The extreme right-wing National Front is now France's fourth
largest political party. In 1986 under a proportional electoral
system it won thirty-five seats in the French National Assembly; in
the 1988 Presidential election the National Front's leader,
Jean-Marie Le Pen, obtained over fourteen percent of the popular
vote. Over the past decade, it has won representation at virtually
all levels of French politics.
Le Pen's xenophobic anti-immigrant message has clearly attracted
significant support in France. He has had a major influence upon
the terms on which issues like immigration, nationality and racism
are debated in France. Drawing on personal interviews with Le Pen
and other National Front leaders, Jonathan Marcus traces the rise
of Le Pen's party, and its impact on the French political scene,
and in the process raises important questions about the future of
French, European, and world politics. How far have the mainstream
parties of both Left and Right faced up to Le Pen's challenge? Is
the National Front now a permanent feature of French politics? To
what degree is Le Pen a threat to French democracy? And finally,
how successful will Le Pen be in pushing his agenda in the European
Parliament?
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