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May Day in France: 1.5 million march against neo-fascist Le
Pen
Socialist Party, unions campaign for Chirac
By David Walsh in Paris
2 May 2002
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In one of the largest demonstrations seen in Paris in decades,
hundreds of thousands of trade unionists, students, immigrants
and professional workers marched on May 1 to oppose the extreme
right in France, represented by Jean-Marie Le Pen and his National
Front. Across France an estimated 1.5 million took part in anti-Le
Pen protests.

In addition to the Paris demonstrations, some 400 regional
protests were staged, the largest in Lyon (50,000), Bordeaux,
Toulouse and Grenoble (40,000), Marseille, Lille and Nantes (30,000)
and Strasbourg (15,000). Even smaller communities, such as Saint-Nazaire
(14,000) and Rouen (13,000), had sizable marches.
Le Pen received 17.2 percent of the popular vote in the first
round of the presidential election held April 21, finishing ahead
of Socialist Party prime minister and presidential candidate Lionel
Jospin. Le Pens second-place finish put him in the runoff
election against the incumbent president, Jacques Chirac of the
Gaullist party. That second round takes place Sunday, May 5.
Jospins collapse and Le Pens success in the first
round sent political shockwaves throughout France. The response
of the governmental left parties, the unions and the media has
been to channel anti-fascist sentiment behind the reelection campaign
of Chirac, who ran a right-wing law-and-order campaign and supports
an intensification of the attacks on the conditions of the French
working class.
The leadership of the massive May Day protest made every effort
to turn it into an election rally for Chirac.
There were actually four anti-Le Pen marches in Paris. The
main one, organized by the trade unions and supported by dozens
of left-wing and protest organizations, took hours to proceed
from the Place de la République to the Place de la Nation.
The crowd was so large that police were obliged to create new
routes for the marchers, many of whom waited for hours before
setting off.
The crowd was representative of the French working population,
as well as its younger generation: trade unionists, undocumented
workers, Arab and African immigrants, as well as Vietnamese, Chinese
and Turkish immigrants, technical and professional workers, students
from high schools, colleges and universities, and the unemployed.
Union leaders Bernard Thibault of the CGT, politically allied
with the Stalinist Communist Party, and Nicole Notat of the CFDT,
linked to the Socialist Party, were at the head of the main march,
along with Mouloud Aounit of the Movement Against Racism and for
Friendship between Peoples (MRAP), José Bové of
the Peasants Confederation (famous for his attack on a McDonalds
restaurant in 1999) and Daniel Cohn-Bendit and Noël Mamère
of the Greens.
Supporters of the International Committee of the Fourth International
(ICFI) and the World Socialist Web Site intervened in the
Paris march, distributing thousands of copies of an open letter
to the three left-wing parties that received a combined vote of
more than 10 percent on April 21Lutte Ouvrière (LO),
the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire (LCR) and the Parti
des Travailleurs (PT).
The open letter, from the WSWS editorial board, was headlined
No to Chirac and Le Pen! For a working class boycott of
the French election. The ICFI supporters were the only participants
actively campaigning for a boycott of the May 5 contest between
the two right-wing candidates.
The LO and the LCR marched, but made no serious effort to advance
an independent policy in opposition to that of the protest organizers.
WSWS reporters did not see a single LO member or supporter distributing
political literature to the demonstration.
While these parties, which call themselves Trotskyist, have
not called for a vote for Chirac, they have in practice adapted
themselves to the pro-Chirac campaign of the Socialist Party,
the Communist Party, the Greens and the trade unions, refusing
to fight for an active, independent policy for the working class
to counter the reactionary program of Chirac as well as the danger
of fascism. Their submissive posture at the May Day rally in Paris
was evidently calculated to avoid a conflict with the SP-CP-trade
union campaign for the Gaullist president.
Every effort is being made by the political and media establishment
in France to stampede the population into voting for Chirac and
providing him with a significant mandate for his right-wing program.
They are deliberately creating an atmosphere of panic over the
election result for Le Pen. The latter is a thoroughly repugnant
and reactionary figure, but in no sense an immediate threat to
become a fascist dictator.
The greatest danger, revealed in the election results themselves,
comes from the absence of an independent political alternative
for the working class, based on a genuinely socialist perspective.
This political vacuum, under conditions of growing economic insecurity
and crisis, becomes the breeding ground for political confusion,
disorientation and demoralization, which fascist forces are able
to exploit.
With the Socialist Party, the Communist Party, the Greens and
the unions all complicit in implementing the program of the French-based
transnational corporations for European integration on the backs
of the working class, Le Pen is able to make a demagogic appeal
to the social concerns of sections of workers, unemployed and
middle-class people, portraying himself as an anti-establishment
candidate and channeling their anger and frustration in the direction
of national chauvinism and anti-immigrant racism.
The demonstration staged by Le Pen earlier in the day, an annual
affair of the National Front to honor French national symbol Joan
of Arc, underscored the fact that Le Pen does not have a mass
base of popular support for his fascist policies. Some twenty
or thirty thousand people from all over France assembled to support
Le Pen, sporting the French flag and placards reading, Proud
to be French.
Aside from a certain percentage of toughs and neo-Nazi types,
more or less reined in for the day in the interests of electoral
respectability, the Le Pen forces were primarily small-town petty
bourgeois, with a sprinkling of student youth and unstable urban
elements. The disparity in size between the pro- and anti-Le Pen
demonstrations is indicative of the narrow base of the National
Front. This party has come to the fore by default: as a result
of the treachery and impotence of the traditional working class
organizations.
The essential argument of the Socialist Party reformists and
the Stalinists, echoed by countless protest organizations, is
that Chirac is the lesser of two evils, and that the French population,
no matter how reluctantly, must vote for the Gaullist candidate
and hope for a left victory in the legislative election to be
held in June. In their May Day editorial, the Stalinists of the
French Communist Party declared: It is necessary not simply
to defeat him [Le Pen] severely at the ballot box, but everything
must be done to reduce his score by utilizing the only ballot
that will permit that, the one bearing the name: Jacques Chirac.
The Gauche Socialiste, a left group within the
Socialist Party, commented: The result of the first round
in the presidential election entails a major political crisis.
No one knows how it will end. We are obliged to vote for Jacques
Chirac in the second round of the presidential election. But we
do not want that to be repeated in the legislative vote.
The SOS Racisme group wrote: In brief, to
break the dynamic of the [National] Front, only one choice is
possible: a vote for Chirac.
This is vulgar, pragmatic and reactionary reasoning. According
to this logic, one might as well dissolve the socialist movement
immediately and throw in ones lot with the least right-wing
of the bourgeois parties. None of these organizations can explain
how directing the working class and youth to vote for the representative
of their class enemy, Chirac, who is the defender of French imperialist
interests all over the world, will stop the growth of the extreme
right, much less defend the basic rights and living standards
of French workers. In fact, the social democrats, Stalinists and
middle-class protest movements, which spend a great deal of time
declaiming about the values of the Left, are largely
indifferent to the needs of the broad mass of the population.
The elementary demand raised by the statement of the ICFI and
World Socialist Web Site for a boycott of the second
round of the presidential election, rooted in the need of the
working class to adopt its own independent political orientationprovoked
the ire of not a few of the left protestors. A member of the above-mentioned
Gauche Socialiste denounced the ICFI delegation as fascists
in disguise for refusing to call for a vote for Chirac.
The irony of this leftist zealously campaigning
for the corrupt and discredited incumbent president was obviously
lost on him and apparently on many others. Indeed, the Socialist
Party and its hangers-on are now the most ardent of Chiracs
supporters. His election posters have sprouted stickers all over
Paris, reading May 5I vote Chirac and carrying
the SP symbol.
The ICFI/ World Socialist Web Site statement was read
with interest, however, by many workers, native-born and immigrant,
and many young people.
The political and social pressure being brought to bear by
the French political and media establishment around the campaign
for Chirac has had its obvious effects on the left-wing organizations
that ran their own candidates in the first round of the presidential
election and won considerable support, the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
and Lutte Ouvrière.
The LCR, whose membership is deeply involved in the operations
of various left protest movements, has capitulated to the pro-Chirac
stampede in its usual evasive manner. As always, this organization
is highly conscious of the need to maintain its far-left
coloring. But what can the phrase It is necessary to block
the route to Le Pen, the worst enemy of the workers, in the street
as in the elections mean, except a back-handed accommodation
with the pro-Chirac establishment? In its leaflet for May Day,
the LCR was more critical of the campaign for Chirac, but its
headlines refer simply to Le Pen and the National Front. Its criticism
of the social democrats and union bureaucracy is buried deep in
its editorial.
As for Lutte Ouvrière, its attitude was summed up by
the editorial of Arlette Laguiller in the April 26 edition of
the organizations newspaper: This is why workers must
not vote for Le Pen. On the other hand, the less Chirac will be
able to win workers votes, the better it will be for the
labor movement. Of course, everyone must make the choice that
seems justified to him, but everyone must consider what this choice
might entail in the future.
Thus Laguiller tacitly sanctions a vote for Chirac. This does not
even rise to the level of a call for abstention, which itself
would be entirely inadequate. The position of Laguiller and LO,
which is entirely passive, is calculated to have little practical
effect.
What is demanded by the present situation is the organization
of a serious political campaign, a mass boycott of the presidential
election, demonstrating the opposition of large sections of the
working class and the youth to this undemocratic charade and the
two right-wing candidates. Such a campaign will create the best
conditions for the development of an independent political movement
of the working class in the major class battles that lie ahead.
See Also:
Mass demonstrations against
Le Pen throughout France
Social democrats channel anti-fascist sentiment behind Chirac
[30 April 2002]
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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