National Rally (France)

The National Rally (French: Rassemblement national, pronounced [ʁasɑ̃bləmɑ̃ nasjɔnal]; RN), until June 2018 known as the National Front (French: Front national, pronounced [fʁɔ̃ nasjɔnal]; FN), is a right-wing populist[26] and nationalist[27] political party in France. Although most political commentators place the RN on the far-right,[18][20][19][24][28] other sources suggest that the party's position on the political spectrum has become more difficult to define clearly.[29][30][31][32] Owing to the French electoral system, the party's representation in public office has been limited despite its significant share of the vote.[33] Its major policies include opposition to French membership in NATO, European Union, the Schengen Area, and the eurozone. As an anti-European Union party, the National Rally has opposed the European Union since its creation. The party also supports economic interventionism, protectionism, a zero tolerance approach to law and order, and is opposed to immigration, advocating significant cuts to legal immigration.[14]

National Rally

Rassemblement national
PresidentMarine Le Pen
FounderJean-Marie Le Pen[1]
Founded5 October 1972 (1972-10-05)
Headquarters76–78 rue des Suisses, 92000 Nanterre, Hauts-de-Seine
Youth wingGénération Nation
Security wingDepartment for Protection and Security
Membership (2018) 31,000[2]
IdeologyFrench nationalism[3][4][5]
National conservatism[6]
Souverainism[7][8]
Economic nationalism[9]
Protectionism[10][11]
Right-wing populism[3][12][13]
Anti-immigration[14][5]
Euroscepticism[15]
Anti-globalism[10][16]
Social conservatism[12][17]
Political positionRight-wing[18][19][20][21] to far-right[22][23][24]
National affiliationRassemblement bleu Marine
European affiliationIdentity and Democracy Party
European Parliament groupIdentity and Democracy[nb 1]
Colours     Navy blue[nb 2]
National Assembly
7 / 577
Senate
1 / 348
European Parliament
23 / 79
Presidencies of Regional Councils
0 / 17
Regional Councils
292 / 1,758
Presidencies of Departmental Councils
0 / 101
Departmental Councils
46 / 4,108
Website
rassemblementnational.fr

The party was founded in 1972 to unify a variety of French nationalist movements of the time. Jean-Marie Le Pen was the party's first leader and the undisputed centre of the party from its start until his resignation in 2011. While the party struggled as a marginal force for its first ten years, since 1984 it has been the major force of French nationalism.[34] It has put forward a presidential candidate at every presidential election but one since 1974. In 2002, Jean-Marie came second in the first round, but finished a distant second in the runoff to Jacques Chirac.[35] His daughter Marine Le Pen was elected to succeed him as party leader in 2012. In April 2017, she temporarily stepped down in order to concentrate on being the presidential candidate and to unite voters.[36][37][38]

While her father was nicknamed the "Devil of the Republic"[39] by mainstream media and sparked outrage for hate speech, including Holocaust revisionism[40] and Islamophobia,[41] Marine Le Pen pursued a policy of "de-demonisation"[42] of the party by softening its image. She endeavoured to extract it from its far-right cultural roots, and to normalise it by giving it a culture of government, and censuring controversial members like her father, who was suspended, and then expelled from the party in 2015.[43][44] Since her election as the leader of the party in 2011, the popularity of the FN continued to grow apace as the party won several municipalities at the 2014 municipal elections; it topped the poll in France at the 2014 European elections with 25% of the vote; and again won more votes than any other party in the 2015 departmental elections.[45] The party once again came in first place in the 2015 regional elections with a historic result of just under 28% of the vote.[46] By 2015, the FN had established itself as one of the largest political forces in France, unusually being both most popular and most controversial political party.[47][48][49][50]

At the party congress on 11 March 2018, Marine Le Pen proposed renaming the party to Rassemblement national (National Rally), pending approval by a vote of party members.[51] On 1 June 2018, she announced the renaming of the party after its approval by 80.81% of the party's adherents.[52]

Background

The party maintains that the nation is concrete (that is, a reality) rather than an abstraction; such point of view is in direct opposition to the French Revolution itself and its legacy.[53] One of the primary progenitors of the party was the Action Française, founded at the end of the 19th century, and its descendants in the Restauration Nationale,[54] a pro-monarchy group that supports the claim of the Count of Paris to the French throne.[55] More recently, the party drew from the Poujadism of the 1950s, which started out as an anti-tax movement without relations to the right-wing, but included among its parliamentary deputies "proto-nationalists" such as Jean-Marie Le Pen.[56]

Another conflict that is part of the party's background was the Algerian War (many frontistes, including Le Pen, were directly involved in the war), and the right-wing dismay over the decision by French President Charles de Gaulle to abandon his promise of holding on to French Algeria.[57] In the 1965 presidential election, Le Pen unsuccessfully attempted to consolidate the right-wing vote around the right-wing presidential candidate Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour.[58] During the late 1960s and early 1970s, the French far-right consisted mainly of small extreme movements such as Occident, Groupe Union Défense (GUD), and the Ordre Nouveau (ON).[59]

History

Early years

Foundation (1972–1973)

While the ON had competed in some local elections since 1970, at its second congress in June 1972 it decided to establish a new political party to contest the 1973 legislative elections.[60][61] The party was launched on 5 October 1972 under the name National Front for French Unity (Front national pour l'unité française), or Front National.[62] In order to create a broad movement, the ON sought to model the new party (as it earlier had sought to model itself) on the more established Italian Social Movement (MSI), which at the time appeared to establish a broad coalition for the Italian right. The FN adopted a French version of the MSI tricolour flame as its logo.[63][64][65] It wanted to unite the various French far-right currents, and brought together "nationals" of Le Pen's group and Roger Holeindre's Party of French Unity; "nationalists" from Pierre Bousquet's Militant movement or François Brigneau's and Alain Robert's Ordre Nouveau; the anti-Gaullist Georges Bidault's Justice and Liberty movement; as well as former Poujadists, Algerian War veterans, and some monarchists, among others.[62][66][67] Le Pen was chosen to be the first president of the party, as he was untainted with the militant public image of the ON and was a relatively moderate figure on the far-right.[68][69]

