
French TwistLe Pen terrifies Europe by violating its political taboos.
Posted Tuesday, April 23, 2002, at 12:42 PM ET
Outside of France, Jean-Marie Le Pen is probably best-known for a single phrase. The Nazi gas chambers, he once said, were "a detail of history." Shocking though that was, don't be misled by it. Monsieur Le Pen's surprise success in the first round of the French presidential elections on Sunday—he defeated the prime minister, Lionel Jospin, and came a close second to the sitting president, Jacques Chirac—had very little to do with anybody's sympathy for Hitler. And although "racist" is a word correctly applied both to Le Pen and to his party, the National Front, I don't believe Le Pen's receipt of 17 percent of the vote means that the French have suddenly become more racist than anybody else, either. This wasn't an election about racism, exactly—but it was an election about taboos.
To be precise, there are two large taboos in French public life. The taboos are immigration and the creeping economic and political power of "Europe," meaning the European Union. Because both of these issues touch on the question of national identity—what does it mean, nowadays, to be French?—they are issues that make many people nervous. At the same time, no mainstream politician wants to address them: The French center-left and the French center-right remain united in their belief that noisy opposition to immigration is racist and that serious criticism of the EU is nationalist. For that reason, both issues have been pushed to the margins, left for the extremists like Le Pen: He is vehemently opposed to immigration, and he vehemently objects to France's participation in the European Union.
In France, as in many European countries, immigration isn't so much an issue in principle as it is an issue in practice. In principle, the French have a far more open definition of nationality than, say, their German neighbors, and a far more liberal definition of citizenship. While even third-generation immigrants do not necessarily find it easy to become German citizens, France does naturalize many of the 100,000 legal immigrants who enter the country every year, and about 6 percent of the population is foreign-born.
In practice, however, many French do object to their large North African immigrant population, some 5 million people. Rightly or wrongly, many believe the North Africans have failed to assimilate. Rightly or wrongly, many believe they take jobs away from natives. Rightly or wrongly, many link their presence to rising crime. Rightly or wrongly—in the wake of Sept. 11—many believe Islamic fundamentalism in France is growing. It may well be, as defenders of French immigration policy contend, that none of these statements is true and that immigration is slowing down in any case. But if French politicians make it unacceptable to discuss such things in the mainstream, then the discussion will take place on the far-right fringes.
The same is true of the European Union. As I wrote in January, the absence of open opposition to the new European currency still remains mysterious, at least to me—and nowhere more so than in France. A high percentage of French legislation now originates in Brussels; the European Central Bank controls French monetary policy; and European bureaucrats dictate the shape of France's economic regulations, France's environmental policy, even France's immigration policy. Given that this is the country that virtually invented nationalism, it's not surprising that many in France object to the French loss of control over French internal affairs. When they do so out loud, however, mainstream politicians and the mainstream press accuse them of being "anti-European"—a terrible insult, on par with "fascist"—leaving them with no one to vote for except Le Pen.
There is a third taboo in France as well—although this is one shared by most French politicians, from Le Pen to Chirac to Jospin, and most French voters, too. This is the taboo on the vigorous advocacy of liberal economic reforms—the elements of what the French call "Anglo-Saxon" capitalism. In fact, there have been liberal reforms in France, including privatizations—usually instituted quietly, by left-wing politicians—but not enough to shake France convincingly out of recession. One isn't allowed to say so in polite society, however, so unemployment continues to rise, without any explanation or apparent solution, and insecurity increases, bringing yet more votes for Le Pen.
I exaggerate, slightly, to make a point: There are some more or less mainstream euro-skeptic, economically liberal French politicians. Nevertheless, there aren't enough of them to prevent Le Pen from making use of immigration, Europe, and fears of unemployment to win votes. In this, Le Pen is strikingly similar to Jörg Haider, whose occasional words of praise for Nazi Austria also led to street demonstrations and anti-fascist marches when his Freedom Party joined the Austrian coalition government two years ago. Their political circumstances were similar, too. Haider was fighting against "left-wing" Social Democrats and "right-wing" Christian Democrats who had been serving together in coalition governments so long they had ceased to have any real political or economic differences. Le Pen's victory came in a contest between the "left-wing" Jospin and the "right-wing" Chirac, two men who had also shared power, "cohabiting" as prime minister and president. Don't overlook the fact that the Trotskyites got 11 percent of the vote in last weekend's presidential poll as well: Above all, this election was a protest against the blandness, the interchangeability, and the suspected corruption of the two centrist parties.
