Cal Thomas
Jan 10, 2006
PARIS - The French have had two months to sort out the lessons of last
fall's riots in predominately Muslim neighborhoods. Prime Minister
Dominique de Villepin says the rioting was caused by racial bias, lack
of business opportunity and insufficient education for immigrant
children. He vows tax breaks for business, better education for
immigrant children and tougher enforcement of anti-bias laws. For this
conclusion, the French media, which is more left wing than the American
press, praised him.
The founder and leader of France's Front National (FN) party,
77-year-old Jean-Marie Le Pen, has reached the opposite conclusion, as
might be expected of a man who has warned for decades about the dangers
of unrestrained immigration.
Le Pen claims that the French media marginalized him, even during the
riots, though FN has made immigration the center of its platform.
During a recent interview with me at his home, Le Pen said, "The
politically correct forbids any link be established between immigration
and the riots. Everybody knows it, but you can't say it."
To Le Pen, the facts are indisputable. The migration of Muslims to
France since the 1950s from Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco and Senegal is
larger than any other influx in France's history. New immigrants are
young and have a higher birth rate than the French. There are about
200,000 abortions a year in France and the government has begun
offering to pay French women to have more babies. At current rates, the
Muslim population in France will grow from its current 8 percent -
that's about 5 million of France's 60 million people - to a majority in
25 years. French culture, possibly French secularism and liberty,
cannot be sustained in the face of such demographic facts.
I asked Le Pen what he would do should he become president in next
year's election. He told me he would immediately stop all immigration
and "change the law of nationality" so that being born in France does
not automatically make one a French citizen. He also would make it more
difficult for an immigrant to bring all of his or her relatives to
France, as is now allowed.
Le Pen, who has been called a fascist, racist, xenophobe and other
things that cannot be printed here, says, "We are currently subsidizing
everybody, including the illegals. It is costing us the equivalent of
$500 billion annually."
Le Pen fears that not only France, "but all of Europe will be submerged
by all these people if nothing is done. There are no jobs for them and
most won't work, preferring a government check. Many live by dealing in
drugs, or stealing. They have created their own ghettos. We have places
where there are no schools, because they have set them afire and the
police and firemen are attacked when they go there. Civilization is
slowly evaporating from this country."
Le Pen denies he is any of the things his detractors call him, but he
protests what he calls the censorship of his views by the French media.
He tells me the French media spend more time talking about him than
allowing him to speak for himself. During the rioting last fall, he
says 50 foreign journalists interviewed him, but no French reporters.
As a result, he maintains, most French people know little of his views
and he is dismissed as a fringe character.
Despite the odds, Le Pen made it to the second round of voting in the
2002 presidential election and is likely to do so again in the 2007
race. But, he says, all of the parties, including the communists,
quickly united against him last time and he expects a similar strategy
next year. A poll in Paris Match found support for Le Pen increased 5
percent after the riots. He hopes to increase those numbers, if he can
be heard.
Le Pen has been fighting for his issues since first being elected to
office in 1956. Getting elected president of France is his biggest
battle (if you don't count the Indo-China and Algerian wars in which he
fought).
Asked his chances next year, he told me, "the next election is up to
God," then quickly added, "or more riots."