The National Front fared poorly in the 1973 legislative elections, receiving 0.5% of the national vote (although Le Pen won 5% in his Paris constituency).[70] In 1973 the party created a youth movement, the Front national de la jeunesse (National Front of the Youth, FNJ). The rhetoric used in the campaign stressed old far-right themes and was largely uninspiring to the electorate at the time.[71] Otherwise, its official program at this point was relatively moderate, differing little from the mainstream right.[72] Le Pen sought the "total fusion" of the currents in the party, and warned against crude activism.[73] The more radical elements of the ON were not persuaded, and reverted to hard activism. They were banned from the party later that year.[74][75] Le Pen soon became the undisputed leader of the party,[76] although this cost it many leading members and much of its militant base.[74]

In the 1974 presidential election, Le Pen failed to find a mobilising theme for his campaign.[77] Many of its major issues, such as anti-communism, were shared by most of the mainstream right.[78] Other FN issues included calls for increased French birth rates, immigration reduction (although this was downplayed), establishment of a professional army, abrogation of the Évian Accords, and generally the creation of a "French and European renaissance."[79] Despite being the only nationalist candidate, he failed to gain the support of a united far-right, as the various groups either rallied behind other candidates or called for voter abstention.[80] The campaign further lost ground when the Revolutionary Communist League published a denunciation of Le Pen's alleged involvement in torture during his time in Algeria.[80] In his first presidential election, Le Pen gained only 0.8% of the national vote.[80]

FN–PFN rivalry (1973–1981)

Following the 1974 election, the FN was obscured by the appearance of the Party of New Forces (PFN), founded by FN dissidents (largely from the ON).[81][82] Their competition weakened both parties throughout the 1970s.[81] Along with the growing influence of François Duprat and his "revolutionary nationalists", the FN gained several new groups of supporters in the late 1970s and early 1980s: Jean-Pierre Stirbois (1977) and his "solidarists", Bruno Gollnisch (1983), Bernard Antony (1984) and his Catholic fundamentalists, as well as Jean-Yves Le Gallou (1985) and the Nouvelle Droite.[83][84] Following the death of Duprat in a bomb attack in 1978, the revolutionary nationalists left the party, while Stirbois became Le Pen's deputy as his solidarists effectively ousted the neo-fascist tendency in the party leadership,[85] which dismissed the FN as becoming "too Zionist" and eventually founded the French Nationalist Party in 1983.[86] The far right was marginalised altogether in the 1978 legislative elections, although the PFN was better off.[87][88] For the first election for the European Parliament in 1979, the PFN had become part of an attempt to build a "Euro-Right" alliance of European far-right parties, and was in the end the only one of the two that contested the election.[89] It fielded Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour as its primary candidate, while Le Pen called for voter abstention.[90]

For the 1981 presidential election, both Le Pen and Pascal Gauchon of the PFN declared their intentions to run.[90] However, an increased requirement regarding obtaining signatures of support from elected officials had been introduced for the election, which left both Le Pen and Gauchon unable to stand for the election. In France, parties have to secure support from a specific number of elected officials, from a specific number of departments, in order to be eligible to run for election. In 1976, the number of required elected officials was increased fivefold from the 1974 presidential cycle, and the number of departments threefold.[90] The election was won by François Mitterrand of the Socialist Party (PS), which gave the political left national power for the first time in the Fifth Republic; he then dissolved the National Assembly and called a snap legislative election.[91] The PS attained its best ever result with an absolute majority in the 1981 legislative election.[92] This "socialist takeover" led to a radicalisation in centre-right, anti-communist, and anti-socialist voters.[93] With only three weeks to prepare its campaign, the FN fielded only a limited number of candidates and won only 0.2% of the national vote.[78] The PFN was even worse off, and the election marked the effective end of competition from the party.[78]

Jean-Marie Le Pen's era

Electoral breakthrough (1982–1988)

Jean-Marie Le Pen, the long-time leader of the FN

While the French party system had been dominated by polarisation and competition between the clear-cut ideological alternatives of two political blocs in the 1970s, the two blocs had largely moved towards the centre by the mid-1980s. This led many voters to perceive the blocs as more or less indistinguishable, particularly after the Socialists' "austerity turn" (tournant de la rigueur) of 1983,[94] in turn inducing them to seek out to new political alternatives.[95] By October 1982, Le Pen supported the prospect of deals with the mainstream right, provided that the FN did not have to soften its position on key issues.[96] In the 1983 municipal elections, the centre-right Rally for the Republic (RPR) and centrist Union for French Democracy (UDF) formed alliances with the FN in a number of towns.[96] The most notable result came in the 20th arrondissement of Paris, where Le Pen was elected to the local council with 11% of the vote.[96][97] Later by-elections kept media attention on the party, and it was for the first time allowed to pose as a viable component of the broader right.[98][99] In a by-election in Dreux in October, the FN won 17% of the vote.[96] With the choice of defeat to the political left or dealing with the FN, the local RPR and UDF agreed to form an alliance with the FN, creating national sensation, and together won the second round with 55% of the vote.[96][100] The events in Dreux were a monumental factor for the rise of the FN.[101]

Le Pen protested the media boycott against his party by sending letters to President Mitterrand in mid-1982.[98] After some exchanges of letters, Mitterrand instructed the heads of the main television channels to give equitable coverage to the FN.[98] In January 1984, the party made its first appearance in a monthly poll of political popularity, in which 9% of respondents held a "positive opinion" of the FN and some support for Le Pen.[98] The next month, Le Pen was for the first time invited onto a prime-time television interview programme, which he himself later deemed "the hour that changed everything".[98][102] The 1984 European elections in June came as a shock, as the FN won 11% of the vote and ten seats.[103] Notably, the election used proportional representation and was considered to have a low level of importance by the public, which played to the party's advantage.[104] The FN made inroads in both right-wing and left-wing constituencies, and finished second in a number of towns.[105] While many Socialists had arguably exploited the party in order to divide the right,[106] Mitterrand later conceded that he had underestimated Le Pen.[98] By July, 17% of opinion poll respondents held a positive opinion of the FN.[107]

By the early 1980s, the FN featured a mosaic of ideological tendencies and attracted figures who were previously resistant to the party.[107] The party managed to draw supporters from the mainstream right, including some high-profile defectors from the RPR, UDF, and the National Centre of Independents and Peasants (CNIP).[107] In the 1984 European elections, eleven of the 81 FN candidates came from these parties, and the party's list also included an Arab and a Jew (although in unwinnable positions).[107] Former collaborators were also accepted in the party, as Le Pen urged the need for "reconciliation", arguing that forty years after the war the only important question was whether or not "they wish to serve their country".[107] The FN won 8.7% overall support in the 1985 cantonal elections, and over 30% in some areas.[108]

