home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c)
- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
- More essays can always be found at:
- --- http://www.CheatHouse.com ---
- ... and contact can always be made to:
- Webmaster@cheathouse.com
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Essay Name : 1155.txt
- Uploader :
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Politics
- Title : The Impact of Le Pen and the National Front on French Politics
- Grade : 79%
- School System :
- Country : Canada
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments :
- Date : 3/13/96
- Site found at : surfing
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Over the last fifteen years the Front National in France has risen from being an
- obscure and insignificant actor to one of the more visible and most discussed parties in
- French politics. The Front, led by Jean-Marie Le Pen, has managed to attract a sizable
- proportion of the electorate in nearly every election at every level of government over this
- time period. The support the FN has garnered can be attributed to the populist themes it
- addresses in its policy platform - law and order, immigration and unemployment. This
- essay examines the rapid ascent of Le Pen and his party, and the circumstances that made
- the rise feasible. It also analyses the FN's policies and their subsequent effects on French
- politics and society. Finally, the Front National's electorate and future in French politics
- is investigated.
-
- The Rise of Le Pen and the FN
- Jean-Marie Le Pen, who lost his left eye in a political brawl,1 began his political career
- long before the conception of the FN. As a lieutenant to Pierre Poujade, the leader of the
- Poujadist movement,2 Le Pen became a member of the National Assembly from 1956 to
- 1958. During this time he acquired many of the values and ideals on which he later used
- to formulate the Front's platform. After his stint in the National Assembly, Le Pen
- traveled to then colonized Algeria and saw active duty as a paratrooper officer. The years
- leading up to the naming of Le Pen as leader of the FN were comparatively calm to the
- years he would spend with the Front.
- The Front National's creation in 1972 with Le Pen at the helm, might be described
- as anything but auspicious. During the first decade of its existence, it remained at best a
- fringe party with a radical and extreme right wing slant. In the Presidential election of
- 1974, which was won by the moderate right's Valery Giscard d'Estaing over the Socialist
- Francois Mitterand, Le Pen managed to obtain only 0.75 per cent of the vote. In fact
- seven years later he failed to procure the five-hundred elected sponsors needed to run in
- the French election.3 The FN survived these disappointments and were soon revived by an
- unexpected resurgence of the extreme right only two years later.
- A reversal of fortunes occurred for the Front in isolated municipal and National
- Assembly by-elections in 1983, where they amassed close to 11 per cent of the vote. The
- following year in June, they built upon their success by compiling a surprising 11 per cent
- of the national vote in elections to the European Parliament, enabling them to send 10
- delegates to Strasbourg.4 Despite this success many observers, such as Subrata Mitra,
- maintained that the success of the Front would be short-lived and fade as suddenly as they
- had originated,
- Movements that rise almost out of nowhere and shoot into political prominence within a
- short span of time, basing their appeal on a relatively restricted platform and drawing
- support from across established political and sociological cleavages are sometimes
- referred to as single-issue movements... Characteristically, the single-issue movement
- galvanizes support from different political camps on the basis of a single, all-
- encompassing issue, and, predictably, disappears once the issue has been articulated and
- aggregated into the political agenda.5
- The meteoric rise of the Front National, coupled with the narrow platform of the party,
- appeared to make it vulnerable to the changing focus of French Politics. In the 1986
- legislative elections the FN managed to secure 10 per cent of the vote and elected 35
- deputies under a system of proportional representation. Why didn't the FN fade and
- vanish like the Poujadists of the 1950s or other 'single-issue' movements?
- The political and economic instability of the 1970s created a much more
- hospitable climate for the FN, than the Poujadist movement of the 1950s. A broad trend
- of voter instability on both the left and the right characterized the late 1970s. In an article
- by Martin Schain, Suzanne Berger maintains that the established parties failed to recognize
- and acknowledge the changing political grievances, nor the shifting values and interests of
- its citizenry. Also, there was a "sense of economic crisis encouraged by government
- policy and rising unemployment."6 A year or so after the Socialists gained power in 1981,
- people were increasingly dissatisfied and lacked confidence in the leftist policies, yet they
- had little faith in the right as an alternative. It is within this political climate that the FN's
- policies became attractive to the disgruntled population. The FN's stance offered an outlet
- for voters frustrations over the state of the economy and the increase in crime and
- violence. The people had reason to hope that perhaps now their concerns would be
- addressed.
-
- Effects of Policy
- It's no secret that Le Pen and the Front are dangerously nationalistic, typified by extreme
- statements such as the following made by Le Pen, "Two million unemployed, that's two
- million immigrants we don't want."7 Inflammatory declarations of this sort are not only
- provocative and shameful, But they also have explosive consequences in society. They
- incite violence and hate and create fear in particular segments of the population.
