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Mass demonstrations against Le Pen throughout France
Social democrats channel anti-fascist sentiment behind Chirac
By Peter Schwarz in Paris
30 April 2002
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France has been in a state of turmoil ever since it became
clear that Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the neo-fascist Front
National, had finished second in the first round of the presidential
election and would face the current president Jacques Chirac in
the second round May 5. There have been mass demonstrations every
day expressing popular opposition to Le Pens racist, ultra-right
politics.

Tens of thousands took to the streets on Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday of last week. On Thursday the total protesting exceeded
300,000 in 70 different cities and on Saturday hundreds of thousands
demonstrated across the country. In Paris alone, 100,000 took
to the streets in the single biggest demonstration so far.
Initially the street demonstrations were dominated by young
people and students, who gathered to protest as soon as the result
of the election was known. Joining the schoolchildren and students
were thousands of residents of Frances working class suburbs,
along with Arab and North African immigrants, unemployed workers,
teachers, pensioners and housewives, and then later, after working
hours, blue collar and white collar workers from the factories.
The protests were directed against Le Pen and the xenophobic,
racist policies of the Front National, although protesters evidently
had no clear idea of how to counter the threat. In the course
of demonstrations participants shouted: F for Fascism, N
for Nazi (FN are the initials of the Front National); Firstsecondthird
generation, we are all the children of immigrants! Widespread
unease with the political system as a whole, expressed in the
election, took new forms following the shock result on April 21.
At first the main parties took their distance from this movement.
The former Gaullist prime minister Edouard Balladur went so far
as to call for the banning of all demonstrations, including those
on May Day, until the second round of voting May 5, in order,
he said, to avoid any risk of disturbance and violence.
According to a report in Le Figaro (April 25), Lionel Jospin
told his ministers and those in attendance at a dinner following
the last meeting of his ministerial council not to take
part on the anti-Le-Pen demonstrations, and also not those planned
for the 1st of May.
From anti-Le Pen to pro-Chirac
Eventually, however, an intensive campaign was launched to
transform the wave of spontaneous anger into a campaign of support
for the Gaullist candidate Jacques Chirac and in support of the
Fifth Republici.e., precisely those leaders and institutions
which were shown to have dismally failed in the first round of
voting. Those parties in the forefront of this campaign for Chirac
were the same ones who had suffered such a heavy defeat on April
21, the governmental left coalition of the Socialist
Party, the Communist Party and the Greens.
Leading members of these parties had already spoken out for
a vote for Chirac on the evening of the first presidential ballot.
In the course of last week a veritable chorus of voices emerged
with the single message that a high level of voter participation
and a massive vote for Chirac were the only means to fight against
the danger embodied by Le Pen. This campaign was echoed powerfully
in the media.
The leaders of the Socialist Party besieged the partys
defeated presidential candidate Lionel Jospin, who had refused
to make any public statement for some days, to speak out openly
in favour of a vote for Chirac. Jospin eventually did this last
Friday in the form of a press statement, although he failed to
mention the name of his opponent. At the same time the press ran
reports about numerous local SP meetings in which leading party
functionaries had great trouble in overcoming scepticism within
the membership regarding a vote for Chirac.
The candidate of the Green Party, Noel Mamère, made
his web site available for a campaign for the re-election of Chirac.
The leader of the Green fraction in the European parliament, Daniel
Cohn-Bendit, together with his brother Gabriel, published a full-page
commentary in Libération, in which, in a thoroughly
cynical manner, he presented Chirac as the embodiment of democracy,
warning of the danger should we lose the second round due
to an irony of democratic procedure and a grotesque nightmare.
Grovelling before this corrupt big business politician, Cohn-Bendit
even made an anagram of Chiracs name: Saying no to
the executioners Chopper, to Hatred, to Intolerance, to
Racism, to Anti-Semitism and the spread of the Cancer means developing
a new grammar to spell out the word C-H-I-R-A-C. When we drown
the right wing and the vote for a right-wing government in a sea
of ballots, then the Front National will drown.