For the 1986 legislative elections the FN took advantage of a new proportional representation system that had been imposed by Mitterrand in order to moderate a foreseeable defeat for his PS.[108][109] In the election, the FN won 9.8% of the vote and 35 seats in the National Assembly.[108] Many of its seats could be filled by a new wave of respectable political operatives, notables, who had joined the party after its 1984 success.[110][111] The RPR won a majority with smaller centre-right parties, and thus avoided the need to deal with the FN.[108] Although it was unable to exercise any real political influence, the party could project an image of political legitimacy.[111][112] Several of its legislative proposals were extremely controversial and had a socially reactionary and xenophobic character, among them attempts to restore the death penalty, expel foreigners who "proportionally committed more crimes than the French", restrict naturalisation, introduce a "national preference" for employment, impose taxes on the hiring of foreigners by French companies, and privatise Agence France-Presse.[113] The party's time in the National Assembly effectively came to an end when Jacques Chirac reinstated the two-round system of majority voting for the next election.[114] In the regional elections held on the same day, it won 137 seats, and gained representation in 21 of the 22 French regional councils.[108] The RPR depended on FN support to win presidencies in some regional councils, and the FN won vice-presidential posts in four regions.[108]

Consolidation (1988–1997)

Le Pen's campaign for the upcoming presidential election unofficially began in the months following the 1986 election.[115] To promote his statesmanship credentials, he made trips to South East Asia, the United States, and Africa.[115] The management of the formal campaign, launched in April 1987, was entrusted to Bruno Mégret, one of the new notables.[115] With his entourage, Le Pen traversed France for the entire period and, helped by Mégret, employed an American-style campaign.[116] Le Pen's presidential campaign was highly successful; no candidates came close to rival his ability to excite audiences at rallies and boost ratings at television appearances.[115] Using a populist tone, Le Pen presented himself as the representative of the people against the "gang of four" (RPR, UDF, PS, Communist Party), while the central theme of his campaign was "national preference".[115] In the 1988 presidential election, Le Pen won an unprecedented 14.4% of the vote,[117] and double the votes from 1984.[118]

The FN was hurt in the snap 1988 legislative elections by the return two-ballot majority voting, by the limited campaign period, and by the departure of many notables.[112][119] In the election the party retained its 9.8% support from the previous legislative election, but was reduced to a single seat in the National Assembly.[119] Following some anti-Semitic comments made by Le Pen and the FN newspaper National Hebdo in the late 1980s, some valuable FN politicians left the party.[120][121] Other quarrels soon also left the party without its remaining member of the National Assembly.[122] In November 1988, general secretary Jean-Pierre Stirbois, who, together with his wife Marie-France, had been instrumental in the FN's early electoral successes, died in a car accident, leaving Bruno Mégret as the unrivalled de facto FN deputy leader.[115][122] The FN only got 5% in the 1988 cantonal elections, while the RPR announced it would reject any alliance with the FN, now including at local level.[123] In the 1989 European elections, the FN held on to its ten seats as it won 11.7% of the vote.[124]

In the wake of FN electoral success, the immigration debate, growing concerns over Islamic fundamentalism, and the fatwa against Salman Rushdie by Ayatollah Khomeini, the 1989 affaire du foulard was the first major test of the relations between the values of the French Republic and Islam.[125] Following the event, surveys found that French public opinion was largely negative towards Islam.[126] In a 1989 legislative by-election in Dreux, FN candidate Marie-France Stirbois, campaigning on an anti-Islamism platform, returned a symbolic FN presence to the National Assembly.[127] By the early 1990s, some mainstream politicians began employing anti-immigration rhetoric.[128] In the first round of the 1993 legislative elections the FN soared to 12.7% of the overall vote, but did not win a single seat due to the nature of the electoral system (if the election had used proportional representation, it would have won 64 seats).[129][130] In the 1995 presidential election, Le Pen rose slightly to 15% of the vote.[131]

The FN won an absolute majority (and thus the mayorship) in three cities in the 1995 municipal elections: Toulon, Marignane, and Orange.[132] (It had won a mayorship only once before, in the small town of Saint-Gilles-du-Gard in 1989.)[133] Le Pen then declared that his party would implement its "national preference" policy, with the risk of provoking the central government and being at odds with the laws of the Republic.[133] The FN pursued interventionist policies with regards to the new cultural complexion of their towns by directly influencing artistic events, cinema schedules, and library holdings, as well as cutting or halting subsidies for multicultural associations.[134] The party won Vitrolles, its fourth town, in a 1997 by-election, where similar policies were pursued.[135] Vitrolles' new mayor Catherine Mégret (fr) (who ran in place of her husband Bruno)[136] went further in one significant measure, introducing a special 5,000 franc allowance for babies born to at least one parent of French (or EU) nationality.[135] The measure was ruled illegal by a court, also giving her a suspended prison sentence, a fine, and a two-year ban from public office.[135]

Turmoil and split of the MNR (1997–2002)

Bruno Mégret and his faction broke out from the FN to form the MNR party

In the 1997 legislative elections the FN polled its best-ever result with 15.3% support in metropolitan France, confirming its position as the third most important political force in France.[137][138] It also showed that the party had become established enough to compete without its leader, who decided not to run to focus on the 2002 presidential election.[139] Although it won only one seat in the National Assembly (Toulon), thanks to a good communication director,[140] it advanced to the second round in 132 constituencies.[141] The FN was arguably more influential now than it had been in 1986 with its 35 seats.[142] While Bruno Mégret and Bruno Gollnisch, in an unusual display of dissent, favoured tactical cooperation with a weakened centre-right following the left's victory, Le Pen rejected any such compromise.[143] In the tenth FN national congress in 1997, Mégret stepped up his position in the party as its rising star and a potential leader following Le Pen.[144] Le Pen however refused to designate Mégret as his successor-elect, and instead made his wife Jany the leader of the FN list for the upcoming European election.[145]

