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For a boycott of the French election
Statement of the International Committee of the Fourth International
26 April 2002
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The International Committee of the Fourth International calls
upon French workers, youth and intellectuals to boycott the May
5 presidential runoff election that pits the neo-fascist National
Front candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen against Frances right-wing
President Jacques Chirac.
Le Pens electoral breakthrough in the first round of
voting has laid bare the deep-going crisis of Frances Fifth
Republic. A political order that produces a choice between two
such candidates has lost all credibility. The working class must
reject this undemocratic charade and prepare to mobilize its independent
strength against whichever of these two reactionaries wins.
Why is a boycott the necessary and correct political response
for the French working class to the May 5 runoff? It will deny
legitimacy to the electoral fraud and provide a means for translating
mass discontent into effective political action.
A review of the voting in the first round makes it clear that
broad sections of French voters have been effectively disenfranchised
in the runoff. One third of the total eligible voters stayed home
out of disgust for all the candidates, while nearly 40 percent
of those who voted chose parties describing themselves as part
of the left. Among these voters, 11 percent cast ballots for parties
identified with revolutionary socialist politics. Yet the electorate
is left to decide between two extreme right-wing candidates, who
together received the support of less than a quarter of those
eligible to vote.
Hundreds of thousands of French workers and youth have taken
to the streets to express their opposition to the anti-immigrant
and anti-working class policies of Le Pens National Front,
as well as their hatred of the system of social inequality and
political corruption that spawned this reactionary political movement.
Many hundreds of thousands more will march on May Day in Paris.
This international day of working class unity should be utilized
to launch a genuine campaign of class opposition against the two
candidates of bourgeois reaction through a boycott of the polls.
This is not a question of mere abstention, but of workers beginning
to move as an independent force against those elementsfascist
and Gaullist alikethat are attempting to scapegoat immigrants
and the most oppressed layers of society.
The campaign mounted by the Socialist Party, the Communist
Party, the Greens and other sections of the French left in support
of Chirac in the second round is deserving only of contempt. A
vote for Chirac in no way advances the struggle against Le Pen,
but will only intensify the political disorientation that handed
the neo-fascists their success at the polls in the first place.
The first round of the election saw the largest abstention
rate since 1958, clearly revealing the alienation of broad masses
of the population from the two partiesGaullist and Socialistthat
have dominated political life for decades. These parties of the
ruling elite have become virtually indistinguishable in their
policies and increasingly incapable of responding to, or even
apprehending the mood of the masses.
In the absence of any independent alternative from the parties
that have historically drawn their votes from the working class,
the National Front was able to wage a right-wing populist campaign,
appealing to the little man against the monolithic
political establishment.
As a result, Le Pen garnered his support not merely from his
traditional strongholds in the south of France, but from working
class areas in the north that have traditionally provided the
base of support for the Stalinist CP, which saw its vote collapse
from 2.6 million in 1995 to just 960,000.
The dangers posed by the growth of support for a neo-fascist
party in France must not be underestimated. In assessing the significance
of Le Pens vote, however, it is critical to grasp that the
election results reveal a crisis of confidence in the bourgeois
political setup as a whole.
Forty percent of those voting have rejected the parties
of the government, double the total in 1988 and 1995, noted
Le Monde. If one adds the abstentions, three in every
five registered voters have rejected the candidates capable of
leading a government today. This figure alone means that over
and above the failure of the left, the success of the extreme
right and the weakness of the right, there is a fundamental and
disturbing rejection which is being expressed.
The political parties and public figures calling for a vote
for Chirac in the name of a referendum against Le Pen
or a plebiscite for democracy are attempting to revive
popular confidence in a political system that broad sections of
the French people are rejecting. For his part, Le Pen has welcomed
the closing of ranks between the Socialists and the Gaullists
as substantiating his reactionary demagogy.
Chirac has wrapped himself in the tricolor, declaring that
his victory is necessary to save the honor of France.
It is fitting that such a dubious goal should be identified with
the election of a man whose name is synonymous with corruption
and graft.
The incumbent president has refused to debate Le Pen. Faced
with intolerance and hatred, no debate is possible, Chirac
declared at his first campaign rally since the April 21 vote.
Just as I did not accept any alliance in the past with the
National Front ... I will not accept a debate with its leader
in the future.
