["Ms Le Pen’s best hope of winning is for a large slice of the
electorate to abstain. Her offensive is aimed at fanning hostility to
Mr Macron among left-wing supporters to encourage them to sit out the
election. A “neither-nor” movement has emerged among voters of
Jean-Luc Melenchon, the leftist who attracted nearly 20 per cent cent
of votes in the first round. They are demonstrating under the
anti-nationalist, anti-capitalist slogan “Ni patrie, ni patron” —
neither motherland nor boss."

(Source: 
<http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/the-times/french-presidential-election-voter-apathy-may-hand-marine-le-pen-victory/news-story/1a030c576598f82c4d8f3c108318e1de>.)]

http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article40887

The National Front & French Elections: Macron 2017 = Le Pen 2022

Tuesday 25 April 2017, by BONZOM Mathieu

*Opposing Le Pen should in no way be limited to voting against her on May 7.*

 Table of contents
The Triumph of the “Extreme
The Resistible Rise of a (...)
Next Steps for the Left

Now that we know the French presidential election’s second round will
set former banker and finance minister Emmanuel Macron against
neofascist Marine Le Pen, where should the French left set its sights?

The vote — as well as the legislative election that will follow in
June — is unfolding amid a deep crisis of political representation
that, alongside financial decline and growing violence, has turned the
European Union into what Stathis Kouvelakis and others have termed
global capitalism’s “weakest link.” [1] Although these multiple crises
are far from new, they have produced striking new developments that we
need to analyze before mapping out possible next steps for a stronger
political left.

 The Triumph of the “Extreme Center”

The coalition between center-left and center-right politicians, giving
birth to the “extreme center,” [2] has ruled Europe for some time now.
It has become difficult to run the European Union and various nations
without such an alliance. “Center” alone might hint at a moderation
that is altogether absent from contemporary politics. Extreme center,
in contrast, evokes the “no alternative,” neoliberal policies that
have plagued the world for decades.

In this light, Emmanuel Macron’s first-round (and likely second-round)
victory loses some of its surprise. A former banker, Macron
contributed to some of the worst neoliberal reforms of the last five
years. Once incumbent François Hollande decided not to run for
reelection and less-extreme-centrist Benoît Hamon won the Socialist
Party primary in a surge of anti-government sentiment [3], Macron
became the extreme center’s only viable candidate.

What makes Macron’s success interesting is the fact that he belonged
to the Fifth Republic’s least popular government. His platform closely
imitates the Hollande presidency [4], and while Hollande’s historic
decline in popularity once seemed to guarantee that right-wing
candidate François Fillon would win this so-called change election, we
will most likely end up with President Macron.

Of course, most French citizens, even those who voted for him, do not
think he will revolutionize French politics. Even in a strongly
anti-incumbent election, the Socialist Party would have fared much
better if Manuel Valls, Hollande’s prime minister, had won the
primary. This explains why many members of the government endorsed
Macron, who could also count on votes from Hollande’s remaining
supporters. The extreme centrist also shaved a few points off Fillon’s
vote share, as corruption scandals plagued the right-wing candidate’s
campaign.

Amid justified fears of the far right’s good showing, the media
convinced a significant number of otherwise left-wing voters that
supporting Macron in the first round represented the best — or even
the only — chance of eliminating Marine Le Pen. Macron helped his case
by hinting at his (virtually nonexistent) support for a more
multicultural France.

While Macron’s victory owes something to these other developments, it
also confirms that, in a context of economic and social crisis, French
society is split between those who want to reject the European Union
and those who still hope for technocratic salvation.

For all those reasons, neoliberal capitalism’s political
representatives broke with the de facto two-party system, taking an
anti-establishment pose and saving the extreme center — at least for
now.

However, this background points to some of the next administration’s
likely weaknesses. What used to represent the Left (the Socialist
Party) and the Right (the recently renamed Republicans) ended up with
about 26 percent of the vote. If we consider Macron part of the same
section of the political spectrum — which used to constitute all or
most of the spectrum — then the center’s total comes to about 50
percent.

Moreover, the extreme center’s internal contradictions will return in
June’s legislative elections. The center-right will try to get its
revenge on center-left incumbents, and Macron will have to rely on
those incumbents to build a coalition. Soon, his outsider status will
disappear.

Meanwhile, the structural, economic, and social factors that have
plunged most European countries into this kind of political crisis
will persist, further discrediting the neoliberal center. Macron
appears, at best, as a temporary solution for capitalism and its
political representatives; another way to buy time, which seems to be
the only thing capitalists can do anymore.

 The Resistible Rise of a Fascist Opposition

Meanwhile, the first round also saw the far-right National Front’s
(FN) return to the second round, with Marine Le Pen following in her
father’s footsteps. Unlike in 2002, however, the neofascists’ success
came as no surprise, which further underlines the ongoing political
crisis’s dangers.