Mégret and his faction left the FN in January 1999 and founded the National Republican Movement (MNR), effectively splitting the FN in half at most levels.[146][147] Many of those who joined the new MNR had joined the FN in the mid-1980s, in part from the Nouvelle Droite, with a vision of building bridges to the parliamentary right.[146] Many had also been particularly influential in intellectualising the FN's policies on immigration, identity and "national preference", and, following the split, Le Pen denounced them as "extremist" and "racist".[146] Support for the parties was almost equal in the 1999 European election, as the FN polled its lowest national score since 1984 with just 5.7%, and the MNR won 3.3%.[148] The effects of the split, and competition from more moderate nationalists, had left their combined support lower than the FN result in 1984.[149]

Presidential run-off (2002)

Logo for Le Pen's 2002 presidential campaign

For the 2002 presidential election, opinion polls had predicted a run-off between incumbent President Chirac and PS candidate Lionel Jospin.[150][151] The shock was thus great when Le Pen unexpectedly beat Jospin (by 0.7%) in the first round.[151] This resulted in the first presidential run-off since 1969 without a leftist candidate, and the first ever with a candidate of the far-right.[152] To Le Pen's advantage, the election campaign had increasingly focused on law and order issues, helped by media attention on a number of violent incidents.[153] Jospin had also been weakened due to the competition between an exceptional number of leftist parties.[154] Nevertheless, Chirac did not even have to campaign in the second round, as widespread anti-Le Pen protests from the media and public opinion culminated on May Day, with an estimated 1.5 million demonstrators across France.[155] Chirac also refused to debate with Le Pen, and the traditional televised debate was cancelled.[156] In the end, Chirac won the presidential run-off with an unprecedented 82.2% of the vote and with 71% of his votes—according to polls—cast simply "to block Le Pen".[156] Following the presidential election, the main centre-right parties merged to form the broad-based Union for a Popular Movement (UMP).[157] The FN failed to hold on to Le Pen's support for the 2002 legislative elections, in which it got 11.3% of the vote.[158] It nevertheless outpolled Mégret's MNR, which won a mere 1.1% support, even though it had fielded the same number of candidates.[159]

Decline (2002–2011)

National advertisement in Marseille for Le Pen's 2007 presidential bid

A new electoral system of two-round voting had been introduced for the 2004 regional elections, in part in an attempt to reduce the FN's influence in regional councils.[160] The FN won 15.1% of the vote in metropolitan France, almost the same as in 1998, but its number of councillors was almost halved due to the new electoral system.[161] For the 2004 European elections, too, a new system less favourable to the FN had been introduced.[162] The party regained some of its strength from 1999, earning 9.8% of the vote and seven seats.[162]

For the 2007 presidential election, Le Pen and Mégret agreed to join forces. Le Pen came fourth in the election with 11% of the vote, and the party won no seats in the legislative election of the same year. The party's 4.3% support was the lowest score since the 1981 election and only one candidate, Marine Le Pen in Pas de Calais, reached the runoff (where she was defeated by the Socialist incumbent). These electoral defeats partly accounted for the party's financial problems. Le Pen announced the sale of the FN headquarters in Saint-Cloud, Le Paquebot, and of his personal armoured car.[163] Twenty permanent employees of the FN were also dismissed in 2008.[164] In the 2010 regional elections the FN appeared to have re-emerged on the political scene after surprisingly winning almost 12% of the overall vote and 118 seats.[165]

Marine Le Pen's era

Revival of the FN (2011–2012)

Marine Le Pen, National Front president (2011–2017)
Results by region at the first round of the 2015 French regional elections, with regions where the National Front gained the most votes in grey

Jean-Marie Le Pen announced in September 2008 that he would retire as FN president in 2010.[150] Le Pen's daughter Marine Le Pen and FN executive vice-president Bruno Gollnisch campaigned for the presidency to succeed Le Pen,[150] with Marine's candidacy backed by her father.[150] On 15 January 2011, it was announced that Marine Le Pen had received the two-thirds vote needed to become the new leader of the FN.[166][167] She sought to transform the FN into a mainstream party by softening its xenophobic image.[150][166][167] Opinion polls showed the party's popularity increase under Marine Le Pen, and in the 2011 cantonal elections the party won 15% of the overall vote (up from 4.5% in 2008). However, due to the French electoral system, the party only won 2 of the 2,026 seats up for election.[168]

At the end of 2011, the National Front withdrew from the far-right Alliance of European National Movements and joined the more moderate European Alliance of Freedom. In October 2013, Bruno Gollnisch and Jean-Marie Le Pen resigned from their position in the AENM.

For the 2012 presidential election, opinion polls showed Marine Le Pen as a serious challenger, with a few polls even suggesting that she could win the first round of the election.[169][170] In the event, Le Pen came third in the first round, scoring 17.9% – the best showing ever for the FN.

In the 2012 legislative election, the National Front won two seats: Gilbert Collard and Marion Maréchal.[171][172][173]

In two polls about presidential favourites in April and May 2013,[174] Marine le Pen polled ahead of president François Hollande but behind Nicolas Sarkozy.[174]

Electoral successes (2012–2017)

In the municipal elections held on 23 and 30 March 2014, lists officially supported by National Front won mayoralties in 12 cities: Beaucaire, Cogolin, Fréjus, Hayange, Hénin-Beaumont, Le Luc, Le Pontet, Mantes-la-Ville, the 7th arrondissement of Marseille, Villers-Cotterêts, Béziers and Camaret-sur-Aigues. While some of these cities were in southern France (like Fréjus) which traditionally votes more for right-wing parties than the rest of the country, others were located in northern France, where Socialist Party was strong until 2010s. Following the municipal elections, the National Front had, in cities of over 1,000 inhabitants, 1,546 and 459 councilors at two different levels of local government.[175] The international media described the results as "historic",[176][177][178] and "impressive", although the International Business Times suggested that "hopes for real political power remain a fantasy" for the National Front.[179]

Demonstration against National Front in Paris after the results of the 2014 election

The National Front received 4,712,461 votes in the 2014 European Parliament election, finishing first with 24.86% of the vote and 24 of France's 74 seats.[180] This was said to be "the first time the anti-immigrant, anti-EU party had won a nationwide election in its four-decade history."[181] The party's success came as a shock in France and the EU.[182][183]

Presidential and parliamentary election (2017–present)

On 24 April 2017, a day after the first round of the presidential election, Marine Le Pen announced that she would temporarily step down as the party's leader in an attempt to unite voters.[36] In the second round of voting, Le Pen was defeated 66.1% to 33.9% by her rival Emmanuel Macron of En Marche![184]

During the following parliamentary elections, the FN received 13.02% of the vote, which represented a disappointment compared to the 13.07% of the 2012 elections. The party appeared to have suffered from the demobilisation of its voters from the previous vote. However, 8 deputies were elected (6 FN and 2 affiliated), the best number for the FN in a parliamentary election using a majoritarian electoral system since its creation (proportional representation was used in the 1986 elections). Marine Le Pen was elected to the National Assembly for the first time, and Gilbert Collard was re-elected. Ludovic Pajot became the youngest member of the current French parliament at 23.

