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Le Pen’s vision: Retooling France at home, abroad

Le Pen's

Most of the press keeps hanging the moniker of far-right on Marine Le Pen, which may be true, but then in the same sentence they call Emmanuel Marcon and centrist, which is very far from the truth, Macron is definitely on the left. The two candidates could not be more different, Macron is pro-Europe which means he spends a lot of time working for the E.U. instead of with the E.U. Le Pen, wants to hopefully change that, but with that change may come a major shift in the political dynamics in France and broader Europe. As reported by the AP:

A Le Pen defeat of Macron, could rock France’s system of governance, that now is more pro-Europe   

PARIS (AP) — No more Muslim headscarves in public. All schoolchildren in uniforms. Laws proposed and passed by referendum. Generous social services unavailable to foreigners unless they’ve held a job for five years.

FILE – Emma Mino holds an electoral poster of French far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen, Tuesday, March 29, 2022 in Le Temple-De-Bretagne, western France. Marine Le Pen’s vision for France if the far-right leader wins Sunday’s runoff presidential election would include a ban on Muslim headscarves in public, schoolchildren in uniforms and laws passed by referendum. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez, File)

That’s just a sampling of Marine Le Pen‘s vision for France if the far-right leader wins Sunday’s runoff presidential election against incumbent Emmanuel Macron. In all things, France, and the French, would come first.

Polls portray Macron as the front-runner in Sunday’s vote, but a Le Pen win is possible — an outcome that could rock France’s system of governance, strike fear among its immigrants and Muslims, jolt the dynamics of the European Union, and unnerve NATO allies.

Macron, 44, a centrist who is ardently pro-EU, has relentlessly blasted his adversary as a danger and framed their election showdown as an ideological battle for the soul of the nation. Le Pen, 53, views Macron as a progressive technocrat for whom France is just a part of the EU.

Marine
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen smiles during a press conference Tuesday, April 12, 2022 in Vernon, west of Paris. The thought of an extreme-right leader standing at the helm of the European Union would be abhorrent to most in the 27-nation bloc. But if Emmanuel Macron falters in the April 24 French presidential elections, it might be two weeks away. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

She says she would retool the country’s political system and the French Constitution to accommodate her populist agenda, putting the EU into second place and making France truer to its bedrock principles.

“I intend to be the president who gives the people back their voices in their own country,” Le Pen said at a news conference.

Critics fear a threat to democracy under Le Pen, a nationalist who is cozy with Hungary’s autocratic prime minister, Viktor Orban, and anti-immigrant far-right parties elsewhere in Europe. Le Pen met with Russian President Vladimir Putin before the 2017 French presidential vote that she lost to Macron in a landslide.

Current French President and centrist presidential candidate for reelection Emmanuel Macron speaks at his election night headquarters Sunday, April 10, 2022 in Paris. French polling agencies projected Sunday that incumbent Emmanuel Macron and far-right nationalist Marine Le Pen are heading for another winner-takes-all runoff in the French presidential election, with their fierce political rivalry and sharply opposing visions pulling clear of a crowded field of 12 candidates in the first round of voting. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)

The United States has long considered France its oldest ally, but a Le Pen presidency could pose a problem for the Biden administration by undermining trans-Atlantic unity over sanctions against Russia and by bolstering autocratic populists elsewhere in Europe.

The National Rally leader also is wary of free-trade deals and would seek a more independent stance for France in the United Nations and other multilateral bodies.

In a column published Thursday in several European newspapers, the center-left leaders of Germany, Spain and Portugal raised a warning about “populists and the extreme right” who hold Putin “as an ideological and political model, replicating his chauvinist ideas.”

French far-right leader Marine Le Pen arrives at a television recording studio for a debate with centrist candidate and French President Emmanuel Macron, Wednesday, April 20, 2022 in La Plaine-Saint-Denis, outside Paris. In the climax of France’s presidential campaign, centrist President Emmanuel Macron and far-right contender Marine Le Pen meet in a one-on-one television debate that could prove decisive before Sunday’s runoff vote. Behind is chief executive officer of French TV Group France Televisions Delphine Ernotte. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

“They have echoed his attacks on minorities and diversity and his goal of nationalist uniformity,” wrote German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and Portuguese Prime Minister António Costa.

Le Pen’s meeting five years ago with Putin has haunted her campaign amid Russia’s war in Ukraine, even though she has condemned the invasion “without ambiguity.”

But if she were president, Le Pen said she would think twice about supplying Ukraine with weapons and would oppose energy sanctions against Moscow — for the sake of the Russian people.