Although Chirac will certainly win in the final round, the story may not end here. The unthinkable has now happened twice: The supposedly marginal far-right has scored damaging blows on the mainstream politicians of both Austria and France. Others should draw lessons. As I wrote last month, a number of European countries have avoided a similar calamity through the rejuvenation of center-right parties (most recently Denmark, Italy, and Portugal), which advocate liberal economic reforms, on the American model, more restricted immigration, and a more vigorous debate about the European Union. The rejuvenation of the left—on the somewhat idiosyncratic model of the British Labor Party—might work just as well. The alternative is bleak. If politicians refuse to address their voters' concerns—however dark and unacceptable those concerns may be—sooner or later, the voters will make them pay for it.
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Reader Comments From The Fray:
Ms. Applebaum's third taboo--the French aversion to open advocacy of free market economics--is the one that makes the least sense. Obviously, anywhere millions of people would be inconvenienced by change, politicians will tend to talk of it in whispers if at all. This is why American Congressmen can speak at length about sending thousands of troops to the Hindu Kush to battle Saudi-financed terrorists but would sooner have roll call votes on Mondays than consider raising the federal tax on gasoline. But the status quo can be inconvenient too. French farmers surely benefit from massive subsidies and trade protection, but food is more expensive; it's nice that French workers are protected from being fired, but unemployment is not a good thing, and workers who can't be fired are a lot less likely to be hired in the first place.
Yet instead of having the chance to vote for a frankly free-market, Yankophile political party the French vote in their millions for Le Pen and for parties inspired by Leon Trotsky. I mean, really--Leon Trotsky! I could begin to understand this if Trotsky had been French, or had done anything for France. It would make more sense for a French political party to be inspired by George Patton, who at least spoke the language and threw the Germans out of the country. Or Lafayette, who actually was French and probably didn't think much about market economics, but might have if he'd been born 200 years later.
Yes, it's past time for a French American Party--a political party dedicated to remaking France in the image of the United States. It probably wouldn't ever claim majority support, but could be a crucial factor in assembling governing coalitions. A French Premier seeking to bring French American Party supporters into his government could say, "Paris is worth a McDonalds." I even have a slogan for the French American Party, aimed directly at those Frenchmen who dread the prospect of being assimilated into an English-speaking, free market world: Resistance is Futile.
--Zaphras
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This election was not about latent anti-Europe and anti-immigration sentiment. If that were the case, then I would have expected voters to turn out in droves to protest at the polls. But that didn't happen; the election saw the highest abstention rate in recent history. The biggest story in France during the last year has been the skyrocketing crime rate--which has made Paris more dangerous than New York City. That problem, which neither Jospin nor Chirac has been able to deal with effectively, played a larger role in Le Pen's victory.
Second, as Applebaum rightly pointed out, both the president's and the PM's platforms differed little, and those far-right ballots were votes of protest. But she draws the wrong conclusion. Of course Le Pen will always garner the votes of a loud, anti-EU, anti-Arab minority, but this election was an aberration and a wake-up call to moderate politicians--not a signal that they should question or scale back immigration or their role in the EU.
--Amanda
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I doubt very much whether Le Pen is likely to be elected President of France sometime soon anymore than people like Buchanan, Falwell, or Robertson on the Republican far right are likely to win the U.S. Presidency in 2004. However, there is no reason to believe that Le Pen could not become a power broker very much in their style. Just how moderate President Bush is naturally is subject to debate but I think there is little doubt he often has to take more conservative positions than he would desire for personal/political reasons because he is so tied to his Republican base and it is the extremists who control that base today.
--The Bell
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