Le Pen’s second-place finish confirms that her “normalization
strategy” has worked, both as a way to avoid being denounced as a
fascist threat and to force the rest of the political spectrum onto
her terrain. Throughout the election, the other mainstream candidates
tried to woo FN voters by imitating Le Pen — “immigration is a
problem,” “patriotism is the solution,” “France for French people.” As
a result, the far right is now winning the race to lead the opposition
to capital’s chief representatives, the embattled extreme center.

For the Left, this seems like the most pressing issue. The difficulty
lies not so much in identifying Le Pen and her party as the most
dangerous enemy but in elaborating a successful plan to defeat them.
We risk falling into the “anyone but Le Pen” trap, which the American
left is already facing [5]. As in the United States, the antidote is
to take the far right’s specific threat seriously, combining a
negative (anti-Le Pen) campaign with a positive left project,
absolutely independent from the neoliberal center.

Many commentators have already noted the similarities between a
Macron–Le Pen second round and last year’s Clinton-Trump match-up. To
a certain extent, however, we might more accurately describe Macron
and Le Pen as the two faces of Trump: Le Pen does not have the
endorsement of an establishment party and is ultimately a reloaded
fascist, a definition that fits only some of Trump’s followers; Macron
has been able to frame himself as a
political-outsider/business-insider, and will use this maverick
profile to carry out the same old neoliberal policies.

This analysis has led some left sectors to decide that the candidates
represent two sides of the same coin and that we should therefore
abstain from voting in the second round. This is the dominant
interpretation of a slogan that emerged soon after the results were
announced: “Macron 2017 = Le Pen 2022.”

The slogan expresses radical opposition to both neoliberalism and
neofascism and is usually associated with calls for street
mobilizations and direct action. However, it seems difficult to build
a mass left opposition without recognizing the immediate danger posed
by broad support for fascist politicians.

Opposing Le Pen should in no way be limited to voting against her on
May 7. It should include preparations for the biggest May Day rallies
possible that unite traditional labor demands with an urgent
antifascist and antiracist stance. But can the Left afford to leave
the antifascist vote to others?

Clearly, this slogan would have less popularity if Macron’s victory
did not appear as a done deal. But we may reach the opposite
conclusion as well: Macron’s all-but-certain victory means we can call
for immediate opposition to Le Pen both in the streets and in the
ballot box without holding back in our denunciations of everything
Macron stands for.

In the end, the slogan correctly points out where the chief
responsibility for Le Pen’s success lies. We would not find ourselves
in this mess if it weren’t for decades of neoliberal policies enforced
by alternating poles of a two-party system, making clear that “there
is no alternative.” Which is why, faced with a false choice between
the extreme center’s champion and his fascist challenger, we must
build an antifascist movement that doesn’t join with the increasingly
discredited representatives of the neoliberal status quo.

 Next Steps for the Left

If anything, “Macron 2017 = Le Pen 2022” sounds like the ticking of a
time bomb. In addition to pointing out the extreme center’s
responsibility for the return of fascists, it also underlines what the
Left must do: build a powerful, united movement, independent from the
so-called left government of the last five years. Above all, this
resurgent left must refuse to oppose Le Pen by imitating her
“patriotic” language or putting the antiracist movement on the back
burner.

The good news is that the Left almost gathered as many votes as Le Pen
this time, most of which were votes for Jean-Luc Mélenchon. As useful
as the far-left campaigns of Philippe Poutou and Nathalie Arthaud were
in bringing up key issues and attacking status quo candidates, they
openly admitted that for them this election was merely an opportunity
to spread ideas. Mélenchon insisted that an electoral victory, or even
just a very successful campaign, would be a crucial contribution to a
deep transformation of society, and encourage the mass mobilizations
which such a transformation would require. That Mélenchon took such a
stance while remaining independent from the Socialist Party, and came
close to reaching the second round, should indeed energize us all.

Moreover, the Mélenchon campaign was able to help the Left make some
progress in strategic debates about the European Union. Mélenchon put
forward “plan A” (renegotiating the main treaties making the European
Union the neoliberal machine that it is) and “plan B” (being prepared
to leave the European Union it if turns out to be the only way not to
give in to neoliberalism), a didactic and unifying approach to a
crucial debate in which the Left too often stuck to something like
“plan A or bust” (even after Syriza did just that in Greece, with
devastating results).

But the way forward for the Left is also through an earnest debate
about the Mélenchon campaign’s own major shortcomings. Despite a good
platform on issues of democracy, France Insoumise did not set a good
standard of internal democratic practices on the Left. Nor did it
challenge the worst aspects of republicanism on the French left,
especially as it relates to not foregrounding the struggle for
immigrant rights and international solidarity, fighting police
brutality and anti-Muslim “secular” laws.

Still, we should draw hope from Sunday and the starting point it gives
us for the struggles to come.

Mathieu Bonzom



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Peace Is Doable

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