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Analysis

Le Pens at war over Jew-hate? Think again

April 21, 2015 05:24
2 min read

The famous TV series Game of Thrones has roots in French history: it was modelled on The Accursed Kings, a novel by Maurice Druon about the medieval French monarchy.

It is now French politics that looks increasingly like Game of Thrones. Or, at least, French far-right politics. Marine Le Pen, 46, the National Front's chairman since 2011, "declared war" on her father, Jean-Marie, 86, who founded the party in 1972 and ran it for almost 40 years. And Jean-Marie is striking back.

On the face of it, antisemitism is the issue. On April 2, Mr Le Pen reiterated on BFM TV a view he first made known in 1987, that "ascertaining whether there was such a thing as gas chambers was a small detail in Second World War history". Asked whether he retrospectively "regretted" having said such a thing, the elder Le Pen replied: "Absolutely not, because this is the historical truth."

Five days later, in an interview with the far-right weekly Rivarol, Mr Le Pen said that he would neither change his mind nor "crawl before the public" on these matters. Moreover, he praised Marshall Pétain's pro-Nazi regime - which was instrumental in the persecution and rounding up of Jews from 1940 to 1944 - and insisted that guilt over the Shoah was the main reason why France was not able to cope with its immigration problem. Finally, he resorted to classic Christian antisemitism to describe Marine Le Pen as a modern "Judas" and her advisers as a "Sanhedrin".