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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

France’s Le Pen retires from right-wing party

Politician’s daughter is likely successor

Marine Le Pen applauds her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, at the National Front congress  on Saturday.  (Associated Press)
Sylvie Corbet Associated Press

TOURS, France – France’s right-wing firebrand Jean-Marie Le Pen bid adieu Saturday to the National Front party he founded nearly 40 years ago with an impassioned defense of his polemic anti-immigration, anti-Islam platform.

In his final speech as party president, the 82-year-old nationalist was unapologetic, insisting that “unceasing immigration” poses a threat to the French way of life. Le Pen harped on what he sees as the transformation of “Christian and secular France into an unbelieving France on the path of Islamization.”

He appealed to his audience of some 1,800 supporters, saying it was up to them to ensure the National Front’s future success – under a new leader.

“I entrust you with the destiny of our movement, its lasting, its unity, its pugnacity,” Le Pen told the audience of the party congress in the city of Tours. “It’s still time … to join us, to sign up for the decisive battle which will open a new era for France.”

Le Pen’s successor at the head of the party will be announced today, but French media reports have said his daughter, Marine, handily won a vote that pitted her against the party’s longtime No. 2, Bruno Gollnisch.

A 42-year-old mother of three, Marine Le Pen is widely seen as the kinder, gentler face of a party known for its extreme stances. French television ran footage of a visibly moved Marine Le Pen, tears streaming down her cheeks as she applauded her father.

Jean-Marie Le Pen has been convicted of inciting racial hatred for saying France might be overrun by Muslims and minimizing the Holocaust for dismissing the Nazi death camps as a “detail of history.”

In 2002, he shocked France and the world by beating out a candidate from the opposition Socialist party and making it into the runoff against the conservative incumbent, then-President Jacques Chirac. Voters from across the political spectrum rallied around Chirac to keep Jean-Marie Le Pen out of power, and he was trounced.

In the 2007 presidential election, Jean-Marie Le Pen took another drubbing, in part because Chirac’s successor, conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy, swiped much of his support with a tough-on-crime platform.

Now, with Sarkozy’s poll numbers lagging, the tables may be turning.

A recent poll found 22 percent of respondents support the ideas of the National Front, up from 18 percent a year ago – though still lower than the 28 percent recorded in 2002.