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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, December 14, 2015
Front National fails to win any region in final round of local elections
Marine Le Pen’s far-right party misses out, a week after achieving record support, says exit poll
An emotional Marine Le Pen speaks after the French regional election results. Photograph: Yves Herman/Reuters
An emotional Marine Le Pen speaks after the French regional election results. Photograph: Yves Herman/Reuters
France’s far-right Front National has failed to win control of any
regions in the final round of local elections despite a historically
high score in the first-round when it was ranked as the most popular
party in France.
The defeat of the FN was down to mass tactical voting,
an increase in turnout and warnings by the left that what it called the
“antisemitic and racist” party would bring France to its knees. All
this combined to stop the FN translating its huge first-round score of
nearly 28% into the overall control of any region.
But the Socialist prime minister, Manuel Valls, deliberately avoided any
triumphalism and did not claim that the steady rise of the far-right
party had been definitively stopped.
“Tonight there is no relief, no triumphalism, no message of victory,” he
said. “The danger of the far right has not been removed – far from it –
and I won’t forget the results of the first round and of past
elections.” He said it was now the government’s duty to “listen more to
the French people” and “to act in a stronger, faster way” particularly
on employment in a country with record joblessness.
He conceded that tactical voting was not enough to counter the far right
and win support: “We have to give people back the desire to vote for
and not just against.”
Exit polls on Sunday night showed that with less than 18 months to go
until the next French presidential election, the nationalist,
anti-immigration, anti-European FN still gained hundreds of regional
councillors across France — tripling its presence on regional councils
and extending its nationwide reach, cementing its grassroots powerbase
and boosting its quest for power nationwide.
Despite the FN failing to grab its first region, Marine Le Pen will
still use her party’s first round breakthrough performance as a
springboard for her bid for the 2017 presidential election.
Addressing her supporters, Le Pen presented her party as the victim of
“calumny and defamation” by the government who she said had “intimidated
and infantilised” voters by teaming up with its rivals on the right to
keep the FN out of power.
She said the tactical voting by leftwingers who chose Nicolas Sarkozy’s
rightwing Les Républicains party in order to put up a “barricade”
against the FN had already played into her claim that she and her voters
were the victims of an elitist system that persecuted them. She vowed
during the campaign that her voters would take their revenge by turning
out in even greater numbers during the presidential campaign.
Le Pen herself failed to capitalise on her high first-round score in the vast northern region of Nord-Pas-de-Calais-Picardie,
after the Socialist party pulled out of the race and made an
extraordinary plea for its voters to chose Sarkozy’s candidate Xavier
Bertrand just to stop Le Pen. First estimations showed that Bertrand,
Sarkozy’s former employment minister, won with a resounding 57% of the
vote.
In an emotional speech, Bertrand said it was not his “victory” and
implored the political class to reinvent itself to counter the rise of
the FN.
Le Pen’s 26-year-old niece, Marion Maréchal-Le Pen, 26, an MP and rising party star hoping to lead the southern region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur,
was also kept out by the tactical voting of the left for another
Sarkozy candidate, the hardline mayor of Nice, Christian Estrosi. First
estimations showed he had won by about 54.4%.
The defeat of both the Le Pens showed the difficulty of a far-right
personality to get past the 50% threshold when faced with a mainstream
candidate. This is crucial to the presidential election where Le Pen is
expected to make it to the second-round run-off.
Turnout was up by around seven percentage points on the first-round,
especially in areas where the FN could have won, suggesting a strong
mobilisation to beat the party. There had been a marked rise in requests
for proxy votes between the two rounds.
First estimates showed the left had performed better than expected,
winning at least five regions. Sarkozy’s Les Républicains also stood on
around five regions, a poorer showing than might have been expected for
the main rightwing opposition party, given that two of those regions
were won with the support of tactical leftwing voters.
The outcome appeared to comfort the Socialist prime minister’s tactic of
agressively warning of the damage the FN could cause. He had warned
that if the FN won, it would foster divisions and “this division could
lead to civil war”.
He called it a party that “didn’t love France”, that cheated French
people and that would bring the country to its knees. The Socialist
party leader Jean-Christophe Cambadelis had also warned that the FN
would be like returning to the wartime Nazi-collaborationist Vichy
regime except “under Vichy it was the Jews [who were targeted]. Now it’s
Muslims.”
Marine Le Pen had slammed the tactics and political manoeuvering as
undemocratic, accusing her opponents of “intellectual terrorism” in
seeking to block her party’s path to power.
The FN was once simply content with attracting protest votes for the
gruff ex-paratrooper Jean-Marie Le Pen, but it has radically changed
strategy since his daughter Marine Le Pen took over in 2011, seeking to
build a base of locally elected officials to target the top levels of
power.
Marine Le Pen’s strategy is to take positions of power across the
country. She hopes the good first-round showing, despite not winning any
regions, will boost her chances in the 2017 presidential race where
polls suggest she could knock out a mainstream candidate and reach the
second-round runoff.
Le Pen has led a drive to detoxify the party and move away from the
racist, jackbooted, antisemitic imagery of the past. But the party’s
hardline positions on Islam and immigration remain unchanged. Since the
Paris terrorist attacks last month, the FN’s key concerns – the refugee
crisis, security, the place of Islam and national identity – have become
the main talking points in France, personally benefiting Le Pen.
The FN sought to capitalise on the sense of disaffection with the
mainstream political class, high unemployment, inequality and social
despair in a range of areas from rural villages to the northern
rustbelt. The party had also capitalised on the migrant crisis,
particularly in Calais where thousands of migrants are camping in
squalid conditions in the hope of reaching Britain.

