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_Why Did So Many French Vote for ‘Far-Right’  Marine Le Pen and Her 
National Front?_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/296706/why-did-so-many-french-vote-far-right-marine-le-pen-and-her-national-front-mario-loyol)
  
 
By _Mario Loyola_ (http://www.nationalreview.com/author/127173) 
_April  22, 2012 11:00 P.M._ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/296706/why-did-so-many-french-vote-far-right-marine-le-pen-and-her-national-front-mar
io-loyol)  


 
 
 
The real winner of the first  round of France’s crucially important 
presidential election was Marine Le  Pen and her “far right” National Front 
Party. 
Of course, she came in  third, which means that she’s eliminated from the 
runoff in two weeks. But  now she’s the talk of all Europe, and can look 
forward to a potentially  huge victory in the looming legislative elections. 
Her victory raises some troubling questions about exactly who she is,  what 
her party stands for, and where her support is coming from — and some  of 
those questions should worry Americans as much as anyone. 
Le Pen’s surprisingly strong showing (about 18.5 percent) put her  within 
ten points of both Nicolas Sarkozy (the conservative sitting  president, who 
came in at about 27 percent) and the Socialist candidate,  François Hollande 
(who got about 28.5 percent). The runoff will be between  Hollande and 
Sarkozy, but both have emerged somehow diminished, compared  with Marine Le 
Pen. 
 
One might think that National Front supporters will go mostly for  Sarkozy. 
But recent polls put Hollande even farther ahead of Sarkozy in a  
one-on-one runoff, 54–46. There are several reasons for that. 
First, Sarkozy is a Gingrich-like figure who has managed to alienate a  lot 
of people in the middle, and whose approval rating is consistently in  the 
30s. 
Second, the “far left” (i.e., Communist) coalition got battered and  came 
in at only 11.5 percent; but its leader, Jean-Luc Mélenchon,  immediately 
endorsed Hollande and practically begged his supporters to  vote Socialist and 
do everything possible to defeat Sarkozy. So Hollande’s  own vote plus the 
Communists gives him nearly enough to win the second  round outright. 
But the most interesting reason Sarkozy is in trouble now is that Le  Pen 
has a very good reason to want him to lose. It’s increasingly clear  that she 
aims to destroy Sarkozy in order to replace him as the  leader of the 
right-wing in France. In that plan, a Sarkozy loss in the  second round would 
be 
a stepping stone to a National Front victory in the  legislative elections 
that will occur just weeks later. That in turn would  be the critical 
stepping stone to an eventual Le Pen presidency. 
The most troubling thing about Le Pen is that  her definition of “right wing
” is very different from yours, and goes far  beyond anti-immigrant 
sentiment. _A  single sentence_ 
(http://www.republicain-lorrain.fr/actualite/2012/04/22/marine-le-pen-nous-sommes-desormais-la-seule-et-veritable-opposition-a-l
a-gauche)  in her _“victory”  concession speech_ 
(http://lci.tf1.fr/politique/elections-presidentielles/marine-le-pen-l-analyse-du-resultat-7180987.htm
l)  summed it all up. I’ll give the original first so  readers who speak 
French don’t have to rely on my translation: “Face à  un président sortant, à 
la tête d’un parti considérablement affaibli, nous  sommes désormais la 
seule et véritable opposition à la gauche  ultralibérale, laxiste et libertaire!
” My translation: “Facing a  president who has emerged at the head of a 
considerably weakened party, we  are, from now on, the sole and true 
opposition to the ultraliberal,  laissez-faire, and libertarian Left!” 
Confused? You shouldn’t be. In France, the terms “ultraliberal,”  “
laissez-faire,” and “libertarian” are all associated with the philosophy  of 
transnational free _trade_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/296706/why-did-so-many-french-vote-far-right-marine-le-pen-and-her-national-front-mario-loyo
l#)  at the heart of the European Union —  and particularly with its 
philosophy of free trade in labor, which  is progressively eroding national 
identity across Europe. The National  Front is a nationalist movement, as the 
name 
suggests; it is not merely  anti-immigrant (in fact she didn’t even mention 
immigration or foreigners  in her speech Sunday) but even more anti-Euro, 
anti-Europe, and  protectionist. What Le Pen apparently hopes to do is to 
co-opt the  protectionist tendency in the French labor movement, and push  
neoliberalism off on the left! 
Whether that strategy will work remains to be seen. Clearly, the  National 
Front’s strong showing owes a lot to the more moderate tone of  Marine, 
compared with her father, Jean-Marie. But the party is not more  moderate. If 
anything, it has become even more radical in sweep. 
The National Front has been increasingly successful in blending  tendencies 
of both the far right and the far left into a  broad-based populist 
movement. 
That suggests the kind of realignment that I’ve long feared might  happen 
in the United States — the coalition of anti-immigrant nationalists  of the 
Right with protectionist (and anti-immigrant) working class  elements of the 
Left, pitted against the rent-seeking beneficiaries of the  middle-class 
entitlement state and its anti-poverty programs.   
Where would such a realignment leave the proponents of economic freedom  — 
the essence of a free society? That question is now squarely facing  France, 
and may be squarely facing us sooner than we think. 
— Mario Loyola is director of the Center for  Tenth Amendment Studies at 
the Texas Public Policy Foundation, and a  former counsel for foreign and 
defense policy to the U.S. Senate  Republican Policy  Committee



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