Chattanooga Times Free Press

Candidate Le Pen lifts former rival’s speech

- BY LORI HINNANT AND ANGELA CHARLTON

PARIS — Far-right candidate Marine Le Pen lifted verbatim parts of a speech by a former rival in what her critics called plagiarism and she said was a deliberate “wink” to him to woo his conservati­ve voters in France’s presidenti­al runoff Sunday.

The stolen words and casual reaction by Le Pen and her team marked the latest shocking developmen­t in a French presidenti­al campaign like no other. Perhaps more surprising­ly, there was little sign it would seriously damage Le Pen.

Polls consider her centrist rival Emmanuel Macron the front-runner in the vote, seen as a test of global populism and decisive moment for the European Union.

Le Pen borrowed from a speech delivered last month by Francois Fillon, the former Republican­s party candidate, about France’s important role in Europe and the world.

Speaking April 15, Fillon described France as a force reaching out on multiple fronts:

“The English Channel and the North Sea opening onto the Anglo-Saxon world and to the immense northern spaces. … The Atlantic, which has opened us for centuries onto the great sea and brings us adventures. The Mediterran­ean, the cradle of some of history’s oldest and richest civilizati­ons. … The Pyrenees, first of all, engaging France with that immense Hispanic and Latin universe. The Alps border, with Italy our sister and beyond that central Europe, the Balkans and eastern Europe. … France is something more and much more than an economic, agricultur­al or military power.”

Le Pen, speaking Monday at a Paris region campaign rally, said:

“The English Channel and the North Sea opening onto the Anglo-Saxon world and to the immense northern spaces. The Mediterran­ean, the cradle of the oldest and richest civilizati­ons. The Pyrenees, first of all, engaging France with that immense Hispanic and Latin universe. The Alps border, with Italy our sister and beyond that central Europe, the Balkans and eastern Europe. … France is something more and much more than an economic, agricultur­al or military power.”

Like three of her aides earlier in the day, Le Pen used the word “wink” to describe the extracts copied word for word from Fillon. At no point in the speech did she cite Fillon or acknowledg­e the source.

“I totally own this wink,” she said in a Tuesday night interview with French broadcaste­r TF1 news. Benefit yourself and others by participat­ing in a clinical research trial. Do you currently use basal insulin with or without oral antidiabet­ic medication? Study participan­ts receive access to trial medication, blood glucose testing equipment, medical care and may receive compensati­on for time and travel.

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