The role of the Stalinists
The Communist Party has also called for a vote for Chirac and
used its influence in the League for Human Rights (LDH), where
the party has traditionally played a leading role. The LDH was
one of the main initiators of the mass demonstration in Paris
on Saturday.
The newspaper Libération has published malicious
commentaries against Arlette Laguiller, the candidate of Lutte
Ouvrière, for refusing to call for a vote for Chirac. One
of the most vicious comments, recalling the slanders issued by
the French Stalinist Party in the 30s, was written by the
filmmaker Gerard Mordillat. He described Laguiller and Le Pen
in near-pornographic terms as an exemplary married couple.
The consequences of the week-long campaign in favour of Chirac
were evident on the demonstration which wound for hours through
Paris last Saturday. Around 60 civil and human rights organisations
called for the demonstration and were joined by the political
parties from the Jospin camp and the socialist left.
Loud and enthusiastic slogans were directed against Le Pen
by many participants, including youth, immigrants and members
of the mouvement sans-papiers (undocumented immigrants).
But the organisers of the demonstration directed this sentiment
entirely into the channels of the vote next Sunday, with the message:
Whoever fails to vote on the 5th of May supports Le Pen.
The League for Human Rights (LDH) made up one of the biggest
contingents, with marchers carrying hundreds of placards with
the words, 100% against Le Pen. We are going voting!
In an appeal which was distributed at the demonstration they
argued as follows: Tomorrow we must take particular care
to prevent those striving to obtain power from abusing the situation
to limit democracy and intensify injustice and social insecurity,
to suppress foreigners and subject the weakest amongst us to blind
repression under the deceitful excuse of security. We will continue
to fight for the maintenance of freedom and legal equality.
But today we direct ourselves to the threat of the deadly
ideas of Jean-Marie Le Pen making their way into peoples
minds and destroying the foundation of the Republic ... we must
do all we can to ensure that Jean-Marie Le Pen is beaten and beaten
decisively. Every vote on the 5th of May which contributes to
the defeat of his opponent [i.e., Chirac] will be a blow to democracy.
The League for Human Rights calls upon all citizens to
make the second round of the presidential elections into, not
a triumph for Jacques Chirac, but a referendum against Jean-Marie
Le Pen, for human rights and democratic values.
Is Chirac an alternative?
Similar arguments could be heard all along the demonstration.
Jean-Florent, a member of the Socialist youth movement, told
the World Socialist Web Site: The 5th of May offers
the opportunity of making both candidates laughable in the second
round. To the extent that one votes massively in favour of Chirac,
one makes both Chirac and Le Pen a laughing stock. There will
never be such another good opportunity.
The claim that whoever votes for Chirac is defending democracy
embodies a clear contradiction. A vote for Chirac remains a vote
for Chirac, quite apart from the intentions of the voter. A president
confirmed in his office by an overwhelming majority and high levels
of voter participation will be strengthened and it will be increasingly
difficult to question the legitimacy of his politics.
At the same time it is utterly false to maintain that Chirac,
as he is widely described at the moment, represents a genuine
democratic political alternative to Le Pen. It is not so long
ago that Chiracs own racist diatribes hit the headlines
at the beginning of the 90s, when he publicly complained
of the smell and noise made by African immigrants.
And it was Chirac who contributed greatly to Le Pens victory
with his right-wing law-and-order campaign in the latest election.
Chirac is also concerned not to completely burn his own bridges
to the National Front because he will be dependent on support
from the organisation in forthcoming parliamentary elections in
June. In a large election rally in Lyon last Thursday Chirac demonstratively
invited three Gaullist regional presidents (the equivalent of
a state governor) who owe their positions to parliamentary deals
with the Front National. One of them, Charles Millon, defended
this state of affairs to the press with the comment that in June
dozens of deputies will only be successful in elections
thanks to the votes of the FN.
The campaign for a vote in favour of Chirac is aimed first
and foremost at breaking the back of the massive opposition to
the established parties expressed in the election result and the
subsequent spontaneous protests, and intimidating anyone who dares
to challenge the official politics of class collaboration. To
this end, Le Pens real influence has been hugely exaggerated
in order to subordinate the independent interests of the working
class to the French bourgeoisie and the institutions of the Fifth
Republic.
