04/18/2022
Three years after Paris’ Notre Dame burned on April 15, 2019, with needless to say still no word on the culprit, France must again, as in 2017, choose between flawed immigration patriot Marine Le Pen and Establishment globalist Emmanuel Macron. Their much-anticipated debate is on Wednesday April 20. The Brussels bureaucracy’s sudden allegation against her of campaign finance irregularities has been widely derided
I doubt that Madame Le Pen’s hopes have been dealt a blow. This is not the first time that courts or regulatory bodies have launched charges against her, sometimes very inconveniently. Many voters will see it as proof of the Euro-establishment’s determination to suppress critics. https://t.co/gv5J8OQjos
— John O’Sullivan (@JohnOSullivanNR) April 18, 2022
and there are some Establishment media worries about a Brexit/Trump-style upset [Macron’s struggles with young voters leave an opening for Le Pen by Ivana Saric, Axios, April 18, 2022].
Perhaps Le Pen won’t make it, this time. But, compared to 20 years ago, France is clearly on the move.
There was much to parse in these first-round election results. There is no question that radical immigration patriot Eric Zemmour’s final result, 7% of the vote, was deeply disappointing, at least to me. Le Pen received 23.15%. There is a number of reasons for this score, not least the “strategic voting” (vote utile in French) of perhaps one third of Le Pen voters, who voted for her to prevent a Leftist candidate from reaching the second round.
But perhaps more significant: the collapse of the mainstream Socialist and conservative (UMP or LR) parties that had governed France for decades until the last-minute invention of Emmanuel Macron. The Socialist and conservative candidates received 55.8% of the vote as recently as 2012. But they reached less than 7% this time.
Bruno Gollnisch, Le Pen père’s former right-hand man, could not hide his schadenfreude:
“seeing the candidates of the two parties, … who have governed France for 60 years and co-managed the coutry’s decline, getting less than 7% of the vote gives me, I admit, some perverse pleasure.” [Twitter, April 15, 2022, my translation]
The Socialist candidate was already a non-entity in the 2017 election. This year, however, the Establishment Conservatives candidate, Valierie Pecresse, also received less than 5% of the vote — which crucially means that the government will not reimburse her campaign spending! Pécresse was reduced to pleading for donations to make up the 7 million Euro loss, 5 million Euro of which she had obtained through personal loans.
Thus the two traditional parties of France (= Democrats and Republicans), while still powerful in local and regional politics, are irrelevant so far as national politics are concerned.
Macron rules on the basis of a hegemonic center while all opposition has concentrated around two irreconcilable “extremes” — the Left around Mélenchon; the Right around Le Pen.
Mélenchon’s triumph on the Left is suggestive of the racialization of French politics. In the major cities, white neighborhoods voted Macron while black/Muslim ones voted Mélenchon:
Damien Rieu, a social media maven who has joined Zemmour’s Reconquest party, declared the election had seen “the eruption of the ethnopolitical [and] electoral communitarianism, the first step towards [becoming] Lebanon.”
Indeed, it seems that around 70% of Muslims voted Mélenchon and 40% of his voters were Muslim. Tellingly, 45.8% of prisoners who voted cast for Mélenchon, twice the national average. This is highly suggestive of the ethnic composition of French prisons.
(The Government of the French Republic generally declines, on principle, to collect demographic data — see David Orland’s Connerly’s Racial Privacy Initiative: The Unhappy French Connection, on VDARE in 2003.)
Mélenchon, who had spent his whole career as a die-hard secularist, is now embracing his increasingly colorful electorate. While denouncing the very idea of a “Great Replacement,” he tells his activist supporters — who are still mostly elderly white boomers — about the glories of “creolization” in the mixed-race France of the future. [Qu'est-ce que la créolisation, nouvel étendard de Jean-Luc Mélenchon?,by Vincent Bresson, Slate.fr, October 1, 2021]. He no longer opposes the wearing of Islamic headscarves by university students, something he used to condemn as a sign of archaic patriarchal culture. His laïcité now basically boils down to a rabid hostility towards Christianity.
But curiously, Le Pen and Mélenchon both did well in France’s majority-black and mixed-race overseas territories (French Guiana and several islands in the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean). This was essentially motivated by a desire for handouts (Le Pen and Zemmour both have voiced strong emotional attachment to these territories as the last vestiges of France as an intercontinental empire) and, significantly. the fact that some of these territories face huge amounts of illegal immigration from Latin America and Africa.
Indeed, there have been amusing cases of local black women protesting against pro-migrant NGOs run by well-thinking white women. NazBol Françafrique when?