In late 2017, Florian Philippot split from FN and formed The Patriots, due to the FN weakening its position on leaving the EU and Euro.[185]

At the conclusion of the party congress in Lille on 11 March 2018, Marine Le Pen proposed renaming the party to Rassemblement national (National Rally) while keeping the flame as its logo. The new name was put to a vote of party members.[51] Rassemblement national had already been used as the name of a French party, the Rassemblement National Français, led by the extreme-right lawyer Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour. His presidential campaign in 1965 was managed by Jean-Marie Le Pen.[186] The name had also been used by the FN previously, for its parliamentary group between 1986 and 1988. However, the name change faced opposition from an already-existing party named "Rassemblement national", whose president, Igor Kurek, described it as "Gaullist and republican right": the party had previously registered its name with the National Institute of Industrial Property in 2013.[187][188] On 1 June, Le Pen announced that the name change was approved by party adherents with 80.81% in favour.[52]

During that party congress, Steve Bannon, former advisor to Donald Trump before and after his election, gave what has been described as a "populist pep talk".[189] Bannon advised the party members to "Let them call you racist, let them call you xenophobes, let them call you nativists. Wear it like a badge of honor. Because every day, we get stronger and they get weaker. ... History is on our side and will bring us victory." Bannon's remarks brought the members to their feet.[190][191][192]

In January 2019, an ex-Sarkozy minister Thierry Mariani and former conservative lawmaker Jean-Paul Garraud, left the Les Republicains (LR), joining the National Rally.[193]

Political profile

The party's ideology has been broadly described by scholars, such as James Shields, as nationalist, and right-wing populist.[194] Jean-Yves Camus and Nicolas Lebourg, following Pierre-André Taguieff's analysis, include the party in an old French tradition of "national populism" that can be traced back to Boulangism. National populists combine the social values of the left and the political values of the right, and advocate a referendary republic that would bypass traditional political divisions and institutions. Aiming at a unity of the political (the demos), ethnic (the ethnos) and social (the working class) interpretations of the "people", they claim to defend the "average Frenchman" and "common sense", against the "betrayal of inevitably corrupt elites".[195]

The FN has changed considerably since its foundation, as it has pursued the principles of modernisation and pragmatism, adapting to the changing political climate.[196][197] At the same time, its message has increasingly influenced mainstream political parties,[197][198] although the FN too has moved somewhat closer towards the centre-right.[199]

Law and order

In 2002, Jean-Marie Le Pen campaigned on a law-and-order platform of zero tolerance, harsher sentencing, increased prison capacity, and a referendum on re-introducing the death penalty.[152] In its 2001 programme, the party linked the breakdown of law and order to immigration, deeming immigration a "mortal threat to civil peace in France."[154] Marine Le Pen rescinded the party's traditional support for the death penalty with her 2017 campaign launch, instead announcing support for imprisonment "in perpetuity" for the "worst crimes" in February 2017.[200]

The party opposed the 2016 criminalisation of the use of prostitution in France, on the grounds that it would negatively affect the safety of sex workers.[201]

Immigration

FN political poster reading: "The immigrants are going to vote... and you're abstaining?!!"

Since its early years, the party has called for immigration to be reduced.[202] The theme of exclusion of non-European immigrants was brought into the party in 1978 and became increasingly important in the 1980s.[203]

Since the 1999 split, the FN has cultivated a more moderate image on immigration and Islam, no longer calling for the systematic repatriation of legal immigrants but still supporting the deportation of illegal, criminal or unemployed immigrants.[204]

In recent years the party still opposes immigration, particularly Muslim immigration from Africa and the Middle East. Following the Arab Spring (2011) rebellions in several countries, Marine Le Pen has been campaigning on halting the migration of Tunisian and Libyan immigrants to Europe.[205]

In November 2015, Front National stated as its goal to have a net legal immigration rate (immigrants minus emigrants) of 10,000 in France per year. Since 2013, that yearly net immigration rate was around 140,000 if one takes into account only people born abroad from non-French parents, but was around 33,000 if one includes also the departures and returns of French expatriates.[206]

Islamism and Islamisation

Representatives of Front National have repeatedly connected immigration to Islamic terrorism.[207] In 2011, Marine Le Pen warned that wearing full face veils are "the tip of the iceberg" of Islamisation of French culture.[208] In December 2018, Al Jazeera's Investigative Unit found links between National Rally and a group calling for the expulsion of all Muslims from Europe.[209]

Economy

At the end of the 1970s, Le Pen refurbished his party's appeal by breaking away from the anti-capitalist heritage of Poujadism. He instead made an unambiguous commitment to popular capitalism, and started espousing an extremely market liberal and anti-statist programme. Issues included lower taxes, reducing state intervention, reducing the size of the public sector, privatisation, and scaling back government bureaucracy. Some scholars have even considered that the FN's 1978 program may be regarded as "Reaganite before Reagan".[203]

The party's economic policy shifted from the 1980s to the 1990s from neoliberalism to protectionism.[210] This occurred within the framework of a changed international environment, from a battle between the Free World and Communism, to one between nationalism and globalisation.[142] During the 1980s, Jean-Marie Le Pen complained about the rising number of "social parasites", and called for deregulation, tax cuts, and the phasing-out of the welfare state.[210] As the party gained growing support from the economically vulnerable, it converted towards politics of social welfare and economic protectionism.[210] This was part of its shift away from its former claim of being the "social, popular and national right" to its claim of being "neither right nor left – French!"[211] Increasingly, the party's program became an amalgam of free market and welfarist policies, which some political commentators have claimed are left-wing economic policies.[142][212][213]

