Los Angeles Times

France’s election shows how political parties can fade away

Current politics there make me grateful for our two-party system.

- @JonahDispa­tch JONAH GOLDBERG

Perhaps the most interestin­g thing about last weekend’s French election isn’t who won, but who lost — and what it might mean for America. French President Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen of the National Rally party won enough of the vote — 27.8% and 23.2%, respective­ly — to head into a runoff on April 24. Close behind them were an assortment of hard-right and hard-left candidates. And in the also-ran category: Valerie Pecresse (4.8%) and Anne Hildago (1.8%). Amazingly, their parties — the Republican­s and the Socialists — dominated French politics for decades, and now they’re fast on their way to obscurity.

It’s a little bit like if America held a giant nonpartisa­n “jungle primary” and the Republican and Democratic candidates combined didn’t break double digits, never mind fail to make the runoff.

Of course, France’s politics and political system are quite different from ours so the analogy shouldn’t be taken too literally. There’s a reason France had five republics, and we’re still working on our first. Macron created his party, La Republique En Marche, in 2016 just so he could run for president.

Still, French politics have changed a lot in recent years. The most notable change is that the center of gravity has moved decidedly rightward. Le Pen, daughter of the far-right nativist Jean-Marie Le Pen (whom she expelled from the National Front party in 2015 for his antisemiti­c comments), is a national populist who, according to a YouGov poll, led Macron among all voters under the age of 55.

Meanwhile, in part because Macron has branded himself as the only centrist in French politics, the left has become more radical. Jean-Luc Melenchon, compared by some to Jeremy Corbyn, the socialist politician who led Britain’s Labor Party (perhaps in part for his own problems with the Jewish community), came in third with nearly 22% of the vote, barely a point shy of Le Pen. Melenchon wants to scrap the Fifth Republic entirely and start over.

Another important difference between France and America is that “liberalism” over there still has more of its original meaning. A French liberal, or “neoliberal,” on economics is a champion, or at least a proponent, of laissez faire economics. Meanwhile, both the far left and far right alike are far friendlier to state-driven regulation of the economy. The difference­s mostly manifest themselves over which winners and which losers the state should pick.

Given that our politics are moving in a French direction, it’s an interestin­g thought experiment: What if America had its own French-style jungle primary?

It’s harder than it might sound because polls aren’t entirely reliable. Partisansh­ip in our polarized two-party system often drives big shifts in voter attitudes on some issues. For instance, when Donald Trump railed against free trade, a lot of Republican­s and Democrats switched positions.

It’s easy to imagine an Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders moving toward something close to Melenchon’s agenda of constituti­onal radicalism and confiscato­ry taxation (in 2017 he even proposed a 100% tax on earnings above 400,000 euros). And even if they wouldn’t go that far, you can be sure someone would. That’s part of the problem with France’s system, the bigger the field in the first round, the more incentive there is for fringe candidates to throw their hats in.

On the right, the picture is murkier. The loudest voices on the right champion their own versions of populism and nationalis­m. Fox’s Tucker Carlson, who has praised Sen. Warren’s economic program, has also promoted anti-immigratio­n “replacemen­t theory,” which is all the rage in France.

While I suspect Carlson would leap into the race, he’d have a lot of competitio­n in his lane. A host of Republican­s have embraced the idea that the GOP should become the party of the working class, at war with “Big Tech” and “woke corporatio­ns” generally. What this means in practice, varies widely.

What unites them is rejection, in whole or in part, of the American right’s traditiona­l laissez faire dogma about not using the state for picking winners and losers.

In September, J.D. Vance, who’s running for the Senate from Ohio, asked why the state doesn’t confiscate the assets of nonprofit institutio­ns he dislikes and “give it to the people who’ve had their lives destroyed by their radical open borders agenda?”

Who would be a Macron-like centrist? I’m not sure and, not wanting to hurt their standing among Republican­s, I’m reluctant to offer a guess.

What I am certain about is that while I have ample contempt for both parties these days, I am grateful for our twoparty system and constituti­onal safeguards.

The founders were as concerned about the tyranny of autocracy as they were about the tyranny of the majority and the tyranny that would result from any single “faction” that might attain momentary power thanks to periodic gales of populist rage.

Imagine if America held a giant nonpartisa­n ‘jungle primary’ in a presidenti­al election — and both the Republican and Democratic candidates failed to make the runoff.

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