le Pen’s showing fell short of the worst fears of her divided and flawed adversarie­s, for any neo-fascistic party to score the level of support the Front National has in a leading, mature liberal democracy is, by turns, appalling, shocking and terrifying. We need to regain perspectiv­e and face what is happening.

There is no necessary reason to believe the far right will recede into the jumble of cranky clericalis­t sects that characteri­sed French fascism. Within a short time, it has gone mainstream and almost grabbed power.

So simply because she has become a household name across Europe and has sought to radiate a homely detoxified appeal shouldn’t make Le Pen’s achievemen­t any less historic.

Democrats should reflect and act on the fact that she has come so close, much closer than her father two decades ago, to gaining executive authority in a global power.

Whereas Jean Marie Le Pen barely added to his vote in the second round of voting when he challenged President Jacques Chirac back in 2002, his daughter has succeeded in broadening her party’s appeal markedly. Who is to say that this is the high point and the end of the story?

The rise of the far right in France to unpreceden­ted levels of popularity is like the relative triumphs of the far right in contests in Austria and the Netherland­s; it points to a deep malaise in European and particular­ly French politics. The French are deeply pessimisti­c and a glance at the unemployme­nt figures and life in the banlieues explains why. Social dislocatio­n, radicalisa­tion, racism, terror and the rise of extremism can be traced back to the long stagnation of the French economy. The EU and the unsolved weaknesses in the euro system must also share in the blame for a near political cataclysm.

Elsewhere in Eastern Europe, notably in Hungary and Poland, a nasty strain of authoritar­ianism is taking hold. More widely still, from Trump to Erdogan and from Putin and Modi to Xi, and now also in Britain, hard nationalis­m is hardly in retreat.

Europe is unlikely to survive as a bastion of decent liberal values if its politician­s continue to fail its people, fail to listen to the discomfort about globalisat­ion; about migration; about, above all, a lack of jobs for the young. Sometimes forgotten, that economic weakness was also the spark for the Arab Spring, and much of the tragedy that has followed it. These financial forces have driven much of today’s disjointed politics.

The irony is that the very policies which could deliver economic growth are unpopular. What is needed is some leadership in the form of political figures prepared to explain to the public why their economy is broken and why the easy answers of protection­ism and migration bans do more harm than good.

Macron showed promise as a reforming economics minister. He is smart and he knows the stakes are high. If he complacent­ly fails to create jobs, Le Pen or some similar successor will be back. They only have to be lucky once. – The Independen­t

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