European lawmaker Jordan Bardella replaced his mentor Marine Le Pen on Saturday at the helm of Frances leading far-right party, pledging to protect French civilization from perceived threats posed by immigration and defending a party member who made a racist remark in parliament.
Bardella, 27, won an internal party vote with 85% support, marking a symbolic changing of the guard at the resurgent National Rally party. He is the first person to lead the party who doesnt have the Le Pen name since it was founded a half-century ago.
The National Rally is seeking to capitalize on its recent breakthrough in Frances legislative election and growing support for far-right parties in Europe, notably in neighboring Italy. Its also facing broad public anger over an offensive comment this week by a National Rally member in parliament in response to a Black lawmaker.
Marine Le Pen is still expected to wield significant power in the partys leadership and run again for Frances presidency in 2027. She says she stepped aside to focus on leading the partys 89 lawmakers in Frances National Assembly.
To broad applause, she hugged Bardella after the results were announced at a party congress on Paris Left Bank, and both raised their arms in victory. Le Pen said Bardellas main challenge will be pursuing the party roadmap of taking power in France.
We are going to win! supporters chanted.
Anti-racism activists, union leaders and politicians protested nearby Saturday against the National Rally, denouncing what many see as a creeping acceptance of its xenophobic views.
Yeliz Alkac, 30, told The AP that she was demonstrating to support people who face persistent racism in France. She described shock that the remark in parliament seen as denigrating African immigrants was seen as normal by some in France.
The fact that the National Rally has 89 lawmakers at the National Assembly is a strong signal. It should be a warning about how the extreme right is going strong, she said.
In his speech Saturday, Bardella defended the National Rally legislator who was suspended over the remark, calling him a victim of a manhunt.
Bardella described his familys Italian immigrant roots and pride at becoming French, but made it clear that not all foreigners are welcome.
France shouldnt be the worlds hotel, he said, calling for drastic limits on immigration.
He welcomed a representative of Italian Premier Giorgia Melonis far-right party who came to the congress, calling for a rapprochement of similar forces in Europe.
Bardella had been the interim president of the National Rally since Le Pen entered the presidential race last year. He beat out party heavyweight Louis Aliot, 53, who had argued that the National Rally needs to reshape itself to be more palatable to the mainstream right.
Bardellas election feels like a fresh push, said party member Marie Audinette, 23. He embodies the youth.
Audinette, who grew up in a working-class neighborhood in Bordeaux, said that her country was perishing, citing deteriorating public services that struggled to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic. She also described a clear change of population in Bordeaux.
Some far-right supporters in France increasingly refer to the false great replacement conspiracy theory that the populations of Western countries are being overrun by non-white, non-Christian immigrants. The claim, propagated by white supremacists, has inspired deadly attacks.
Le Pen lost to French President Emmanuel Macron on her third presidential bid in April but earned her highest score yet. Two months later, her party won its most seats to date in the lower house of parliament, in part thanks to Le Pens efforts to focus on inflation and workers economic troubles.
Le Pen has worked to remove the stigma of racism and antisemitism that clung to her party and broaden its base. She has notably distanced herself from her now-ostracized father Jean-Marie Le Pen, who co-founded the party then called the National Front and has been repeatedly convicted for hate speech.
Bardella is part of a generation of young, very young, people who engaged themselves behind Marine Le Pen in the 2010s and who probably wouldnt have joined the National Rally during Jean-Marie Le Pens era, political scientist Jean-Yves Camus told The Associated Press.
The Le Pen family and the party also have deep ties to Vladimir Putins Russia. While Le Pen condemned Russias invasion of Ukraine, she has also questioned resulting Western sanctions against Russia, and her party took out a $9 million loan from the First Czech-Russian bank in 2014 that many see as a Russian effort to influence French politics.
According to Camus, Saturdays party vote wont question Le Pens leadership.
Le Pen wont have to deal with the party (now) and can focus on the most important thing, leading the partys lawmakers in the National Assembly, he said.
(AP)
2 Responses
This is not good for the Jews.
There may be some significance in far right parties switching to leaders so young that it was probably their grandparents or great-grand parents who were adults during World War II. It makes for a clean break from the far-right of 80 years ago (particularly since the left-wing parties have in some ways been moving towards positions that 80 years ago were identified with the far-right).