The
Organisation armée secrète (OAS) was created in Madrid by French military officers opposed to the
independence of Algeria. Many of its members would later join various
anti-communist struggles around the world. Some, for example, joined the
Cité catholique fundamentalist group and went to Argentina, where they were in contact with the
Argentine Armed Forces.
Jean Pierre Cherid, former OAS member, took part in the 1976
Montejurra massacre against left-wing Carlists. He was then part of the Spanish
GAL death squad, and participated in the 1978 assassination of
Argala, one of the
ETA members who had killed
Franco's Prime minister,
Luis Carrero Blanco, in 1973.
Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour was the far-right candidate at the
1965 presidential election.
His campaign was organised by
Jean-Marie Le Pen.
Charles de Gaulle said of Tixier-Vignancourt: "Tixier-Vignancour, that is Vichy, the
Collaboration proud of itself, the
Milice, the OAS". founded the Front National in 1972 and led it until 2011
Jean-Marie Le Pen founded the
Front National (FN) party in 1972, along with former
Occident member
Jacques Bompard, former
Collaborationist Roland Gaucher,
François Duprat, who introduced the
negationist thesis to France, and others nostalgics of
Vichy France,
Catholic fundamentalists, etc. Le Pen presented himself for the first time in the
1974 presidential election, obtaining 0.74%. The FANE rallied
Jean-Marie Le Pen's
National Front in 1974, gathered around
François Duprat and 's
Revolutionary Nationalist Groups (GNR), which represented the
nationalist revolutionary tendency of the FN. But in 1978, neo-Nazi members of the GNR-FANE broke again with the FN, taking with them sections of the FN youth movement, the
Front National de la Jeunesse. On the other hand, GNR activists closer to the
Third Position (Jacques Bastide and Patrick Gorre) This first electoral success was confirmed at the
1984 European elections, the FN obtaining 10% of the votes. Two years later, the FN gained 35 deputies (nearly 10% of the votes) at the
1986 legislative elections, running under the label of "
Rassemblement national". Those elected included the monarchist
Georges-Paul Wagner. Internal disputes continued however to divide the far-right. Following the 1986 elections, which brought
Jacques Chirac to power as
Prime Minister, some hardliners inside the FN broke away to create the
French and European Nationalist Party (PNFE, Parti Nationaliste Français et Européen), along with members of
Mark Frederiksen's Third Position
FANE. Three former members of the PNFE were charged of having desecrated, in 1990, a Jewish cemetery in
Carpentras. The PNFE was also implicated in the
1988 Cannes and Nice attacks.
Mégret's split, 2002 election results and subsequent electoral fall The most important split was headed by
Bruno Mégret in 1999. Taking many FN elected representatives and party officials with him, he then created the
National Republican Movement (MNR). However, with an eye to the
2007 legislative elections, he supported Le Pen's candidacy for the
presidential election. During these presidential elections,
Jean-Marie Le Pen only took 10.4% of the vote, compared to his 16.9%
first round result in 2002, qualifying him for the second round, where he achieved 17.79% against 82.21% for
Jacques Chirac (
Rally for the Republic, RPR). With only 1.85% in the second round of the
2002 legislative elections, the FN failed to gain any seats in the
National Assembly. In the
2007 presidential election, Le Pen finished fourth, behind
Nicolas Sarkozy,
Ségolène Royal and
François Bayrou.
Philippe de Villiers, the
Catholic traditionalist candidate of the
Movement for France (especially strong in the conservative
Vendée region), was sixth, obtaining 2.23% of the vote. This electoral slump for the FN was confirmed at the
2007 legislative elections, the FN obtaining only 0.08% of the votes in the second round, and therefore no seats.
Le Pen's succession succeeded her father as Front National leader in 2011 These electoral defeats, which contrasted with the high score obtained at the 2002 presidential elections, caused financial problems for the FN, which was forced to sell its headquarters, the
Paquebot, in
Saint-Cloud. Le Pen then announced, in 2008, that he would not compete again in presidential elections, leaving the way for contest for the leadership of the FN between his daughter,
Marine Le Pen, whom he favoured, and
Bruno Gollnisch. The latter had been condemned in January 2007 for
Holocaust denial, while Marine Le Pen attempted to follow a slicker strategy to give the FN a more "respectable" image.
