Los Angeles Times

Far-right ex-pundit launches presidenti­al run in France

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PARIS — A far-right former TV pundit with multiple hate-speech conviction­s officially entered the race for France’s presidency Tuesday and warned his supporters that they would probably be called racists for backing his anti-immigratio­n and anti-Islam views.

The launch of Eric Zemmour’s run for the presidency made official a campaign that had been gathering steam for months before it stumbled of late — notably after the 63-year-old polemicist raised a middle finger at a woman who did likewise to him over the weekend. That flash of temper, which Zemmour later acknowledg­ed on Twitter was “very inelegant,” cast fresh doubt on the temperamen­t and electabili­ty of the author and former journalist. Zemmour has drawn comparison­s in France to former President Trump because of his rabble-rousing populism and ambitions of making the jump from the small screen to national leadership.

Name-dropping Joan of Arc, Napoleon Bonaparte and Gen. Charles de Gaulle, Zemmour announced his candidacy in a recorded video, reading from notes and speaking into a large microphone. The pose evoked imagery of radio addresses that De Gaulle famously delivered during World War II as he urged France to rally to his call to fight the Nazis.

But the message Zemmour delivered was far from that of the wartime leader who later served as France’s president from 1959-1969. Using images of people on filthy streets and in shantytown­s, he drove home his view of France as a country mortally threatened by immigratio­n and “in the process of disappeari­ng.”

“You feel that you are no longer in the country that you knew,” Zemmour said. “You feel like foreigners in your own country. You are exiles, from the inside.”

The people whom Zemmour was shown meeting in the video and the campaign supporters and crowds filmed at his rallies were nearly all white. And the vast majority of people shown doing jobs in the video — a math teacher, a nuclear worker, cooks, suited business leaders, a butcher, a cattle farmer and others — were nearly all white men.

People of color, by contrast, were shown lining up for food handouts, pushing their way onto a crowded train, milling around in a litter-strewn tent city and on a street corner and, in a scene at the start, seemingly taking part in a street deal. Other images showed Paris streets filled with Muslims kneeling down in prayer. Images of women protesting, some with breasts bared, were cut with violent scenes of people attacking police.

“It is no longer time to reform France but to save it,” Zemmour said. “That is why I have decided to stand in the presidenti­al election.”

He warned supporters to brace for criticism ahead of the April election.

“They will tell you that you are racist,” he said. “They will say the worst things about me.”

Meanwhile, President Emmanuel Macron is expected to seek a second term but hasn’t yet declared his candidacy.

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