The Hindu
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Saturday, Nov 11, 2006

Opinion

Unemployed swelling ranks of the Right
http://www.hindu.com/2006/11/11/stories/2006111106801100.htm

Vaiju Naravane

Jean-Marie Le Pen of the National Front could exploit the upsurge in
protectionism and nationalism and the fact that France appears to be "at war
with itself."

A FEMALE torso still adorns the façade of Aubade, one of France's best-known
makers of lingerie. For over half a century, through its hugely expensive
near-nothings of lace and satin, Aubade has contributed to the creation and
definition of French feminine mystique.

But Aubade's story, in France at least, will soon be coming to an end. The
owners have decided that with shrinking profit margins, the time has come to
uproot and re-locate in Tunisia, where labour costs four times less than in
France.

Aline, has worked at Aubade for the past 30 years. A kerchief tied around
her head she rattles off statistics about the female form with enviable ease
and is a fund of precious knowledge about styles and shapes.

Aline and all her colleagues suddenly find themselves on the mat. Her
knowledge, she says is of no use to her anymore. "Overnight, just like that,
they decide to close; not because we are losing money but simply because
their levels of profit have come down. We are honest workers - I started
here at the age of 18 and have worked here ever since. Where am I to go now?
Who will employ me? With cheap imports coming in from China and elsewhere
our jobs are being driven out of the market. What I get angry about is that
the owners will get Tunisian labour for one-fourth our salaries. But they'll
still sell Aubade products for the same price on the French market. We are
being sacrificed for profit and greed, nothing else."

Aline's bitterness is echoed by countless workers, most of them blue collar,
as factories close across France to move to emerging economies, whether in
Europe or elsewhere, to take advantage of cheaper labour and manufacturing
costs. And Aline makes no bones about who she will vote for next year:
Jean-Marie Le Pen's National Front (FN). "Everyone in Paris and the big
cities is screaming about the suburbs just because those troubles are at
their doorstep. Do any of our leaders spare a thought for people like us -
we are French, sons and daughters of the soil, and our bread is being
snatched away by those illegal immigrants who have come pouring into our
country and who are now setting fire to the buses and causing trouble.
France should be for the French. I don't want to know about the misery of
the rest of the world," says Aline.

A recent study showed that France's stubbornly high unemployment rate -
nearly 10 per cent of the active population, especially amongst blue collar
workers - is swelling the ranks of the extreme Right, xenophobic National
Front and other extreme Right parties. Workers, retired people, low level
office employees - all those who find it most difficult to make ends meet
today, constitute the bulk of the National Front electorate. Over 28 opinion
polls conducted in 2006 indicate that these people, usually the staple
electorate of the Communist Party, are crossing over in droves from one
political extreme to the other.

As the National Front begins a three-day conference to hammer out its
strategy for the 2007 presidential election, its leader Mr. Le Pen appears
assured of at least 15 per cent of the vote in the first round. The
professionals - doctors, lawyers, teachers or company executives - are
amongst those least seduced by the National Front's vitriolic anti-immigrant
rhetoric. Interestingly, the number of farmers and fishermen among FN
supporters has gone up significantly since the last presidential election of
2002.

A typical National Front voter is male, white, catholic and between 35 and
69 years of age. More often than other French people, FN voters say they do
not care for politics and harbour a deep mistrust of politicians. The
strength of the National Front lies not in the big cities but in the
thousands of big and small towns and villages. Significantly, the fastest
growing segment of Le Pen voters is women, mainly rural women, like Aline,
whose families have been forced out of agriculture and into jobs in
manufacturing, which they are now in the process of losing because of
globalisation.

Favourite themes

Immigration, insecurity, unemployment, globalisation, anti-Europeanism, and
the reintroduction of capital punishment are the National Front's favourite
themes. Eighty-six per cent of FN voters feel there are too many immigrants
in France and have little sympathy with the Africans or Arabs living in big
city suburban ghettos, most of whom now have French nationality. Immigrants,
they feel, are the major cause of insecurity, delinquency, and drug-related
crimes, they say.

As the FN prepared for its conference, its leader cast himself in the role
of Zorro, ready to defend a disillusioned people from the political
establishment. "I am the Zorro of French politics," Mr. Le Pen said in an
interview with the Financial Times in London.

Mr. Le Pen, 78, told the financial daily he hoped to profit from a reported
deep mistrust among French voters of "corrupt" politicians. Dissatisfaction
with their performance has reached record highs especially on subjects such
as law and order, immigration, social and employment reform. Mr. Le Pen
could exploit the upsurge in protectionism and nationalism and the fact that
France appears to be "at war with itself."

What is more worrisome is that the ruling conservative UMP party led by the
hugely ambitious Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy is likely to enter into a
tacit electoral pact with the FN and another right-wing party - the UMF -
led by Philippe de Villiers, a fundamentalist catholic and Muslim baiter.
Recently, the UMP said it would not bar its local elected officials from
sponsoring Mr. Le Pen's candidature.

In order to be on the list of presidential hopefuls, Mr. Le Pen, like any
other candidate, needs 500 signatures from elected officials.

Copyright © 2006, The Hindu. 

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