Under her leadership, Marine Le Pen has been more clear in her support for protectionism, while she has criticised globalism and capitalism for certain industries.[214] She has been characterised as a proponent of letting the government take care of health, education, transportation, banking and energy.[208][212]

Feminism

In the 2002 legislative elections, the first under the new gender parity provision in the French Constitution, Le Pen's National Front was among the few parties to come close to meeting the law, with 49% female candidates; Jospin's Socialists had 36%, and Chirac's UMP had 19.6%.[215] Women voters in France were traditionally more attracted to mainstream conservative parties than the radical right until the 2000s. Marine Le Pen has successfully introduced a neo-populist shift in the defense of women, gays, and Jews against a "phallocratic, homophobic, and anti-Semitic Islam".[216] The proportion of women in the party has risen to 39% by 2017.[217]

Foreign policy

From the 1980s to the 1990s, the party's policy shifted from favouring the European Union to turning against it.[210] In 2002, Jean-Marie Le Pen campaigned on pulling France out of the EU and re-introducing the franc as the country's national currency.[152] In the early 2000s the party denounced the Schengen, Maastricht, and Amsterdam treaties as foundations for "a supranational entity spelling the end of France."[218] In 2004, the party criticised the EU as "the last stage on the road to world government", likening it to a "puppet of the New World Order."[219] It also proposed breaking all institutional ties back to the Treaty of Rome, while it returned to supporting a common European currency to rival the United States dollar.[219] Further, it rejected the possible accession of Turkey to the EU.[219] The FN was also one of several parties that backed France's 2005 rejection of the Treaty for a European Constitution. In other issues, Le Pen opposed the invasions of Iraq, led by the United States, both in the 1991 Gulf War and the 2003 Iraq War.[204] He visited Saddam Hussein in Baghdad in 1990, and subsequently considered him a friend.[220]

Marine Le Pen advocated France leaving the euro (along with Spain, Greece and Portugal) - although that policy has been dropped.[221] She also wants to reintroduce customs borders and has campaigned against allowing dual citizenship.[222] During both the 2010–2011 Ivorian crisis and the 2011 Libyan civil war, she opposed the French military involvements.[208] She has recast the party's support for Israel, after affirming Israel's right to secure itself from terrorism, and criticising the leadership of Iran.[223]

Russia and Ukraine

Marine Le Pen described Russian President Vladimir Putin as a "defender of the Christian heritage of European civilisation."[224] The National Front considers that Ukraine has been subjugated by the United States, through the Ukrainian crisis. The National Front denounces anti-Russian feelings in Eastern Europe and the submission of Western Europe to NATO's interests in the region.[225] Marine Le Pen is very critical against the threats of sanctions directed by the international community against Russia: "European countries should seek a solution through diplomacy rather than making threats that could lead to an escalation." She argues that the United States is leading a new Cold War against Russia. She sees no other solution for peace in Ukraine than to organise a kind of federation that would allow each region to have a large degree of autonomy.[226] She thinks Ukraine should be sovereign and free as any other nation.[227]

Luke Harding wrote in The Guardian that the National Front's MEPs were a "pro-Russian bloc."[228] In 2014, the Nouvel Observateur said that the Russian government considered the National Front "capable of seizing power in France and changing the course of European history in Moscow's favour."[229] According to the French media, party leaders had frequent contact with Russian ambassador Alexander Orlov and Marine Le Pen made multiple trips to Moscow.[230] In May 2015, one of her advisers, Emmanuel Leroy, attended an event in Donetsk marking the "independence" of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic.[231]

European Union

Since their entry into the European Parliament in 1979, the National Front has promoted a message of being pro-Europe, but anti-EU.[232] In 2019, the National Rally excludes the exit of France from the euro zone.[233]

Controversies

View on Nazi history and relations with Jewish groups

There has been a difference between Marine Le Pen's and her father's views concerning the Holocaust and Jews. In 2005, Jean-Marie Le Pen wrote in the far-right weekly magazine Rivarol that the German occupation of France "was not particularly inhumane, even if there were a few blunders, inevitable in a country of [640,000 square kilometres (6.9×1012 square feet)mi)]" and in 1987 referred to the Nazi gas chambers as "a point of detail of the history of the Second World War". He has repeated the latter claim several times.[234] In 2004, Bruno Gollnisch said, "I do not question the existence of concentration camps but historians could discuss the number of deaths. As to the existence of gas chambers, it is up to historians to determine" (de se déterminer).[235] Jean-Marie Le Pen was fined for these remarks, but Gollnisch was found not guilty by the Court of Cassation.[236][237][238] The current leader of the party, Marine Le Pen, distanced herself for a time from the party machine in protest at her father's comments.[239]

During the 2012 presidential election, Marine Le Pen sought the support of Jewish people in France.[240] Interviewed by the Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz about the fact that some of her European senior colleagues had formed alliances with, and visited, some Israeli settlers and groups, Marine Le Pen said: "The shared concern about radical Islam explains the relationship ... but it is possible that behind it is also the need of the visitors from Europe to change their image in their countries ... As far as their partners in Israel are concerned, I myself don't understand the idea of continuing to develop the settlements. I consider it a political mistake and would like to make it clear in this context that we must have the right to criticise the policy of the State of Israel – just as we are allowed to criticise any sovereign country – without it being considered anti-Semitism. After all, the National Front has always been Zionistic and always defended Israel's right to exist". She has opposed the emigration of French Jews to Israel in response to radical Islam, explaining: "The Jews of France are Frenchmen, they're at home here, and they must stay here and not emigrate. The country is obligated to provide solutions to the development of radical Islam in the problematic regions".[241]

