*http://tinyurl.com/gnkc98f <http://tinyurl.com/gnkc98f>*



November 30, 2016

*A Transatlantic Holy Alliance?*

By Michael Curtis <http://www.americanthinker.com/author/michael_curtis_1/>

The result of recent elections in the United States and in France raises
the possibility of a new Holy Alliance, a loose alliance of the two
countries to uphold the principles and values of Western civilization by
changing the present system.

The great Marxist, Groucho, put it succinctly. "I don't want to belong to
any club that will accept me as a member." Present-day politics has its
amusing side as prominent individuals criticize the ruling "elites" or
establishment in their country, those who dominate and share in the making
of political, economic and military decisions. Criticism of the
establishment, by those within it, has become fashionable as recent
elections and statements show.

Donald Trump's campaign for the U.S. presidency did not drown because
of his constant warning he would drain the swamp in Washington. On the
contrary he floated with it. More surprisingly, British prime minister
Theresa May and, less surprisingly, Francois Fillon, a leading candidate
for the presidency in France, themselves members of their country's elite,
point out the inadequacies of contemporary elites.

On November 14, 2016 Prime Minister Theresa May spoke at the Lord Mayor's
Banquet at the prestigious Guildhall in London to a wealthy, influential
audience dining on roast beef and drinking $300 bottles of red wine. She
spoke of being aware of the downsides as well as the benefits of the
globalization process and of the tensions and differences between those who
gain and those who lose from the process.

In a manner similar to Trump, who was supported by those called
"deplorables" by his rival Hillary Clinton, May indicated she understood
the problem of modest to low income individuals who see their jobs being
outsourced and wages undercut. These individuals see and are unhappy about
the emergence of a new global elite who sometimes seem to play by a
different set of rules and whose lives are far removed from their everyday
existence.

For some time, France has been largely governed by a small group of
individuals, a self-reproducing caste drawn from those who have studied at
the same few elite schools. If Britain has Oxford and the U.S. has the Ivy
League, they are only partly comparable to the role and dominance of elite
French schools. Those schools, the Sciences-Po, ENA, Ecole Polytechnique,
and the HEC business management school, determine the careers of their
students and the leaders of France.

One of those eager to be a leader will emerge in the presidential election
in France to be held in April 8 and May 2017. Two of the major presidential
candidates have made similar statements critical of the French elite or
society. The views of Martine Le Pen, head of the Front National (FN) are
well known. She has compared events in present-day France, including mass
immigration of Muslims, now 8% of the population, to the barbaric invasion
of the 4th century, and asserts that the consequences will be the same. The
Muslim "occupation" in France weighs heavily on local residents.

Le Pen is a fierce nationalist, and prominent parts of her program are in
opposition to the European Union, the "Europe of Brussels," to globalism,
to free trade, and to open borders. One of her rallying cries is emphasis
on the "voice of people... the spirit of France." She is likely to do well
at the first round of voting, but according to polls, not likely to win at
the second round. However, the polls in France, like those in the U.S.
concerning Trump, may understate the hidden vote, whose priority is
anti-immigration.

Opposing her will be a nominee of the Socialist party, but that party and
its leader President Francois Hollande, is at present deeply unpopular.
Hollande has not yet declared if he will be a candidate to succeed himself:
his positive decision is dependent on serious reduction of unemployment in
the country. And Prime Minister Manuel Valls is in the wings.

The main opponent of Le Pen will be Francois Fillon, the 62-year-old
candidate of the right-wing party, Les Republicains (formerly UMP). Fillon
has had a 35-year-old political career, including being prime minister
2007-2012, and a cabinet minister five other times, and a parliamentary
representative of his home town, Le Mans. He had led in the first round of
the Republican primary, gaining 44.1% compared with rivals, Alain Juppe
with 28.6% and former president and his former boss, Nicolas Sarkozy who
was eliminated from the second round since he was third with 20.7% of the
vote. On November 27, 2016 Fillon won the second round of his party primary
with 67 % of the vote. The electoral slogan, similar to that of Donald
Trump, of this veteran conservative was, "we have to change the system."

Francois Fillon is more moderate than his rival Juppe, but he is an
integral part of the conservative, Catholic Right section of Les
Republicains, if not a "social reactionary", the term used by his opponents
in referring to him. Though Fillon had emphasized his social conservatism,
his Catholic and family values, he has declared he would not seek to
overturn the 2013 law allowing same-sex marriage. Though he is personally
opposed to abortion, he will not change the 1975 law advocated by Simone
Veil that legalized it in France, nor change the abortion law. He embodies
family values: he and his wife, originally Welsh, have raised five children
in their 12th-century chateau in Western France.

Fillon is clear about the menace facing France and the world. Russia poses
no threat. The real danger is Islamist terrorism and fundamentalism, the
invasion of bloody Islamism into daily life: "that invasion could herald a
third world war." Fillon holds that Radical Islam is corrupting some
Muslim citizens in France. He advocates administrative controls on Islam,
dissolving the Salafi movement, and banning preaching in Arabic. In summer
2016 he approved the banning of burkinis, the full-bodied swimsuits, worn
by Muslim women on the beaches of France.

His attitude towards Islamic extremism was clear in his book, *Conquering
Islamic Totalitarianism*, published in 2016. He called on France to war
against that totalitarianism. Like Le Pen, he asserts that France is not a
multicultural society, and opposes the idea of identity politics. On the
contrary, French national identity must be protected. He invokes, among
other things, cooperation with Russia and with Vladimir Putin, who has
praised him as a very principled person. The two share a concern about the
virulence of Islam, especially ISIS, and the protection of Christians in
the Middle East. Fillon believes sanctions against Russia because of its
actions in Ukraine should be dropped.

Fillon, an admirer of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, plans policies
similar to theirs, including cuts in public spending, raising the
retirement age, reducing the number of public sector jobs by half a
million, ending the 35-hour week, lowering taxes, and curbing the power of
the trade unions.

Fillon also shares positions that are similar to or coincide with those of
both Le Pen and Donald Trump. Among them are doctrines of patriotism,
family values, and reduction of immigration to a minimum. All three stress
the sovereignty of their country, the U.S. and France, and call for what
they see as a decline to be stopped.  All three share the strong view that
authority and true values must be restored in their country. As in the case
of Brexit in the UK, for the three politicians, opposition to immigration
is still the key. Does this herald a Franco-American alliance?




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