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ELECTIONS

The French town showcasing far right’s ‘respectability strategy’

With France's far right set to win Sunday's parliamentary election runoff, voters across the country are wondering what life under a Rassemblement National government would be like.

The French town showcasing far right's 'respectability strategy'
Marine Le Pen (C) receives a piece of ribbon from Steeve Briois (L), mayor of Henin Beaumont, in northern France, while participating in the inauguration of the town's "Grande Braderie" (flea market) in September 2023. (Photo by FRANCOIS LO PRESTI / AFP)

A small town in the north of the country already knows.

Henin-Beaumont, population 26,000, has been run by the Rassemblement National (RN) since the former mining town voted in the far-right party in local elections in 2014, and then again in 2020.

It is often described as “the fiefdom” of RN heavyweight Marine Le Pen, an unassailable fortress of support, and a bridgehead for her national campaigns.

Le Pen, who was a local councillor in Henin-Beaumont between 2008 and 2011, last Sunday also won re-election as a National Assembly deputy, scoring a commanding 64.6 percent of Henin-Beaumont’s vote.

Steeve Briois, Henin-Beaumont’s mayor for the last decade, took over from a leftist administration tainted by corruption, and won re-election with a comfortable absolute majority.

“Mr Briois is sociable, loved and friendly,” said party activist Charlotte Chabierski. “When there’s a local festivity, he’ll get up on stage and sing.”

Local people, she said, were delighted with his record that included lower local taxes, less crime and a cleaner town.

“The quality of life is really good,” said Valentin, a 30-year-old shop assistant who declined to give his last name. “We have a mayor who looks after his town and his co-citizens.”

The local success story of Henin-Beaumont is a great help to Le Pen’s “strategy of respectability”, said Pierre Mathiot, a political scientist at the Sciences Po Lille university.

Briois had been “very quick to hide the more questionable aspects of the RN’s behaviour”, presenting himself as “a decent chap, everybody’s idea of an ideal son-in-law”.

‘Save a region that is suffering’

The Henin-Beaumont experience, meanwhile, had allowed Marine Le Pen to present herself “as a grassroots politician and not a Parisian”, he said. “As somebody who will save a region that is suffering and by extension, save France.”

In the aftermath of last Sunday’s first round of National Assembly elections, Henin-Beaumont residents went about their daily business quietly. There was no noticeable festive mood after the voting triumph, and few people were willing to talk, a sign of widespread suspicion of visiting journalists.

“The vote is over, I don’t have anything to say,” said a pensioner waiting at a bus stop with her shopping.

“This is part of the RN’s strength,” said Ines Taourit, a councillor for the opposition Socialists. “They have managed to build a wall of silence in this town, an omerta.”

This makes it harder to gauge the depth of what Le Pen’s opponents say is widespread anti-immigration sentiment and racism in the party.

Except perhaps during this week’s Euro 2024 match between France and Belgium, when a regular customer in a bar showing the game shouted “Too many immigrants!” when a shot by French-Cameroon player Aurelien Tchouameni missed the goal.

But the bar erupted in joy after Randal Kolo Muani, a French-Congolese striker, scored, securing France’s spot in the quarter finals.

On fundamental issues such as the economy — crucial in an area that is part of France’s impoverished rust belt — and local services, the RN would like their policies not to attract too much scrutiny, Taourit said.

The party’s management had involved “the privatisation of almost all public services” such as nursery schools and swimming pools, leading to “a steep cut in purchasing power”, she said.

“The voting booth is no test lab,” she said. “We shouldn’t walk into this trap, because in the end they will implement an ultra-liberal policy everywhere, just as they’re doing in Henin-Beaumont,” she said.

Some of the town’s residents, meanwhile, profess deep scepticism towards politicians from all sides.

“They’re all scumbags,” said a man drinking in a bar in the town centre. “That’s why I don’t vote.”

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ELECTIONS

France votes in final round of ‘seismic’ elections

France went to the polls on Sunday for the second round of a crunch election that is expected to leave the far right as the dominant force in a divided and paralysed parliament.

France votes in final round of 'seismic' elections

President Emmanuel Macron called the snap elections three years ahead of time after his forces were trounced in June’s European parliament vote, a gamble which seems to have backfired.

Far right leader Marine Le Pen’s Rassemblement National (RN) came top in the June 30 first round, and is on course to repeat the feat in Sunday’s second round of voting.

But she may not win the outright majority that would force Macron to appoint Le Pen’s lieutenant, the RN party leader Jordan Bardella, 28, as prime minister.

You can follow all the latest election coverage HERE, and also listen to the team at The Local discuss the election latest in the Talking France podcast. Download here

A hung parliament with a large eurosceptic, anti-immigration contingent could weaken France’s international standing and threaten Western unity in the face of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

With the country on tenterhooks, last week saw more than 200 tactical-voting pacts between centre and left wing candidates in seats to attempt to prevent the RN winning an absolute majority.

READ ALSO What time can we expect the second-round results on Sunday

This has been hailed as a return of the anti-far right “Republican Front” first summoned when Marine Le Pen’s father Jean-Marie faced Jacques Chirac in the run-off of 2002 presidential elections.

Following the pacts, opinion polls forecast that the RN would fall short of the 289 seats needed for an outright majority in the 577-seat National Assembly, while still becoming the largest party.

Such an outcome could allow Macron to possibly build a broad coalition against the RN and keep Gabriel Attal as prime minister on a caretaker basis.

But it could also herald a long period of paralysed politics in France, as it prepares to host the Olympics from July 26th.

“Today the danger is a majority dominated by the far right and that would be catastrophic,” Attal said in a final pre-election interview with French television on Friday.

Many in France remain baffled over why Macron called an election which could end with the RN doubling its presence in parliament and his contingent of centrist MPs halving in number.

But the president, known for his theatrical gestures, appears intent on executing what he calls a “clarification” of French politics, which he hopes will eventually leave three clear camps of far right, centre and hard left.

The final opinion polls published by two organisations on Friday projected the RN would win between 170 to 210 seats, followed by the Nouveau Front Populaire (NFP) broad left-wing coalition on 145 to 185 and Macron’s centrists on 118 to 150.

Explained: The main parties and big names in France’s snap elections

While Macron’s Ensemble alliance is forecast to come third, the more successful NFP is a fragile mix of several warring factions ranging from traditional Socialists to the hard-left La France Insoumise (LFI) of firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon.

“France is on the cusp of a seismic political shift,” said analysts at the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), warning that even if Macron controlled the government after the election he would face “legislative gridlocks”.

This would weaken “France’s voice on the European and international stage.”

Macron, who disappeared from public view over recent days in order not to provoke the electorate further, has vowed to serve out his term until 2027, when he must step down.

That is when Le Pen scents her best chance to win the Elysée presidential palace at the fourth attempt.

Le Pen has angrily denounced what she has described as Macron’s vision for “one party” rule spanning the right to left by excluding the RN and lashed out at the French elites, which she says conspire against it.

But after the success of the first round, the RN had a sometimes tricky final week of campaigning with a handful of scandals involving RN candidates – including one who had been photographed wearing a Nazi military cap.

After voting began on Saturday in France’s overseas territories, polls opened in mainland France at 8am and were due to close by 8pm.

Preliminary results – which usually give a very close idea of the final outcome – are published shortly afterwards.

A total of 30,000 police, including 5,000 in Paris, have been deployed this weekend to head off trouble.

Follow all the latest news and analysis in English from 8pm on Sunday HERE

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