6 February 1986, during a debate with
Jean-Marie Le Pen on
France Inter (French public radio), Stasi started "I do not have the same beliefs as you," to which Le Pen replied, "That is normal, because you are an immigrant son and you have only been French since you were eighteen." Stasi immediately replied, "You have the nerve to tell me that as a foreign son I would not have the right to engage in politics?" Le Pen concludes, "I think it's a matter of good taste." After the fall of the
Berlin Wall, Jean-Marie Le Pen renewed his claim: "When one is named Stasi, one does as the Communist Party, one changes ones name." But his strong support for immigration expressed in his book L'immigration, une chance pour la France (Immigration, an opportunity for France), also resulted in insults from his own party. He also adopted nonconformist positions on the crisis in November 1984 in New Caledonia, saying in a report that the origins of the Kanak crisis predated the 1981.
Christian Bonnet called him "Stasibaou" (alluding to the Kanak leader
Jean-Marie Tjibaou). This double hostility contributed to his parliamentary defeat in September 1986, during his candidacy for President of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Assembly against Roland Dumas, for the fall session of the year 1986. Members of the
National Front and a member of the right-wing majority voted for
Roland Dumas, who accepted all votes without qualms. It was also fair, as he says, to count only the votes of the National Front. Roland Dumas prevailed because of, as was the law, his greater age. Subsequent sessions of the spring and fall of 1987,
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing maintained cohesion within the majority for the candidacy, while he solicited, by open letter, the votes of the National Front. ==Details of offices held==