In Le Pen’s speech reacting to her qualifying for the second round, she declared France would have to choose between Macron’s vision of “division, injustice, and disorder” for the benefit of “the few,” and her own vision:
The unity of the French around social justice, protection, guaranteed by the fraternal framework around the millennia-old idea of the nation and of the people
Patriots like me regret that Le Pen has soft-pedaled nationalist themes, especially immigration, to focus on essentially statist protectionist economics. Large swathes of her discourse are scarcely distinguishable from that of a Social-democrat.
But identitarian thinkers like Julien Rochedy [Tweet him] and François Bousquet have conceded that, in purely electoral terms, Le Pen may well have been right to focus on bread and butter issues. Macron is an embattled president whom vast swathes of the electorate loath for his failure to bring positive change, his authoritarian reaction to the yellow-vest protests, and his totalitarian management of the COVID crisis [Macron declares his Covid strategy is to ‘piss off’ the unvaccinated, by Jon Henley, Guardian, January 4, 2022].
While Le Pen’s (relatively) pro-Russian stance has proven embarrassing in light of the general emotional reaction to the war in Ukraine, the spikes in the cost of fuel, energy bills, and inflation in general may strengthen her position in the long run. Remember that the massive Yellow-Vest protests were sparked by a fuel tax hike.
Francois Bousquet, the editor of the high-brow identarian magazine Éléments, sums up Le Pen’s triumph over Zemmour:
While Zemmour knows France, Marine knows the French. And they’re the ones who vote. [Marine qui rit, Zemmour qui pleure (Marine Laughs, Zemmour Cries), Éléments, April 14, 2022
Significantly, Zemmour’s supporters were more educated, often in white-collar and management positions, and were more motivated. They are concentrated in the prosperous southeast of France, where there are many retirees and a few descendants of the European settlers who fled Algeria. But he even had a few supporters within some of the wealthier neighborhoods of Paris.
Le Pen, however, has her ear attuned to déclassé whites in peripheral France, who have despite themselves adopted a rather atomized way of life, defined indeed by their automobiles, suburban sprawl, and the sparsification of public services (particularly in rural areas).
Bousquet concludes on these atomized lower-class whites: “Do they still form a people? I do not know, but they are our people. We shouldn’t forget it.”
There is now a strange situation in which many activists moved to Zemmour, while Le Pen retains — essentially through her carefully honed TV appearances — appeal to a critical mass of largely depoliticized voters.
I remain skeptical of Le Pen’s ability to win the second round. (But I must acknowledge that some polls have her neck-and-neck with Macron).
The Media-political demonization machine has started going into overdrive. The University of Nantes for example point-blank told its students to vote for Macron, abandoning all pretense of political neutrality [The president of the University of Nantes calls for a vote for Macron, Paudal.com, April 13, 2022]
The Leftist magazine Le Nouvel Observateur published a deranged article declaring that if Le Pen is elected she would become commander-in-chief of France’s nuclear force de frappe and so would be able to “unleash the equivalent of 48,000 Hiroshimas over a large part of the United States, Russia, China, Africa — and Europe.” [Si Marine Le Pen était élue, voici l’arsenal nucléaire qui se trouverait entre ses mains (If Marine Le Pen were elected, here is the nuclear arsenal that would be in her hands), by Vincent Jauvert, April 13, 2022].
But while Le Pen has deemphasized identitarian themes, she has by no means disavowed them. She proposes a referendum against immigration, abolishing Birthright Citizenship and family reunification, deporting foreign criminals, and reserving welfare to French citizens (or to foreigners who have been working and paying into the system for at least five years).
Macron by contrast has issued almost 1.3 million foreign visas (an increase from the previous presidential administration, despite the sharp decline during the COVID years).
A Le Pen presidency, whatever its other faults, would at least slowdown the demographic dispossession of the French — rather like the Trump Administration did.
Like Mélenchon, Le Pen’s proposals of protectionism and give-aways are probably economically ill-advised (in my opinion). While Le Pen wants to replace the EU with an “Alliance of European Nations,” it is not clear what this would mean in practice.
There is a significant risk a Le Pen presidency would face Trumpian ineffectiveness — especially given the inevitable sabotage of huge swathes of the Media-Political establishment — and Brexit-type time-wasting. There is a troubling lack of prioritization.
But perhaps a president Le Pen would be able to focus on popular, actually doable actions — which is what Matteo Salvini did, with great effectiveness, during his short stint as Interior Minister of Italy prior to being ousted in a parliamentary coup.
Guillaume Durocher [Tweet him] is a European historian and political writer.
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