- Moreover, they reflect a decrease in the social fabric of a nation and a lack of
- imagination amongst its leaders for developing solutions with constructive consequences
- rather than destructive ones. Attitude such as these are reminiscent of the Holocaust. Of
- course the situation in present day France is different from those which infected Germany
- during the interwar period. Nonetheless, the potential for unnecessary violence is genuine
- and arguably, inevitable.
- The success Le Pen had in capturing a significant aggregate of the vote assisted in
- the legitimization of the 'immigrant issue', and placed it at the forefront of the political
- agenda as the established parties took aim on the FN's supporters.8 The consent, or
- acknowledgment, by the established parties that immigrants represented "a source of
- unemployment and urban tension, and a drain on the national purse,"9 as the leader of the
- RPR Jacques Chirac stated in an interview, led to an increase in the severity and the
- frequency of racist conduct. Had the major parties denounced Le Pen and the Front
- National as racists that were a threat to democracy and an embarrassment to the French
- people rather than passively allow them to creep their way onto the political stage, perhaps
- people would look elsewhere for explanations to the economic malaise. Who can fault
- people for taking the easy way out by blaming immigrants for their problems when none of
- their leaders were able to articulate a more reasonable way of thinking.
- The increase in racist anger culminated on the 10th of May in 1990 with the
- desecration of a Jewish cemetery at Carpentras. The reason this particular incidence of
- anti-Semitic activity stood out from others was the manner in which the cemetery was
- desecrated. A recently buried body was excavated and abused and 30 other graves were
- tampered with.10 The connection between the events at Carpentras and the FN is very
- convincing when the political context surrounding them is taken into consideration. Three
- events prior to the 10th of May are worthy of examination. First, opinion polls prior to
- the incident showed an increase in popularity for the Front National and Le Pen. Second,
- the 8th of May was the anniversary of the end of the second world war which was marked
- by an anti-Semitic television program on Nazi Germany, and lastly, on the 9th of May Le
- Pen confirmed his anti-Jewish stance in a speech on the same television station.11 The
- media exposure that accompanied the episode, was followed by a dramatic increase in
- anti-Jewish acts that preceded it. It is important to note that persons of the Jewish faith
- are not the only one's to whom racist acts are directed. North Africans, Black Africans,
- Asians and Spanish are also frequently perceived to be too numerous in France by those
- who support the far right.12 This leads to the obvious question of from where does the
- Front generate support for its policies?
-
- The Electorate
- The FN receives a large amount of votes from those that used to support the Communist
- party. "The national Front has appealed primarily to the groups most marginalised by the
- modernization of French society along with those most affected by its economic crisis."13
- The 1988 Presidential elections showed that Le Pen did well in the industrial suburbs
- around Paris, which used to support the PCF. Unemployment in that region had
- skyrocketed, and voting for the extreme right was viewed as a means to protest the
- dissatisfaction over the established parties' unsuccessful efforts to deal with the problem
- effectively.14 In that election, in which the Front amassed four and a half million votes for
- 14.5 per cent of the electorate, they also received much support from farmers,
- shopkeepers, small business, salaried workers and the young. It is not surprising that the
- regions where the Front was most successful were areas with high concentrations of
- immigrants and minorities, and as already mentioned, the highest unemployment rates.15
- The FN's electorate in the 1995 presidential elections shared many of the same
- characteristics that were present in 1988. Again Le Pen secured four and a half million
- voters for 15 per cent of the vote, and again they came from the same groups in society.
-
- Future?
- Although the Front National is managing to attract a significant segment of the
- electorate, one has to question its future. Due to the reversion to a two-ballot majority
- electoral system, it is unlikely that the Front will ever manage to elect any deputies to the
- National Assembly as they did in 1986. For the same reason, it is unlikely that they will
- ever elect a president. Another problem the FN will have to overcome in the future is its
- ability to continue to retain around 15 per cent of the vote. Although they do have
- supporters who can be described core xenophobes, a large part of the votes they received
- in the presidential and legislative elections were protest votes. By opting for Le Pen on
- the first ballot, voters were able express their dissatisfaction while at the same time feel
- safe that their safe vote would not affect the outcome.16
- Although the Front will not be able to have a direct influence on legislation, their
- voice will continue to be heard at least indirectly through the moderate right, who are
- more receptive to them. If the FN is to survive into the foreseeable future it will have to
- broaden its policies and increase its political base in order to become a party for the
- improvement of French society as a whole. So long as they remain a conduit for radical
- disgruntlement they will remain a dangerous presence lingering on the fringes of French
- politics.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-