Le Pen has no difficulty exposing this hypocrisy. He has revealed
that Chirac solicited just such an alliance in 1988, shortly after
the National Front leader made his infamous remark about the Nazi
gas chambers being a detail of history. As a result
of this deal, the National Front leader urged his voters to cast
their second-round ballots for the Gaullist RPR.
Chirac has additional reasons to avoid a debate with Le Pen.
He, like the rest of the French right, has his eyes focused on
parliamentary elections set for June. His principal concern is
not defeating Le Pen, but unifying the parties of the right to
obtain a parliamentary majority. To that end, he has established
a new political front, the Union for a Presidential Majority (UMP),
to ensure an alliance of the right and center right.
Chirac has no principled political differences with Le Pen.
He is taking care to leave the door open for collaboration with
the neo-fascists in the future.
The entire electoral setup has turned into a political stranglehold
over the masses, offering no means for working people to express
their social discontent. The so-called left partiesSocialist
and Communistbear the greatest responsibility for this state
of affairs. Offering themselves as the best administrators of
the capitalist state and capitalist economy, they have presided
over the destruction of social services, the privatization of
industry and attacks on democratic rights.
The sickening display of political cowardice by the Socialist
Party prime minister and presidential candidate, Lionel Jospin,
who announced his resignation within hours of his partys
electoral debacle, exemplified the bankruptcy of the official
left. Jospins prostration before Le Pen defined
him as the political heir to French Radical Party leader Edouard
Daladier, who resigned after a fascist riot in February 1934 and
later paved the way for the fascist takeover in May-June 1940.
A boycott is necessary to begin the political clarification
of the working class and counter the disorientation created by
the treachery of the Socialist and Communist parties. Workers,
students and intellectuals who are smoldering in anger over the
results of the election must not be left in isolation, or even
worse, corralled into helping elect a government committed to
attacking the working class. An active policy is required, including
the organization of meetings promoting a boycott, demonstrations
and political strikes.
Those who claim that a vote for Chirac is the only means to
defeat the National Front merely betray their own paralysis and
pessimism. A political establishment that casts such a figure
as the champion of democracy only exposes its own decrepitude.
A Chirac presidency, with a rightist majority in parliament,
is clearly the result preferred by the most influential sections
of the French bourgeoisie. Such a government will carry out much
of the political agenda advanced by the National Front, whose
anti-immigrant, law-and-order electoral slogans were echoed to
a large degree by the Gaullists in the election campaign.
A substantial section of the electorate, some 11 percent, cast
votes for organizations that call themselves Trotskyist and claim
to advance a revolutionary policy. These parties and their candidatesArlette
Laguiller of Lutte Ouvrière, Olivier Besancenot of the
Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire, and Daniel Gluckstein
of the Parti des Travailleursnow have a responsibility to
take up the demand and actively campaign for a boycott.
The initial response of Laguiller, however, has been entirely
passive. In her most recent statement, she said she would not
call for abstention in the second round of the presidential election.
She added she would urge workers not to vote for Le Pen, while
refusing to join the coalition backing a vote for Chirac.
This is an evasion, not a policy to fight the right wing. It
leaves workers unclear as to what they should do next. Laguillers
formula leaves it to the individual voter to decide, and implicitly
encourages a vote for Chirac.
An active policy, in the form of an organized boycott, is needed
to unite the working class and open a new road of struggle that
will contribute to the construction of a genuinely independent,
mass socialist movement.
The French working class cannot find a way out of the political
crisis by basing itself on a French national program. The alternative
offered by the Socialist and Communist partiesa bureaucratized
welfare state without welfarerepresents no alternative at
all.
Against the national chauvinism, xenophobia and protectionism
promoted by Le Penand echoed by large sections of the so-called
leftthe working class must advance its own internationalist
program to unite the struggles of workers throughout Europe in
defense of living standards and democratic rights. The alternative
for workers to the Single European Market of the transnational
corporations is the struggle for a United Socialist States of
Europe.
See Also:
Neo-fascist Le Pen to face Gaullist
Chirac in runoff for president
Vote for National Front leader heightens political crisis in France
[23 April 2002]
Disaffection with major parties dominates
French presidential elections
[17 April 2002]
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