Bangkok Post

France’s Le Pen seeks to regain momentum after poll setback

-

>>PARIS: French far right leader Marine Le Pen this weekend hosts a party congress seeking to find new impetus for her 2022 challenge to President Emmanuel Macron after disappoint­ing results in regional elections.

Last month’s vote saw Ms Le Pen’s National Rally (RN) fail in its bid to gain control of at least one of the 13 regions of mainland France for the first time, after initial polls had indicated it could pick several up.

While the regional elections are very different to next year’s presidenti­al race, the failure raised questions about the strategy of Le Pen, who over the last years has sought to rebrand her party as a more mainstream right-wing force.

It was little consolatio­n for her that Mr Macron’s ruling centrist Republic on the Move (LREM) party fared even worse, with the traditiona­l right showing signs of a resurgence.

Most analysts have expected the 2022 presidenti­al race to come down to a duel between Mr Macron and Ms Le Pen — in a repeat of the 2017 scenario — but this is no longer seen as a forgone conclusion.

The two-day congress on this weekend is being held in Perpignan in the south of France, the largest city to be controlled by the RN, under mayor Louis Aliot.

“We must ask ourselves why our voters did not turn out. There is a general context. But we have our share of responsibi­lity. We have to analyse things well and respond to them in an effective way,” Mr Aliot told Sud Radio.

Ms Le Pen is due to deliver her keynote address to the congress today.

The party is increasing­ly riven by tensions over how far it should push what insiders call a process of “de-demonisati­on” by toning down once strident rhetoric against immigratio­n and the EU.

Ms Le Pen was widely regarded as under-performing in the 2017 campaign and there have even been whispers that another figure, such as controvers­ial TV pundit Eric Zemmour, could present a rival far-right candidacy from outside the party.

Also under pressure is the party’s deputy leader Jordan Bardella, aged just 25 and the face of the new generation, who flopped in the regional elections as a candidate for the Ile-de-France region that includes Paris.

It was Marine Le Pen’s father Jean-Marie who unleashed a shockwave through French politics in 2002 when he made the run-off against Jacques Chirac in presidenti­al elections at the helm of the National Front (FN), which his daughter then rechristen­ed the RN.

Leading grumbles about the direction the party has taken, Jean-Marie Le Pen said after the regional elections that the RN needed to re-discover its “virility” with Mr Macron and his government having tacked to the right in recent months in a bid to take the initiative on these areas that the RN regarded as its territory.

 ??  ?? UNDER PRESSURE: Marine Le Pen will deliver keynote to party congress today.
UNDER PRESSURE: Marine Le Pen will deliver keynote to party congress today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand