Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Why French far-right candidate Marine Le Pen is attracting youth

Marine Le Pen polls third across the entire electorate, but second among 18- to 22-year-olds, largely because they see her tough stance on immigration as the answer to their employment struggles.?

Although he has studied the French far-right party National Front for nearly two decades, even sociologist Sylvain Cr?pon didn?t expect party leader Marine Le Pen's popularity among young voters to reach the heights it has.

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But distrust in mainstream politicians and the ongoing struggle to find jobs has made Ms. Le Pen?increasingly popular with young voters?? to the extent that she could get as many or even more votes from this age group than President Nicolas Sarkozy in the April 22 election.

A March poll of?18 to 22-year-olds?by?the French Institute of Public Opinion (IFOP) found that Le Pen scored 23 percent, putting her in second place among voters from that age group.?Socialist Party candidate and frontrunner Fran?ois Hollande earned 31 percent and Mr. Sarkozy scored 21 percent.

Because only the two candidates who get the most votes in the first round of the presidential election on April 22 qualify for the runoff, the survey is also seen as a symbolic defeat for Sarkozy among young voters.

Mr. Cr?pon, a research fellow at West Paris Nanterre La D?fense University, says such a proportion of young voters planning to vote for a far-right presidential candidate is unheard of in France.

?I was surprised because it was a level that had never been reached before,? he says. ?Granted, this is a poll; it?s not the election?s result. But it is true that it?s the first time that you see voting intentions that high among young people and particularly among those who are going to vote for the first time,? Cr?pon says.

A late March study from the CSA institute based on three surveys suggests Le Pen could even beat both Mr. Hollande and Mr. Sarkozy among young voters. According to the study, she ranked first among 18- to 24-year-olds with 26 percent of the vote, the newspaper Le Monde reported yesterday. Hollande and Sarkozy had 25 and 17 percent, respectively.?

A modern woman

Le Pen was preceded as leader of the National Front by her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, who led the party until early 2011. He?founded the party in 1972 and is known in France for his xenophobic and authoritarian positions. Always considered a fringe candidate, he never achieved the more mainstream appeal his daughter seems to have garnered in this election.?Although Marine Le Pen has been accused of targeting France?s Muslim community in her speeches, most French see her as a less?radical figure.?

Fr?d?ric Dabi, the associate director general of IFOP, says Marine Le Pen has better ratings from young voters than from the electorate as a whole because her image as a modern candidate appeals to them. For them, her father represented an older, more traditional far right, according to Mr. Dabi.

?Marine Le Pen has very good ratings among young people. Why? Because she is different from her father,? Dabi says. ?For this generation, there is a bigger proximity factor. She is a woman, she herself is young, she was born in 1968, she has children and she has a job. So there is an identification process that is stronger among young people.?

Saving French jobs

But Le Pen's strongest appeal is likely her opposition to current levels of immigration. Younger voters, particularly those who do not have a college education and are therefore more exposed to unemployment, often voice the concern that immigrants are taking the few jobs available to them in France's crisis-stricken economy. They see Le Pen's tough stance on immigration as a way to get jobs back.?

The National Front?s political platform states that in a Le Pen administration, legal immigration would be reduced from its current level of 200,000 legal entries a year to 10,000.

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