Russian bank loan

In November 2014, Marine Le Pen confirmed that the party had received a €9 million loan from the First Czech Russian Bank (FCRB) in Moscow to the National Front.[242][243] Senior FN officials from the party's political bureau informed Mediapart that this was the first instalment of a €40 million loan, although Marine Le Pen has disputed this.[224][243] The Independent said the loans "take Moscow's attempt to influence the internal politics of the EU to a new level."[224] Reinhard Bütikofer stated, "It's remarkable that a political party from the motherland of freedom can be funded by Putin's sphere—the largest European enemy of freedom."[244] Marine Le Pen argued that it was not a donation from the Russian government but a loan from a private Russian bank because no other bank would give her a loan. This loan is meant to prepare future electoral campaigns and to be repaid progressively. Marine Le Pen has publicly disclosed all the rejection letters that French banks have sent to her concerning her loan requests.[245] Since November 2014, she insists that if a French bank agrees to give her a loan, she would break her contract with the FCBR, but she has not received any other counter-propositions.[246] Le Pen accused the banks of collusion with the current government.[245] In April 2015, a Russian hacker group published texts and emails between Timur Prokopenko, a member of Putin's administration, and Konstantin Rykov, a former Duma deputy with ties to France, discussing Russian financial support to the National Front in exchange for its support of Russia's annexation of Crimea.[247]

An undercover investigation by Al Jazeera uncovered links between high-ranking National Rally figures and Generation Identity, a far-right group. In secretly taped conversations, National Rally leaders endorsed goals of Generation Identity and discussed plans to "remigrate" immigrants, effectively sending them back to their countries of origin, if National Rally came to power. Christelle Lechevalier, a National Rally Member of the European Parliament (MEP), said many National Rally leaders held similar views as the GI, but sought to hide them from voters.[248]

International relations

The FN has been part of several groups in the European Parliament. The first group it helped co-establish was the European Right after the 1984 election, which also consisted of the Italian Social Movement (MSI), its early inspiration, and the Greek National Political Union.[249] Following the 1989 election, it teamed up with the German Republicans and the Belgian Vlaams Blok in a new European Right group, while the MSI left due to the Germans' arrival.[250] As the MSI evolved into the National Alliance, it chose to distance itself from the FN.[251] From 1999 to 2001, the FN was a member of the Technical Group of Independents. In 2007, it was part of the short-lived Identity, Tradition, Sovereignty group. Between the mentioned groups, the party sat among the non-affiliated Non-Inscrits. It is part of the Identity and Democracy group, which also includes the Freedom Party of Austria, Italian Northern League, Vlaams Belang, the Alternative for Germany, the Czech Freedom and Direct Democracy, the Dutch Freedom Party, the Conservative People's Party of Estonia, the Finns Party, and the Danish People's Party. It was formerly known as the Europe of Nations and Freedom group, during which time it also included the Polish Congress of the New Right, a former member of the UK Independence Party and a former member of Romania's Conservative Party. They have also been part of the Identity and Democracy Party (formerly the Movement for a Europe of Nations and Freedom) since 2014, which additionally includes Slovakia's We Are Family and the Bulgarian Volya Movement.

During Jean-Marie Le Pen's presidency, the party has also been active in establishing extra-parliamentary confederations. During the FN's 1997 national congress, the FN established the loose Euronat group, which consisted of a variety of European right-wing parties. Having failed to cooperate in the European Parliament, Le Pen sought in the mid-1990s to initiate contacts with other far-right parties, including from non-EU countries. The FN drew most support in Central and Eastern Europe, and Le Pen visited the Turkish Welfare Party. The significant Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) refused to join the efforts, as Jörg Haider sought to distance himself from Le Pen, and later attempted to build a separate group.[220][252] In 2009, the FN joined the Alliance of European National Movements; it left the alliance since. Along with some other European parties, the FN in 2010 visited Japan's Issuikai ("right-wing") movement and the Yasukuni Shrine.[253]

At a conference in 2011, the two new leaders of the FN and the FPÖ, Marine Le Pen and Heinz-Christian Strache, announced deeper cooperation between their parties.[254] Pursuing her de-demonisation policy, in October 2011, Marine Le Pen, as new president of the National Front, joined the European Alliance for Freedom (EAF).[255] The EAF is a pan-European sovereigntist platform founded late 2010 that is recognised by the European Parliament. The EAF has individual members linked to the Austrian Freedom Party of Heinz-Christian Strache, the UK Independence Party, and other movements such as the Sweden Democrats, Vlaams Belang (Belgian Flanders), Germany (Bürger in Wut), and Slovakia (Slovak National Party).[256]

During her visit to the United States, Marine Le Pen met two Republican members of the U.S. House of Representatives associated with the Tea Party movement, Joe Walsh, who is known for his strong stance against Islam, which Domenic Powell argues, rises to Islamophobia[257] and three-time presidential candidate Ron Paul, whom Le Pen complimented for his stance on the gold standard.[258] In February 2017, two more conservative Republican Congressmen, Steve King and Dana Rohrabacher, also met with Le Pen in Paris.[259] The party also has ties to Steve Bannon, who served as White House Chief Strategist under President Donald Trump.[260][261]

In 2017, Marine Le Pen met with and was interviewed for the British radio station LBC by former UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage, who had previously been critical of the FN.[262] Apart from the party's membership in the Identity and Democracy parliamentary group and the Identity and Democracy Party, the RN also has contacts with Giorgia Meloni's Brothers of Italy,[263] Krasimir Karakachanov's IMRO – Bulgarian National Movement,[264] and Santiago Abascal's Vox in Spain.[265]

In 2019, RN MEPs participated in the first international delegation to visit India's Jammu and Kashmir following the decision by Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party government to revoke the special status of Jammu and Kashmir. The delegation was not sanctioned by the European Parliament, and constituted mostly of right-wing populist politicians including MEPs from Vox, Alternative for Germany, the Northern League, Vlaams Belang, the British Brexit Party, and Poland's Law and Justice party.[266][267]

Leadership

The current executive bureau features: Marine Le Pen (president), Steeve Briois (vice-president), Jordan Bardella (vice-president), Wallerand de Saint-Just (treasurer), Sébastien Chenu (spokesperson), Jean-François Jalkh (president of the litigation commission), Louis Aliot, Nicolas Bay, Bruno Bilde and David Rachline.[268]

Presidents

Vice Presidents

The party had five vice presidents between July 2012 and March 2018 (against three previously).[270]

In March 2018, the position of vice-president replaced that of General Secretary.[269] It became a duo in June 2019:[277]

General Secretaries

The position of General Secretary was held between 1972 and 2018:[269]

Election results

The National Front was a marginal party in 1973, the first election it participated in, but the party made its breakthrough in the 1984 European Parliament election, where it won 11% of the vote and ten MEPs. Following this election, the party's support mostly ranged from around 10 to 15%, although it saw a drop to around 5% in some late 2000s elections. Since 2010, the party's support seems to have increased towards its former heights. The party managed to advance to the final round of the 2002 French presidential election, although it failed to attract much more support after the initial first round vote.

