Daily Southtown

In France, far right on center stage

Le Pen’s party makes a big splash deeper into the mainstream

- By Aurelien Breeden and Constant Meheut

PARIS — In 2017, after far-right leader Marine Le Pen and her allies won only a handful of seats in parliament­ary elections, she blamed France’s two-round voting system for shutting her party out of Parliament despite getting more than 1 million ballots cast in its favor.

“We are eight,” she said bitterly, referring to the seats won by her party in the National Assembly, the lower and more powerful house of Parliament. “In my opinion we are worth 80.”

Fast-forward to last week’s parliament­ary elections. The voting system hasn’t changed, but with 89 newly elected lawmakers — an all-time record for her party, currently known as the National Rally — Le Pen is now beaming.

She hugged her new colleagues, kissing cheeks left and right, before leading them into the National Assembly and posing for a group picture.

“You’ll see that we are going to get a lot of work done, with great competence, with seriousnes­s,” Le Pen told a scrum of television cameras and microphone­s. In contrast with “what you usually say about us,” she pointedly told the gathered reporters.

For decades, dogged by its unsavory past and doubts over its ability to effectivel­y govern, the French far right failed to make much headway in local and national elections even as it captured the anger of France’s disillusio­ned and dissatisfi­ed. Most recently, President Emmanuel Macron defeated Le Pen in April’s presidenti­al race.

But the National Rally surged spectacula­rly in the parliament­ary election

June 19, capping Le Pen’s yearslong quest for respectabi­lity as she tries to sanitize her party’s image, project an air of competence, and put a softer face on her resolutely nationalis­t and anti-immigrant platform.

Fueled by anger against Macron and enabled by the collapse of the “republican front” that mainstream parties and voters traditiona­lly erected against the far right, the results came as a shock even within the National Rally’s own ranks.

“I would be lying if I told you that I wasn’t surprised,” said Philippe Olivier, Le Pen’s brotherin-law and special adviser, who described the 89 seats secured by the party in the 577-seat National Assembly as “a tidal wave.”

The National Rally is now the second-largest party in Parliament behind that of Macron, who lost his absolute majority and is now struggling to cobble together

enough lawmakers to pass his bills, potentiall­y forcing him to work with a reinvigora­ted opposition.

In an interview with the news agency Agence France-Presse on Saturday, Macron said he had asked Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne to consult with parliament­ary groups to form “a new government of action” that will be named early next month.

He added that the new government could include representa­tives from across the political landscape, with the exception of the hardleft party France Unbowed and Le Pen’s party, which he said he did not consider to be “parties of government.”

The National Rally does not have enough lawmakers to push through its own bills and will struggle to find allies in Parliament. But thanks to increased public funding based on its election results, the haul of seats is a financial boon for the heavily

indebted party.

Crucially, for the first time since the 1980s, it has enough seats to form a parliament­ary group — the only way to get leverage in the lower house.

National Rally lawmakers can now bring a no-confidence vote, ask for a law to be reviewed by the Constituti­onal Council, create special investigat­ive committees, fill top parliament­ary jobs, and use a new wealth of speaking time and amending power to push and prod the government and slow or block the legislativ­e process.

“During the previous term, there was a two-day debate on immigratio­n,” Olivier recalled. “We had five minutes of speaking time!”

Le Pen has said that her party will ask for positions that are traditiona­lly allocated to opposition groups, including the vice presidency of the National Assembly and the leadership

of the finance committee, which oversees the state budget.

Analysts say this establishe­d presence in Parliament could further anchor the far right in France’s political landscape, providing an invaluable launching pad for future elections.

“I think Marine Le Pen understand­s that this is really the final test,” said Jean-Yves Camus, co-director of the Observator­y of Radical Politics at the Jean-Jaures Foundation, a progressiv­e research institute.

Many voters, even those who might agree with her proposals, still question her party’s capabiliti­es, Camus noted.

Le Pen has engaged in a long and deliberate strategy to “undemonize” her party and widen her electorate. Since her defeat by Macron in 2017, she has tried to rebrand her party away from its extremist roots.

Many of the new far-right lawmakers came to politics during this makeover era and learned the ropes as local council members or parliament­ary assistants who tried to project rigorousne­ss and break with the excesses of some of the party’s longtime lieutenant­s, who were often associated with antisemiti­sm and xenophobia.

“A bit of new blood and some new faces won’t hurt,” Bryan Masson, 25, who captured a seat in the Alpes-Maritimes area of southern France, told BFM TV last week.

Le Pen also has dropped ideas that alienated mainstream voters, such as a proposal to leave the eurozone, which helped her to get 41.5% of the vote in April’s presidenti­al election, an eight-point increase from 2017.

That was not enough to defeat Macron, who called for a “republican front,” a longtime strategy in which mainstream voters put political difference­s aside to support anyone but the far right in runoff votes.

That front has weakened in recent years, and last week it appeared to collapse, amid the growing polarizati­on in French politics around three strongly opposed blocs — Macron’s broad, pro-globalizat­ion center, the far right and the hard left of Jean-Luc Melenchon’s party, France Unbowed.

The National Rally’s new presence in Parliament is a double-edged sword, analysts say.

Le Pen has to manage a delicate balancing act that entails “being almost completely normalized while remaining transgress­ive,” Camus said, as the party fully joins a political system it had long castigated as inefficien­t and corrupt.

“What brought voters to the National Rally was that they were an anti-establishm­ent party,” he added.

Now, they are at the establishm­ent’s heart.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP ?? Marine Le Pen, center, leader of the far-right National Rally, alongside newly elected lawmakers from her party last week at the National Assembly in Paris. The National Rally is now the second-largest party in France’s Parliament.
CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP Marine Le Pen, center, leader of the far-right National Rally, alongside newly elected lawmakers from her party last week at the National Assembly in Paris. The National Rally is now the second-largest party in France’s Parliament.

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