Nearly one-quarter of French voters would vote for France’s National Front in May 2014 European Parliament elections, according to a new poll of voting intentions. The far-right party garnered 24 percent, reinforcing a rightward swing across the EU.
“With 24%, Marine Le Pen’s Front National heads voting
intentions in the European elections of 2014,” stated The
Institut Français d'Opinion Publique (IFOP) on their website. This means that the party has the
potential to win more support than the government and the primary
opposition party in elections next May.
It’s the first time the National Front has topped a pre-election
poll ahead of France’s two mainstream political parties,
ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy’s center-right Union for a Popular
Movement (UPM), picked by 22 percent of voters, and President
Francois Hollande’s centrist Socialist Party, picked by 19
percent.
The poll, conducted by the Institut Français pollster for
France’s Le Nouvel Observateur, surveyed the opinions of 1,893
people considered to be representative of the French voting-age
population.
“This survey reinforces the idea of a tri-polarization of French
political life,” the Institut said in a statement.
The poll was released 10 days before the second round of a
by-election in Brignoles district, in the Var region of southern
France. On Sunday, in a first round of voting, the National Front
gained a spectacular lead of 40.4 percent, well ahead of the UPM
and Socialists.
The victory prompted the National Front to declare that it had
“proved that it can rally its countrymen around its candidate,
and that the mainstream parties have been completely shunned and
defied by voters.”
After hearing the results of the poll, the Front’s
Secretary-General, Steeve Briosis, called it an “unprecedented
earthquake” that showed voters backed the party’s criticism
of “the oppressive European Union ultra-liberal model.”
While the results are not a full prediction of how May’s vote
will turn out, the figures show an enormous rise in support for a
party which procured a mere 6.34 percent of votes in 2009’s
European Parliament elections. Since a similar survey was
conducted in May by IFOP, the FN has gained three percentage
points.
The rise in support for the far-right has been fueled by
record-high unemployment, a struggling economy and mounting
concern over crime, according to analysts – concerns which aren’t
solely confined to France. A Red Cross report released Thursday identified “a quiet
desperation spreading among Europeans,” with people falling
deeper into poverty and suffering from poor health as
unemployment takes its toll.
Le Pen’s party has been pushing a strongly anti-EU and
anti-immigrant stance. In an interview with RT in July, she proposed tighter
border controls for France, which she described as
“bankrupt” and “with a rocketing unemployment
rate.” However, Le Pen has threatened legal action in
France against anyone labeling the party “extreme right,” leaving papers such as France’s Le
Nouvel Observateur to declare: “Unfortunately, we do not see how we can
otherwise qualify it.”
The rightward swing signifies a broader trend toward support for
far-right parties across Europe. At the end of September,
Austria’s far-right Freedom Party gained over one-fifth of the
votes in the country’s general election, while the ruling
two-party centrist coalition got its worst-ever result.
Over the course of the year, the visibility of Britain’s anti-EU
United Kingdom Independence Party has also been climbing after
making surprising headway in May’s local elections, prompting
British Prime Minister David Cameron to adopt a harsher line
against immigration.
President Hollande said there
was a risk the European Parliament may have a “large share” of anti-EU MEPs after May’s elections,
saying that this could lead to “regression and paralysis.”
He attributed the rise in
nationalism across Europe to a “fear of decline,” an aging population and Islamic relations,
while also berating the “lack of perspective” it displayed.