National Assembly

National Assembly
Election year Leader 1st round votes % 2nd round votes % Seats +/–
1973[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 108,616 0.5%
0 / 491
1978[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 82,743 0.3%
0 / 491
1981[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 44,414 0.2%
0 / 491
1986[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 2,703,442 9.6%
35 / 573
35
1988[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 2,359,528 9.6%
1 / 577
34
1993[279] Jean-Marie Le Pen 3,155,702 12.7% 1,168,143 5.8%
0 / 577
1
1997[279] Jean-Marie Le Pen 3,791,063 14.9% 1,435,186 5.7%
1 / 577
1
2002[279] Jean-Marie Le Pen 2,873,390 11.1% 393,205 1.9%
0 / 577
1
2007[279] Jean-Marie Le Pen 1,116,136 4.3% 17,107 0.1%
0 / 577
2012 Marine Le Pen 3,528,373 13.6% 842,684 3.7%
2 / 577
2
2017 Marine Le Pen 2,990,454 13.2% 1,590,858 8.8%
8 / 577
6

Presidential

President of the French Republic
Election year Candidate 1st round votes % 2nd round votes % Winning party
1974[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 190,921 0.8% (7th) Independent Republicans
1981 Socialist Party
1988[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 4,376,742 14.4% (4th) Socialist Party
1995[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 4,570,838 15.0% (4th) Rally for the Republic
2002[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 4,804,713 16.9% (2nd) 5,525,032 17.8% Rally for the Republic
2007[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 3,834,530 10.4% (4th) Union for a Popular Movement
2012 Marine Le Pen 6,421,426 17.9% (3rd) Socialist Party
2017 Marine Le Pen 7,678,491 21.3% (2nd) 10,638,475 33.9% La République En Marche!

Regional councils

Regional councils
Election Leader 1st round votes % 2nd round votes % Seats Regional presidencies +/– Winning party Rank
1986[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 2,654,390 9.7%
137 / 1,880
0 / 26
Union for French Democracy 4th
1992[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 3,396,141 13.9%
239 / 1,880
0 / 26
Rally for the Republic 3rd
1998[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen 3,270,118 15.3%
275 / 1,880
0 / 26
Rally for the Republic 3rd
2004[280] Jean-Marie Le Pen 3,564,064 14.7% 3,200,194 12.4%
156 / 1,880
0 / 26
Socialist Party 3rd
2010[281] Jean-Marie Le Pen 2,223,800 11.4% 1,943,307 9.2%
118 / 1,749
0 / 26
Socialist Party 3rd
2015 Marine Le Pen 6,018,672 27.7% 6,820,147 27.1%
358 / 1,722
0 / 18
The Republicans 3rd

European Parliament

European Parliament
See also Elections to the European Parliament
Election Leader European alliance Votes % Seats +/– Winning party Rank
1984[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen DR 2,210,334 11.0%
10 / 81
10 Union for French Democracy 4th
1989[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen DR 2,129,668 11.7%
10 / 81
Union for French Democracy 3rd
1994[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen NI 2,050,086 10.5%
11 / 87
1 Union for French Democracy 5th
1999[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen TGI 1,005,113 5.7%
5 / 87
6 Socialist Party 8th
2004[278] Jean-Marie Le Pen NI 1,684,792 9.8%
7 / 78
2 Socialist Party 4th
2009[279] Jean-Marie Le Pen EURONAT 1,091,691 6.3%
3 / 74
4 Union for a Popular Movement 6th
2014[282] Marine Le Pen EAF 4,712,461 24.9%
23 / 74
22 National Front 1st
2019 Jordan Bardella EAPN 5,286,939 23.3%
21 / 79
3 National Rally 1st

Notes

  1. The party was formerly part of the European Right (1984–1989), the European Right (1989–1994), the Technical Group of Independents (1999–2001) and Identity, Tradition, Sovereignty (2007).
  2. Other customary colours[25] include the following:
         Black      Brown      Grey      Red

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    Citations

    Davies, Peter (2012). The National Front in France: Ideology, Discourse and Power. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-72530-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
    DeClair, Edward G. (1999). Politics on the Fringe: The People, Policies, and Organization of the French National Front. Duke University. ISBN 978-0-8223-2139-2.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
    Kitschelt, Herbert; McGann, Anthony J. (1997). "France: The National Front As Prototype of the New Radical Right". The Radical Right in Western Europe: A Comparative Analysis. University of Michigan. pp. 91–120. ISBN 978-0-472-08441-8.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
    Shields, James (2007). The Extreme Right in France: From Pétain to Le Pen. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-37200-8.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

    Further reading

    Beauzamy, Brigitte (2013). "Explaining the Rise of the Front National to Electoral Prominence: Multi-Faceted or Contradictory Models?". Right-Wing Populism in Europe: Politics and Discourse. London/New York: Bloomsbury. pp. 177–190. ISBN 978-1-78093-343-6.
    Davies, Peter (1999). The National Front in France: Ideology, Discourse and Power. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-15866-4.
    Hainsworth, Paul (2012). "The Extreme Right in France: From Pétain to Le Pen". Modern & Contemporary France. 20 (3): 392. doi:10.1080/09639489.2012.691290.
    Mayer, Nonna (1 January 2013). "From Jean-Marie to Marine Le Pen: Electoral Change on the Far Right". Retrieved 31 March 2015.
    Russo, Luana (2014). "France: The historic victory of the Front National" (PDF). In De Sio L.; Emanuele V.; Maggini N. (eds.). The European Parliament Elections of 2014. Rome: CISE. pp. 181–188. ISBN 978-88-98012-15-2.
    Shields, James (1 January 2013). "Marine Le Pen and the 'New' FN: A Change of Style or of Substance?". Parliamentary Affairs. 66 (1): 179–196. doi:10.1093/pa/gss076. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
    In French
    Joly, Bertrand, Nationalistes et Conservateurs en France, 1885–1902 (Les Indes Savantes, 2008)
    Winock, Michel (dir.), Histoire de l'extrême droite en France (1993)
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