Jean-Marie Le Pen: rabble-rousing co-founder of the French National Front

Jean-Marie Le Pen: rabble-rousing co-founder of the French National Front

Sign up for The Week’s Free Newsletters

From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.

Millions were appalled by his views, but he commanded enough support to spend 30 years in the European Parliament, and he made five runs for the presidency. For the first decades of his career, Le Pen operated at the margins, said The Times. In 1974’s presidential election, two years after the launch of the National Front, he won less than 1% of the vote. But his share rose to 15% in elections in the 1980s, said The Daily Telegraph, as the economy stumbled, heavy industries went into retreat and France’s failure to assimilate its Arab immigrants started to bite.

Explore More
From the magazine
Jean-Marie Le Pen
Marine Le Pen
National Front
France
Far-right

Exploiting France’s sense of “malaise”, Le Pen rallied a broad coalition, made up of working-class voters in deindustrialised areas who believed that immigrants were taking “French” jobs; conservative Catholics; and city dwellers concerned by the levels of crime in the immigrant ghettos of the banlieue.

He was elected to the National Assembly on a right-wing ticket in 1956; and the next year travelled to Algeria to take part in the Battle of Algiers, where there is evidence that he engaged in torture (he denied it). He helped launch the National Front in 1972, and served as its president until he retired in 2011. Renamed National Rally, the party is currently the second-largest in the National Assembly. Le Pen admitted to having been the “most hated man in France”; but surveying the rise of far-right parties across Europe, he liked to say that his ideas were simply “ahead of their time”.

Jean-Marie Le Pen, who has died aged 96, was a major figure in French public life, and a founder of the far-right National Front. A sometimes violent rabblerouser who claimed, like other extremists, to be merely saying the things that “others think but dare not put into words”, he insisted that “the races are unequal”, and that anyone with Aids was “a kind of leper”, said The New York Times. He referred to the Nazi gas chambers as just “a detail” in the history of the War; and described the Nazi occupation of France – when 76,000 Jews were deported to death camps – as “not especially inhumane”. Latterly, he’d embraced the “great replacement theory”, which holds that a conspiracy is under way to replace Europe’s whites with immigrant Muslims.

source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *