Los Angeles Times

A Bernie-like candidate advances

Jean-Luc Melenchon has risen to be a serious contender for France’s presidency.

- By Kim Willsher Willsher is a special correspond­ent.

PARIS — France’s eternal revolution­ary, Jean-Luc Melenchon, man of the people, is sitting in the firstclass carriage of the TGV (train a grande vitesse , or very fast train) returning to Paris from a meeting in the city of Rennes.

His journeys crisscross­ing France on the campaign trail for the nation’s presidency are used to study speech notes and for team debriefing­s and interviews with journalist­s, hence the first-class ticket.

At the moment, Melenchon is tired. He has just held a rally at which he spoke for more than three hours with barely a glance at his notes. But his weary look brightens when he is asked about being compared to former U.S. presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders, the democratic socialist senator from Vermont.

“You know, we sent someone to the U.S. to study Bernie Sanders. I like the comparison. And he’s 10 years older than me, which makes me feel young,” Melenchon said recently. “Yes, I like him.”

On Sunday, French voters will go to the polls for the first part of a two-part process to elect a new president. The two candidates with the most votes are expected to face off in the second part of the election May 7.

In a remarkable turnaround, the hard-left Melenchon, who is not just a fan of Sanders but also of the late socialist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, has risen to be a serious contender.

An opinion poll by Ipsos for the Sciences Po university and Le Monde newspaper published Wednesday suggested independen­t candidate Emmanuel Macron of the En Marche! party was favored to win the presidenti­al race (23%), with far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen just behind (22.5%).

The poll showed Macron and Le Pen followed by the scandal-hit conservati­ve Francois Fillon of the Republican­s (19.5%), Melenchon of Unbowed France (19%) and Socialist Party candidate Benoit Hamon (8%). Six other candidates are polling lower.

Melenchon’s campaign, run on a shoestring budget using volunteers and employing a high profile on the Internet and social media — tactics relatively new to France — are credited to Sophia Chikirou, the “someone” dispatched to the United States last year to join Sanders’ team.

“Melenchon shares many points in common with Sanders,” Chikirou, Melenchon’s communicat­ions director, told Europe 1 radio in January. “Sanders relied on having the people campaign for him and mobilizing them through social media. That’s mainly what we took from him.”

The Sanders strategy has helped Melenchon. Just weeks ago, the idea that the 65-year-old head of the Unbowed France movement, a poetry- and opera-loving former Trotskyist and onetime teacher, could make it to the Elysee Palace would have raised a good laugh. Today, nothing could be more serious, according to French political analysts.

Melenchon is on a roll with his calls for a nonviolent “citizens’ revolution,” proposed minimum monthly wage of $1,790, anti-capitalist, anti-globalizat­ion rhetoric and plans to renegotiat­e European Union treaties to put an end to “economic liberalism.”

The man who asks supporters to not chant his name because it is all about “the program,” not the person, is drawing support from French millennial­s with pop-star-like hologram appearance­s that on Tuesday allowed him to address rallies in seven cities at the same time. Fans even created a game called Fiskal Kombat in which Melenchon walks down a street shaking money from the pockets of men he meets.

Melenchon says he is appealing to voters who feel abandoned by the mainstream parties.

“If things were going well in society, nobody would need me. Now, we have to have a citizens’ revolution and change things bit by bit. It has to start somewhere in Europe and I hope France will lead the way,” he said in an interview.

“The thing about revolution is that there is no instructio­n book. People just act because they can no longer tolerate a society in which people have nothing to eat, cannot afford healthcare or look after themselves.”

France goes into this election, after five years of President Francois Hollande’s Socialist administra­tion, having weathered the global economic crisis, but with a stuttering recovery. Unemployme­nt remains stubbornly around 10% — and twice the rate among the young — public debt is high, growth is feeble and consumer spending power has declined.

Last year, the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t said that France had “an enviable standard of living” and had “come through the crisis without suffering too heavily,” but that a lack of growth was the “fundamenta­l economic problem.”

Dominique Reynie, founder of the French think tank Fondapol and a professor at the Sciences Po university, said a Macron-Le Pen runoff was the most likely outcome of Sunday’s vote, but acknowledg­ed there was “a lot of uncertaint­y.”

Le Pen, 48, the youngest daughter of National Front founder Jean-Marie Le Pen, is a trained lawyer and is standing on an economic nationalis­m program that includes a referendum on pulling France out of the European Union and dumping the euro, halting immigratio­n, closing France’s borders and giving French nationals priority for housing, social benefits and jobs.

Le Pen is under investigat­ion for allegedly using EU funds to pay for party staff, including a personal bodyguard.

At 39, Macron is the youngest of the 11 presidenti­al candidates and the only one of the front-runners to have never held elected office. The former Rothschild investment banker was recruited by Hollande first as deputy general secretary at the Elysee Palace and then as economy minister.

He resigned in 2016 after two years at the ministry to launch his political movement, En Marche!, insisting he was not left, not right, not even a centrist, but a “proEurope progressiv­e.”

Reynie described the prospect of the “radical socialist and revolution­ary” Melenchon getting into the second round as “extraordin­ary” and a “great risk to the country.”

“Melenchon represents the ‘anti-system-left,’ not a left of government, and the prospect of the complete overturnin­g of France’s political system,” Reynie said.

Manuel Bompart, Melenchon’s campaign director, suggested the idea that the candidate was a threat to the country was fearmonger­ing.

“The situation in France is not exactly very reassuring at the moment,” Bompart said. “There’s nothing to fear by voting Jean-Luc Melenchon. He is presenting a reasonable response to the problems confrontin­g France.”

On the TGV, Melenchon was in a reflective mood.

“Everything in the middle is being blown apart, society is disintegra­ting, and many, like me, are outraged by the greed of certain people and the destructio­n of social norms,” he said.

“This disorder serves me well. You would be surprised how well my message goes down in some of the country’s renowned business schools where I am welcomed and where my diagnosis is shared.”

 ?? Sebastien Bozon AFP/Getty Images ?? JEAN-LUC MELENCHON says he is appealing to voters who feel abandoned by France’s mainstream parties. “If things were going well in society, nobody would need me,” the hard-left candidate said.
Sebastien Bozon AFP/Getty Images JEAN-LUC MELENCHON says he is appealing to voters who feel abandoned by France’s mainstream parties. “If things were going well in society, nobody would need me,” the hard-left candidate said.
 ?? Nicolas Messyasz S I PA ?? SOPHIA CHIKIROU, Melenchon’s communicat­ions director, took what she learned from Bernie Sanders’ presidenti­al campaign back with her to France.
Nicolas Messyasz S I PA SOPHIA CHIKIROU, Melenchon’s communicat­ions director, took what she learned from Bernie Sanders’ presidenti­al campaign back with her to France.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States