Business Day

Le Pen sticks to her guns by making Bardella party leader

• European Parliament member will take over National Rally until at least the first round of presidenti­al vote in April

- Ania Nussbaum

Marine le Pen’s decision to entrust Jordan Bardella with the leadership of her party during the presidenti­al campaign is the latest sign that her movement is not willing to veer too far from its troubled roots.

Bardella, a member of the European parliament who turned 26 on Monday, will take over Le Pen’s National Rally until at least the first round of the vote in April. The announceme­nt was made on Sunday.

As Le Pen tries for a third time to clinch France’s top job, she has been glossing over some of the more contentiou­s views she has aired in the past, and the anti-Semitic legacy of her party.

The following shows how the controvers­ies could play into next year’s election.

● Flirting with the ‘Great Replacemen­t’ theory

Bardella, who has been a member of the party since he was 16, recently said some migrants were coming to France to alter its culture, threatenin­g the very essence of the republic.

That is an allusion to the “Great Replacemen­t”, a term that originated in the writings of Renaud Camus, a thinker associated with the far-right condemned for inciting hatred.

Bardella called it “very theoretica­l” but also said it reflects reality, citing the diverse and poorer Paris suburb of SeineSaint-Denis where he grew up, as an example. The leaders and deputies of all the other

main parties have denounced the theory, which overlooks France’s status as haven for migrants over centuries.

The Islamic ‘occupation’

France’s emphasis on secularism allows Le Pen to position herself as a defender of the Republic and makes her rhetoric on radical Islamism often hard to distinguis­h from that of other leaders who claim the same mantle. She has lashed out at the veil, so have some of President Emmanuel Macron’s allies. She has been critical of “political Islam”, or any interpreta­tion of the religion as a source of political identity or action, so is he.

But Le Pen once compared street prayers to a form of “occupation” and some of

her allies have gone further.

Among them is Damien Rieu, a National Rally candidate defeated in June’s local elections who has backed xenophobic views on social media and protested against halaal meat wearing a pig’s mask. Another is top party official and European parliament­arian Nicolas Bay.

In May, Bay posted a video of a mosque under constructi­on in Normandy on Facebook, saying France’s landscapes are being “disfigured” by political Islam and demanding an end to the “drift”. That sparked calls online for violence against Muslims.

Bay is under investigat­ion for inciting racial hatred, and has parried criticism by saying he had no issues with Muslims or Islam, only the size of the mosque and its minaret.

Le Pen has been trying to clean up her party — her new campaign posters do not even mention the National Rally by name — but has made no move to banish Bay or Rieu.

The limits of free speech

Le Pen defended radical farright group Generation Identitair­e when authoritie­s earlier this year moved to shut it down for hate speech and forming a private militia to target migrants, and especially Muslims.

While not endorsing its ideology, Le Pen objected to the ban on the grounds of freedom of conscience, expression and associatio­n, so did Bardella. After the government enacted the ban, about 50 people attacked a library in Lyon, using far-right chants and a Nazi salute.

The war to save France

When a group of retired generals penned two open letters to Macron in April, raising the spectre of a military coup, Le Pen invited them to join her movement. While saying the solution must be found in politics, she also said she agreed with their assessment.

The letters alleged that France is on the verge of civil war and “disintegra­tion”, and were full of terms used by the far-right. They warned of thousands of deaths unless Macron fights rising violence, radical Islam and “the hordes” who have turned multiracia­l suburbs into no-go zones. They said patriotic values are scorned and antiwhite racism is rampant in the country.

Bardella has called on everyone who wants to defend France to rally round Le Pen.

● The ‘French Fox News’

If there is one key amplifier for all these ideas, it is CNews —

the 24/7 news channel dubbed “the French Fox News” by local media for its tendency to host guests who spread extremist views and erroneous informatio­n.

One of the channel’s most controvers­ial pundits is Eric Zemmour. He wears his conviction­s under French antihate speech laws with pride and last year said young migrants from Africa and the Middle East are killers, rapists and thieves. A case against him was dismissed by an appeal court on the grounds that he was not targeting all migrants or all Muslims.

Le Pen first defended him. His comments were “obviously excessive”, she said, but he had the right to express views that “shock and harm people”. She may regret the support — Zemmour is mulling a presidenti­al run that could split her vote.

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Birthday boy: Marine Le Pen, leader of the French nationalis­t National Rally party, left, alongside Jordan Bardella, who turned 26 on Monday.
/Bloomberg Birthday boy: Marine Le Pen, leader of the French nationalis­t National Rally party, left, alongside Jordan Bardella, who turned 26 on Monday.

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