The Truth About France's 'Far-Right' Electoral Surge
By: Rachel Marsden
Are the French getting their Tea Party on? That's what an outsider looking at
the country's first-round presidential voting results might have been led to
believe. But, as with many things French, the reality is tres compliquee.
The weekend vote knocked out all but the two candidates long expected to square
off in the May 6 final: Socialist Francois Hollande (28.6 percent) and incumbent
center-right President Nicolas Sarkozy (27.2 percent). This isn't the story,
though. The most striking news is the 17.9 percent score by Marine Le Pen's
National Front party. That's even better than her father Jean-Marie's best
showing of 16.9 percent when he shockingly knocked out the Socialist candidate
in the first round of the 2002 race to face incumbent President Jacques Chirac
in the final.
Let's widen the picture a bit to get a better understanding.
Last week, I debated on Russian television the topic of extremism in Europe
within the context of the Anders Breivik case currently being adjudicated in
Norway. Last summer, Breivik killed dozens of people at a youth camp linked to
Norway's left-leaning Labor Party, which he holds responsible for pro-Muslim
immigration policies. One of my debate opponents argued that Breivik represents
some kind of worrisome Western trend -- from the rising popularity of
"far-right" parties in Europe to the American Tea Party movement.
Aside from the fact that Breivik never had the Tea Party on speed dial, I
pointed out that we shouldn't confuse legitimate and vigorous criticism of
current political initiatives with the violent acts of a single behavioral
outlier.
If one were to make the same kind of sweeping judgment about violent non-Western
fanatics, despite the prevalence of a clear perpetrator profile pattern, that
person would be chastised and admonished, if not censored or sued. Yet some are
all too willing to portray a person or group with a thoughtful right-wing view
as being on the verge of snapping -- usually a means of discrediting a rational
argument, even before its merits can be thoroughly assessed.
It's precisely this attempt to marginalize people who don't adhere to the
increasingly prevalent culturally Marxist views that drives them to seek out and
support democratic entities (like Le Pen's National Front party) that accord
them a proper public voice. That's how it's done in civil societies. Where's the
alarmism in that? If dialogue around these issues is quashed or marginalized,
the parties championing these concerns will serve as pressure valves and grow in
popularity. This partly explains the National Front's record electoral figure --
but it's not the whole story.
It would be a mistake to think that the "far right" in France stands for limited
government and a free market. The National Front rails against decentralization,
advocates a strong federal government, and complains that European legislation
forces competitive trade and prevents the French government from financially
assisting companies, thereby inhibiting "economic patriotism."
Sounds more like Russia than the Tea Party, doesn't it? Under the National
Front's political tent, one finds a political buffet consisting of far more than
just a righteous battle against cultural Marxism and population replacement.
There's something for nationalists, socialists, protectionists and anti-elitists
-- everything but a significant helping of free market and limited government.
When Le Pen denounces Sarkozy's "ultra-liberalism," she isn't talking about
leftism. In Europe, "liberalism" isn't synonymous with "leftism" as it is in
America. Rather, it refers to the kind of classical liberalism prevalent in 19th
century America and incarnated by the likes of right-libertarian heroes Milton
Friedman and Friedrich Hayek. As a free-market, limited-government conservative
who once served as a Republican think-tank director, I'm typically considered a
"liberal" in France.
So, how many people within Le Pen's party adhere to politics similar enough to
mine that they'll vote for Sarkozy in the final round? Based on various
analyses, I'd wager no more than about half, with the rest supporting the
Socialist. One might even argue that because former Trotskyite Jean Luc
Melenchon did worse than expected and the Socialist scored precisely as
expected, Le Pen's "far right" party scooped up some nanny-state Communists in
the first round. (Try reading that last sentence again without your brain
exploding.)
Blaise Pascal once said, in adapting a famous Montesquieu quote, "Truth on one
side of the Pyrenees is error on the other." It's a fitting adage as Americans
try to make sense of the politics at play behind this dramatic French electoral
spectacle.