Jospin & Co. fear an independent movement of the working
class much more than a return of Chirac to the presidency. In
the hope that the mood of the electorate will swing in their favour
once again in the June elections, they are preparing for a further
five years of collaboration with the right.
Jospin supporters for Chirac
It was notable that many of those who declared to the WSWS
they would vote for Chirac regarded Jospins poor result
in the polls as pure misunderstanding.
Jean-Florent declared: The poor result by Jospin is the
product of the splitting of the left and above all from the fact
that all French people regarded Jean-Marie Le Pen as a troublemaker
who would never make it to power. Many people could not imagine
that he could ever make it to the second round and said: in the
second round I will then vote for Jospin.
Cécile, a student from Paris studying English, who intends
to vote for Chirac, said: Jospin lost because he ran a bad
campaign. In reality he has done a great deal for the French.
He was not punished for his work in government but rather for
his election campaign. He did not know how to address left-wing
voters. The left voters were satisfied with him and what he has
done over the last five years, but he was not capable of uniting
them.
Fabien, a student of economics from Paris, said: Jospin
was taken to be the same as Chirac. Because we were so sure that
both would make it to the second round we voted for the candidates
of the extreme right and the extreme left. But I do not think
this was because of Jospins record in power. He could demonstrate
a good record in government.
These layers close to the Socialist Party are blind to the
poverty and social insecurity which has spread amongst broad layers
of the population during the last five years of cohabitation.
Lutte Ouvrière and Ligue Communiste
Révolutionnaire
Both Lutte Ouvrière (LO) and the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
(LCR) called for participation on Saturdays demonstration
and marched with their own contingents at the rear. The third
left-wing organisation, the Parti des Travailleurs (PT), which
also ran a presidential campaign, did not take part in the demonstration
and has barely appeared in public since the election.
Lutte Ouvrière took part under the slogan: Not
a single vote for Le Pen, but no to a plebiscite for Chirac.
At first glance this appears to be a call for abstention, but
when one looks closer it is not so clear. The parties which actively
call for a vote for Chirac also say at the same time it should
not be seen as a plebiscite in favour of the Gaullist leader.
At a press conference last week, Arlette Laguiller expressly made
the point that LO was not calling for abstention in the
vote.
As a whole this group has failed to propose an active policy
for the working class. In a statement following the first round
election resultwith 1.6 million votes, Laguiller received
nearly the same total as 1995, although her share of the vote
rose slightly because of the high level of abstention this time
aroundthe Lutte Ouvrière candidate noted that the
electorate for LO remained a stable potential electorate
without, however, drawing any political conclusions.
The LCR, whose candidate Olivier Besancenot was able to secure
1.2 million votes in a first-time showing, took part in the demonstrations
against Le Pen even before the first round vote. A leaflet distributed
at the demonstration by the organisations youth movement
stated: The solution is not to be found in the ballot boxes,
as we are told, because one cannot answer the growth of the extreme
right with ... Jacques Chirac. The only alternative to the Front
National consists of a massive mobilisation of the youth, the
historic driving force for the struggle against fascism. We must
strike among our faculties and schools, organise general assemblies
and take to the streets in dozens, hundreds and thousands to repulse
fascism and the entire asocial policies which give rise to it.
This call to action, however, is not accompanied by any political
perspective which could give the youth a lead and unite them with
the working class in an independent orientation. While the LCR
continuously emphasises the importance of the struggle on
the streets, it adapts to the election charade which subordinates
the working class to the alliance for Chirac. Besancenot and the
LCR as a whole have repeatedly declared that the struggle must
take place both on the streets and at the ballot box. As
a result the militant protests evoked by the LCR threaten to become
the cover for a shabby political manoeuvre.
See Also:
No to Chirac and Le Pen! For a working
class boycott of the French election
An open letter to Lutte Ouvrière, Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire,
and Parti des Travailleurs
[29 April 2002]
The French presidential election: What
the figures reveal
[27 April 2002]
For a boycott of the French election
Statement of the International Committee of the Fourth International
[26 April 2002]
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