Le Pen urges halt to immigration(France)

madkins

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Jean-Marie Le Pen.


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Mr. Le Pen at a Paris rally.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6558949.stm


BBC.-Europe

Le Pen urges halt to immigration
(summary)

April 16, 2007

By Emma Jane Kirby

Jean-Marie Le Pen has been in politics for more than 50 years, but at his rally at Porte de Versailles in Paris the crowd greet him as if he was the hottest new act in politics.

Some 5-6,000 people waving flags crammed into the stadium on Sunday to cheer on the National Front leader. The overspill who could not fit in still screamed their approval through the open doors.

"I'm voting for the first time," 19-year-old Frederic told me. "And I'm voting Le Pen because immigration is a serious problem in France - that's not racist, it's realistic and Le Pen will deal with the problem, while candidates like Sarkozy and Royal just pretend it's not happening."

Thirty-five years after the National Front party was founded, stopping immigration remains its dominant theme. Mr Le Pen warned the crowd that France was in danger from the thousands of immigrants who arrive in the country each year.

"This is just the start of mass immigration," he warned from the podium. "If we do nothing, we will be submerged."

Solid support

Browsing in the National Front shop at the rally, among the flashing lapel pins and Le Pen baseball caps, a T-shirt catches my eye. On the breast pocket is a cartoon of an Arab man in Middle Eastern dress, laden with bags and suitcases. It carries the slogan "Bon Voyage Mate!"

France was horrified when Mr Le Pen came second in the 2002 presidential race, but that sense of shock has had no negative effect on his ratings.

The polls currently put him in fourth place and suggest that with between 13 and 16% he could get his highest score yet.

For the thousands of people at the rally who enthusiastically yell their support, it is worth remembering that many more voters will show their approval for the National Front more quietly at the ballot box on 22 April.

Skara Brae,

madkins
 
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Francoise Brocco


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/talking_point/6565583.stm#francoise


BBC.-Europe

French voter view

April 18, 2007

Name: Francoise Brocco
Age: 56
Lives: Paris (originally from Toulouse)
Works: Hotel worker
Current voting intention: Le Pen

I will vote for Jean-Marie Le Pen first and foremost because I like him as a person.

He is a friendly and amicable man and is the best candidate for president.

He is also the best person to change France, and we do need a lot of change in France.

The country is going downhill.

Too many people do not have enough money, cannot afford their rent and pensions are too low.

Many of our neighbourhoods are also becoming too dangerous.

The main problem is immigration.

There are too many people being allowed into this country without the right papers.

They are given free medical care and free transport, while the rest of us have
to pay. This is not right.

Jacques Chirac has given too many benefits to illegal immigrants. This must stop and the only person to tackle this is Mr Le Pen.

The other candidates would not change a thing when it comes to immigration.

Segolene Royal would only make it worse, and Nicolas Sarkozy's policies are even more dangerous, in my opinion.

Mr Le Pen has run a good campaign overall.

He is polling well at the moment and we hope to see that increase between now and Sunday.

I think he can have a real impact on this election and will hopefully be elected president, so he can enact some much-needed change and regain France.

Skara Brae,

madkins
 
It's about too late for France, they have too many Muslims there right now, and they're way overtaking the natives in birthrates.

LePen is probably being underpolled again, the election there is this weekend, I expect a Sarkozy win in Round 2, but who knows when it comes to French politics.
 
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I'm right, says Le Pen.


http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,2448811,00.html


DW-WORLD.DE

French Election Campaign Swerves to the Right
(summary)

April 20, 2007

As France prepares to go to the polls, even moderate candidates are trying to score points with right-wing slogans, while the real right-wingers are attempting to woo immigrants from the suburbs.

Far-right veteran Jean-Marie Le Pen stunned France in the presidential election in 2002 by clinching 16.9 percent of the vote in the first round and knocking then-Socialist candidate Lionel Jospin out of the race.

Five years later, there are fears in certain quarters that the National Front candidate might pull off a similar feat and make it to the run-off for France's highest office.

But there's little chance of that happening, according to Alain Howiller, president of the Institute of Political Studies in Strasbourg.

"Le Pen won't make it to the second round this time," he said.

"Experience shows these things don't repeat themselves," he said.

"National identity" as a vote-getter

But campaign managers at former Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy's conservative UMP camp remain wary. According to French satirical weekly Canard enchaine, Sarkozy's aides reckon that Le Pen's anti-immigrant National Front could take as much as 20 percent of the vote.

Daniela Schwarzer, an expert on France at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs in Berlin also said that Le Pen's influence could not be written off.

"The National Front's voter potential is possibly higher than the surveys show it to be," she told DW-WORLD.DE.

Sarkozy's campaign managers seem convinced that the election will only be won on the right. And as if to emphasize that point, their candidate has been focusing all his energies on the topic of national identity in the final days leading up to the first round of voting on Sunday.

The conservative frontrunner has said that only those who speak French sufficiently well will be allowed to settle down permanently in France. Sarkozy has also backed quotas for immigrants and choosing them on the basis of professional qualifications. He has said he would set up a "ministry for immigration and national identity" if he's elected.

"France is embittered that its national identity is endangered by unlimited immigration," Sarokzy said recently.

"Those are ideas that Le Pen has been propagating for 25 years," he said.

Royal shows nationalist streak

And it's not just Sarkozy angling for votes from the far right. Even Sarkozy's Socialist challenger, Segolene Royal, has displayed a strong nationalist streak in recent weeks.

At a campaign rally two weeks ago, Royal urged her supporters for the first time to sing the national anthem. Over the weekend, Royal stepped up her new-found nationalist drive by urging all French to have a French flag at home.

Experts, such as Daniela Schwarzer, worry that the "irresponsible" way Royal and Sarkozy have been flirting with the topic of national identity could have serious long-terms political consequences.

"If the whole discussion in a left-wing party like the PS (the Socialist Party) and a moderate right-wing party such as the UMP leans so strongly towards the far-right fringe then it changes the whole atmosphere in society," Schwarzer said. "Then even openly xenophobic slogans don't horrify anymore."

Le Pen in unfamiliar territory

Sarkozy and Royal's right-wing dabbling may end up benefiting Le Pen, not just in the long term, but also more immediately.

The veteran politician has said he's "happy" about the right tilt the election campaign in France has taken so far.

"That's because it shows all the French that I'm right," Le Pen said recently.

The Front National candidate has been charting unfamiliar territory during his campaign this time. In a bid to stay relevant in the fight for both frustrated voters on the far right as well as protest voters, the 78-year-old has a young women, apparently from North Africa, advertise for him on posters.

Le Pen has also been campaigning in the depressed suburbs with the slogan: "Neither friend, nor black, white nor North African -- French!"

The strategy might just work. According to studies by the Paris-based Cevipof Institute, around 100,000 immigrants from North Africa could vote for Le Pen on Sunday.

"Everything but Sarkozy"

The one campaign slogan residents of the suburbs seem to agree on is: "Everything but Sarkozy." It's obvious that they haven't forgotten the conservative frontrunner who described violent youth there as "scum" during riots in late 2005.

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"Many youth in the suburbs will vote for Le Pen because he offers them a chance to explode a system that they hate, because they see no chance for themselves in it," said Schwarzer. "For that they're ready to overlook his xenophobic comments."

Skara Brae,

madkins

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