She also said she would pull France out of NATO’s military command, weakening the Western military alliance’s united front against Moscow, and that there should be a “strategic rapprochement” with Russia once the war is over.

Macron
FILE – French President Emmanuel Macron, right, welcomes Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Fort of Bregancon in Bormes-les-Mimosas, southern France, Monday Aug. 19, 2019. While most of the world is shunning Vladimir Putin, one world leader notably isn’t: French President Emmanuel Macron. The two men have spoken three times since Russia invaded Ukraine and 10 times over the past month. Macron’s diplomatic efforts failed to prevent war, but he’s not giving up – and he is now one of the few outsiders with a view into Putin’s mindset at this crucial time. (Gerard Julien, Pool via AP, File)

Macron has sought similar policies in the past and tried his own outreach with Putin. But his government says it has sent more than 100 million euros ($108 million) in weapons to Ukraine since the war started, and France has been central to the West’s ever-tougher sanctions against Russia.

Le Pen has projected a nurturing image throughout her campaign, saying she would oversee France as “the mother of the family.” She has focused on the purchasing power of consumers while standing firm on emblematic issues that define the far right, such as immigration, security, national identity and sovereignty.

To soften the blow of rising prices, Le Pen wants to slash taxes on energy bills from 20% to 5.5%. She promises to put 150-200 euros ($162-$216) per month back in consumers’ pockets.

Macron, a former French economy minister and banker, considers such measures misdirected and economically unviable.

Le Pen insists her agenda addresses the “France of the forgotten” that he has ignored.

She has proposed a “referendum revolution” as the centerpiece of her plan to help heal the “democratic fracture” that she says accounts for low turnout in recent French elections and growing social discord.

headscarves
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen, left, poses for a selfie with a supporter as she campaigns in a market in Pertuis, southern France, Friday, April 15, 2022. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole)

Laws could be passed by referendum — bypassing elected lawmakers – after supporters gather the signatures of 500,000 eligible voters, That was a demand of the sometimes violent “yellow vest” movement that challenged Macron’s presidency two years ago.

“During my mandate, I count on consulting the only expert that Emmanuel Macron never consulted — the people,” Le Pen said this month.

But there’s a hitch.

The French Constitution would need to be revised to give citizens such a direct voice in lawmaking. It would also need changing for another key Le Pen goal: giving a “national preference” for state housing and job benefits to French citizens before foreigners.

Macron
Centrist presidential candidate and French President Emmanuel Macron poses for selfie with a resident during a campaign stop Thursday, April 21, 2022 in Saint-Denis, outside Paris. French voters head to polls on Sunday in a runoff vote between centrist incumbent Emmanuel Macron and nationalist rival Marine Le Pen. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Macron failed in his own bid to change the constitution, a complicated process requiring support from both houses of parliament. Le Pen wants to skirt that by using a special article in the constitution like Gen. Charles de Gaulle did in 1962 to allow for direct universal suffrage.

“She wants to dynamite liberal democracy by calling on the people,” four constitutional law professors wrote last week in the newspaper Le Monde.

Le Pen would use a referendum for other items in a controversial package to stop “uncontrolled immigration.” These include treating any asylum demands abroad, not in France, and “systematically” expelling migrants without residency papers, among others; and ending automatic citizenship for those born in France to foreign parents.

She would also reinstate uniforms in all schools and fortify police powers.

FILE – French far-right leader Marine Le Pen, left, talks to a woman as she campaigns in a market in Pertuis, southern France, Friday, April 15, 2022. French voters head to polls on Sunday in a runoff vote between centrist incumbent Emmanuel Macron and nationalist rival Marine Le Pen, wrapping up a campaign that experts have seen as unusually dominated by discriminatory discourse and proposals targeting immigration and Islam. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole, File)

Le Pen has called Muslim headscarves “Islamist uniforms” and proposed a ban on wearing them in public. Macron said in a debate Wednesday night that such a ban could lead to “civil war” in the country with Europe’s largest Muslim population.

But it was an elderly woman in a blue-and-white headscarf confronting Le Pen last week in the southern town of Pertuis who may have put a dent in her plan.

“What is the headscarf doing in politics?” she asked Le Pen.

After the pushback by the woman, Le Pen party officials moved into damage control, saying that banning headscarves in streets would be progressive and not target a “grandmother of 70.”

An embarrassed Le Pen conceded later that the headscarf was a “complex problem.”

By ELAINE GANLEY

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