FN 2010s surge Since her election as the leader of the party in 2011, the popularity of the FN continued to grow apace as the party won several municipalities at the
2014 municipal elections; it topped the poll in France at the
2014 European elections with 25% of the vote; and again won more votes than any other party in the
2015 departmental elections. The party once again came in first place in the
2015 regional elections with a historic result of just under 28% of the vote. By 2015, the FN had established itself as one of the largest political forces in France, unusually being both most popular and most controversial political party. For the
2012 presidential election, Le Pen came third in the first round, scoring 17.9% – the partys then best showing ever for the FN. For the
2017 presidential election, Le Pen came second in the first round, scoring 21.3% – the best showing ever for the FN. in the second round she came second with 33.9% a best for NF. In 2018, the National Front was renamed
National Rally.
2020s and onwards: between polarisation of the rights and dediabolisation strategies Far right parties have never enjoyed such a big popularity as they have done since the results of the 2017 and 2022 elections. For the
2022 presidential election, Le Pen came second in the first round, scoring 23.15% – the best showing ever for the RN. Eric Zemmour got 7.07%. Total Far Right vote was 32%, the highest vote ever in a French election. Marine Le Pen may have lost in the second round, but nonetheless her defeat had a taste of victory: the score of 41.46% was the best showing ever for the RN or for a Far Right candidate. The main reason of the success of the
Rassemblement National lies with the political strategies of normalisation and
dediabolisation led by Marine Le Pen and her fellow members of the party, to rally votes of right wing centrists, and to sweep away the extremism her father had cast upon the party. However, the most radical fraction of the
Rassemblement National accused Marine Le Pen of not being radical enough. In parallel,
Éric Zemmour, a far-right pundit with no previous party affiliation or political experience, created his own party,
Reconquête. His views, as a former journalist, in topics such as immigration are much more outspoken and radical than Le Pens. He even overtook Le Pen in one of the polls in the early days of the creation of his party. Le Pen's niece,
Marion Maréchal Le Pen, former member of RN became a member of Reconquête in 2021 while arguing herself and her aunt had "ideological differences". She was excluded of the party on the 18th June, accused of high treason by the head-of-party Eric Zemmour after she showed support for the Central- Far Right coalition between Eric Ciotti's Party
The Republicans (France) and Rassemblement National. In the June 2022
Assemblée Nationale election, the RN gained 89 seats in the national assembly, winning the party enough seats to form a parliamentary group for the first time since 1986.
European elections of 2024: the approach to power The result of the European election was a long-awaited result for Le Pen. Arriving ahead of all other parties, Jordan Bardella's party "
La France revient!" (
lit. "France is coming back") cumulated 31,37% of votes. Turnout rate reached 51.49% and was 1.37 points higher than in 2019. and arguing that far right parties are the impoverishment of French people.
2024 Legislative Elections: alliance of the rights and countermovements On the night of June 9, following the announcement of new elections,
Marion Maréchal called for a "coalition of the rights" in the hopes of forming a union between the
RN,
LR,
Reconquête! and
DLF, mixing right-wing and far-right parties. In the following days,
Marion Maréchal met with
RN officials to discuss the modalities of a potential
RN and
Reconquête! coalition. However, on June 11, talks between the two parties failed as
Jordan Bardella refused "any direct or indirect association with Éric Zemmour". Despite not reaching an agreement,
Marion Maréchal exhorted her followers to vote for the RN-LR alliance the next day.
Éric Zemmour denounced
Marion Maréchal's declaration, calling her out for her "treason" and excluding her from
Reconquête!. On June 11,
Éric Ciotti, the president of
LR, announced during an interview on
TF1 that he intended to form an alliance between his party and the
RN, triggering
The Republicans crisis. This announcement broke the historical
cordon sanitaire between the French republican right and the far-right. However, many figures of
LR criticized
Éric Ciotti's decision to ally with the RN. In an interview in the evening on
France 2,
Jordan Bardella, president of the
RN, confirmed the alliance between the
RN and
LR, declaring that a "deal" has been made between the two parties and that the
RN will support multiple candidates of
LR. On June 12, a political committee composed of influential members of
LR declared the exclusion of
Éric Ciotti from the party.
Éric Ciotti contested this decision, claiming that he was still president of the party. This issue was brought to justice, where a judge temporarily invalidated the political committee's decision. However, a second political committee again excluded
Éric Ciotti from
LR on June 14. In response to the threat of a potential RN government, France's 4 major leftist parties, the
PS,
LFI,
Les Écologistes and the
PCF, announced a union of the lefts, forming the
New Popular Front. Moreover, around 640 000 people mobilized against the far-right in a nationwide protest on June 15; 75 000 or 250 000 of which, depending on sources, were in Paris. == Individuals and groups ==