Copyright (c) 1997 - Ingrid A. Rimland
"Paradoxically, Le Pen registered some of his highest scores in Alsatian villages where there are neither immigrants nor unemployment -- his two key issues." writes one who seems to want it be known that it isn't exactly the rabble who is attracted by Le Pen.
"After Le Pen publicly espoused racial inequality last year," hints another while winking from both eyes, "opposition Socialist politician Henri Emmanuelli called for the FN to be outlawed. But his own party disowned the idea and few politicians believe it is feasible now that Le Pen has 15 percent of the national vote and holds seats in the European Parliament, regional assemblies and city councils across France."
"As he basks in (the) publicity (prior to) his National Front party's congress this weekend, mainstream parties, newspapers and broadcasters are anxiously debating how to deal with him." writes a third.
So. Even as we speak.
Sourly described as a "vituperative orator " and "nimble
polemicist" by some while hailed by others as a ". . . fiery orator
who is taking on the establishment thugs" this highly mediagenic populist
seems to be banking on the fact that lots of folks in France are stricken
with the Freedom Flu as the liberal dream world is coming to an end by popular
demand.
The evidence is certainly convincing. Both supporters and foes started pouring
into Strasbourg yesterday to propel his far-right party into mainstream
politics - the former by design, the latter by default.
While Pen backs reinstating the death penalty and sending even legal immigrants
back home - this to the joy of his supporters - the protesters insist they
are mourning the death of democracy while they are shrouding the city in
black.
Black bands were wrapped around street signs. A black flag was briefly hoisted
on the spire of the towering Gothic cathedral in Strassburg, and black flowers
were planted outside the European Parliament while the town's socialist
mayor, Catherine Trautmann, rushed to remove a statue of Joan of Arc, the
mediaeval heroine who symbolizes French national independence, from its
pedestal near the imposing cathedral in Strassburg's centre, to prevent
National Front backers from using it as a rallying point.
Shucks! What to do with such a man?
Inquiring media wants to know.
Writes a perplexed Reuters reporter: "Ban him? Prosecute him? Legislate
against him? Debate him? Demonstrate against him? Report on him? Ignore
him? Fight him in the streets?"
(Sounds almost like the ruckus around Ernst . . .)
Equally at a loss are the Establishment Lieutenants.
Socialist leader Lionel Jospin and Communist chief Robert Hue, in interviews
published by the daily Le Parisien on Saturday, denounced the Front as "racist",
"xenophobic", "anti-Semitic", and "fascist"
- threats that have lost their zest from overuse.
Conservative Gaullist Justice Minister Jacques Toubon has proposed a tougher
bill to punish racist statements, but his own coalition shows no inclination
to enact the legislation which critics say would make a martyr of Le Pen.
Similarly, Gilles de Robien, the parliamentary leader of the centre-right
UDF party, called this week for a ``media boycott'' (translate: the Silent
Treatment) of the National Front and Le Pen, an idea that won "thumbs
down" by the media.
Media editors reply, making sure they are and will remain politically correct
for the time being, claim piously that their ranks are ". . . determined
no one should claim later that they did not know Le Pen advocated expelling
three million immigrants. . . " this followed by a quote attributed
to Adolf Hitler: ". . . 500,000 jobless, 500,000 Jews" -- while
making sure that their consumers note the resemblance to Le Pen's NF has
said, to wit: ". . . 3 million jobless, 3 million immigrants too many."
Will it hurt or will it help to smear Le Pen with the convenient "Nazi"
taint? Time will tell.
Meanwhile, here is a telling summary of all of the above by Charles Trueheart
of the Washington Post Foreign Service - and please note that I stay well
within the 300 words of "fair use":
"The surging fortunes of France's anti-immigrant National Front party have put mainstream politicians and journalists on the defensive. Arguing about how to handle the menace of intolerance represented by the extreme-right party, they appear tempted to answer it with their own high-minded version of the same thing.
French politicians of the right and left veer daily between condemning the ideas of the National Front and condemning the strategies and blunders of one another in dealing with the threat. But they have done little to stop the spread of the party's appeal from negligible in the early 1980s to potent percentages . . .
The National Front has attracted support from traumatized older people and disaffected younger ones, from workers and the unemployed, by blaming crime and unemployment on immigration from North and Sub-Saharan Africa, and by linking France's economic stagnation to the European Union, globalization and the United States. . .
By default of politicians consumed by the fear of alienating voters drawn to the National Front, or actively seeking to win them over, the burden of managing Le Pen's message of France-firstism, xenophobia and racism has fallen to the French media.
They are in a quandary too. Their self-doubt is evident in the boiling controversy about how to present Le Pen and his ideas to the public -- or whether to give them a place in public discourse at all. A prominent politician this week called for a "wall of silence" to be erected around the National Front, suggesting that coverage is incitement. . ."
(March 29 1997; Page A12)
Haven't we heard that one before?
This morning, on an Easter weekend Saturday in California ". . . that
looks like the Lord scrubbed the sky", as my German Oma used to say,
I decided that it is highly desirable for you to know that what is happening
in France is more than just symbolic.
There's nothing like a California Easter weekend to ponder the amazing:
black flowers put at the base of the multicult may pole of France where
it all started with the guillotine to usher in the slogan "Liberty!
Fraternity! Equality!" more than 200 years ago. The chickens must be
coming home to roost.
Ingrid
Thought for the Day:
"Petrograd became Leningrad and is Petrograd again."
(Doug Collins)