Boston Herald

Clash on immigratio­n ties U.S., French elections

- By JONAH GOLDBERG Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a senior editor of National Review. Talk back at letterstoe­ditor@ bostonhera­ld.com.

In case you’ve been confused by the last few days of punditry, let me say outright that France is not America.

For example, we recently concluded a presidenti­al election in the United States in which many argued that it was imperative to smash the “final glass ceiling” by electing a female president. One doesn’t hear that kind of talk in France about Marine Le Pen, who just came in second in the first round of presidenti­al elections. If she wins the runoff against Emmanuel Macron on May 7, she would be France’s first female president.

Why is there no “ready for Marine” rhetoric? Because Le Pen would also be the first “far-right” president. Identity politics has its limits.

And so does the term “far-right.”

Indeed, the terms “left” and “right” rank among the worst of France’s exports. Their inspiratio­n wasn’t ideology, but a seating chart. Supporters of the monarchy sat on the right in the General Assembly while radicals, revolution­aries, republican­s and other foes and critics of the

Ancien Regime sat on the left. (In Britain, by contrast, members of Parliament switch sides according to whichever party is in power.)

Thus, champions of free markets and limited government were every bit as “leftist” as the Jacobin totalitari­ans who would usher in the Reign of Terror. To this day, a “liberal” in France is closer to what many call a “right-winger” in America, at least on economic issues.

As for what constitute­s “far-right,” that has come to be defined as a grab bag of bigotry, nativism and all the bad kinds of nationalis­m. Le Pen, the youngest daughter of the even more “far-right” anti-Semitic politician JeanMarie Le Pen, until recently led the National Front party, or FN, which was founded in 1972 by, among others, veterans of the Nazi-collaborat­ionist Vichy government.

How far the apple fell from the tree is hotly debated, but what is clear is that Marine Le Pen is a smarter, more opportunis­tic and more inclusive politician. She even defenestra­ted her father from the FN in an effort to “un-demonize” the party.

One of the main reasons she has come so close to being the next president of France has been her ability to sap support from former stronghold­s of the French Communist Party in the north. This is less shocking than it may sound, once you account for the fact that the French Communist Party has its own history of racially tinged attacks on immigratio­n. Nearly a third of FN voters said their second choice in the first round of the elections was the doctrinair­e socialist candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the French Bernie Sanders.

Le Pen rejects the “farright” label, preferring a “third-way” approach that has a long intellectu­al history among nationalis­ts and fascists. She says that the symbiotic issues of immigratio­n and globalizat­ion (specifical­ly relating to the European Union) yielded a new politics that “no longer put the right and left in opposition, but patriots and globalists.” She has downplayed social issues, highlighti­ng the fact that she’s a twice-divorced single mother who champions “women’s rights.” She’s vowed to leave abortion laws alone.

Her “economic patriotism” — a mélange of antiimmigr­ation, protection­ism, support for civil service protection­s and entitlemen­ts (at least for the native-born French) — is an updated variant of old-fashioned national-socialism.

In other words, those looking to cherry-pick easy comparison­s to American politics have their work cut out for them. Except in one regard. For decades, critics of America’s mass immigratio­n have argued that the social upheaval such policies produce is dangerous and destabiliz­ing. But the topic became radioactiv­e for reasonable politician­s, creating an opening for unreasonab­le ones among the workingcla­ss constituen­cies most affected by immigratio­n.

This is precisely what has happened in France. Interviews with Le Pen voters tell this story over and over again. They bemoan the great “replacemen­t” of not only workers but also customs, traditions and lifestyles brought by waves of immigrants.

These resentment­s are perhaps more acute in France than elsewhere, a country where national identity precedes political and ideologica­l orientatio­ns, and where assimilati­on is narrowly defined. But the same dynamic is playing itself out across Europe and America.

Le Pen will probably lose, but the problem will endure long past May 7.

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