Marine Le Pen |
Cukierman’s words were understood by some journalists or political activists, especially on the Left, as a veiled endorsement of Marine Le Pen and her political program. Moreover, the same observers contend that the French Jewish community as a whole is moving to the Far Right. According to Ifop, a leading pollster, 13,5 % of the Jewish voters supported Marine Le Pen in the 2012 presidential election, a sharp increase from the 2007 presidential where only 4,3 % of the Jewish voters had supported Jean-Marie Le Pen. Still, French Jews were still less behind a national average of 18 %.
Clearly, Marine Le Pen has been successful with French voters at large in recasting the National Front as a «democratic» party, that cannot be confused with neo-Nazi groups in Hungary (Jobbik) or Greece (Golden Dawn). In a by-election in an heretofore solidly Leftwing consistuency in Eastern France, National Front candidate Sophie Montel carried almost 49 % of the vote on February 10. She was able to rally both previously Leftwing voters and about one half of the local conservative voters.
Moreover, a report on antisemitism in France released three months ago by Fondapol (the Foundation for Political Innovation), a respected think-tank shows that National Front supporters, while somehow more receptive to antisemitism than other political milieux, are on the whole not antisemitic. 61 % of the National Front voters say they see Jews as full fledged nationals just like other French citizens. While lower than an global average of 84 %, it is still an almost two thirds majority. A fact all the more relevant considering that only 23 % of the National Front voters see French Muslims as true nationals. Likewise, 68 % of the National Front voters agree that fighting antisemitism and racism « in order to prevent another Shoah » must be a national priority. Again, it is lower than a national average of 85%. But it is a very high proportion nevertheless.
Even if crude antisemitism is not the issue, most French Jews still feel uneasy about the National Front. They are concerned that a National Front government may restrict some Jewish practices (like shechitah, Shabbath or wearing a yarmulka) in the name of secularism. They note also that Marine Le Pen has never expressed explicit support for Israel (even if its voters tend to be rather pro-Israel) and that it indulges in problematic anti-UE, anti-American and pro-Russian politics.
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