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#Post#: 94--------------------------------------------------
Treat pain with technology
By: kkshaha cnd Date: September 12, 2023, 4:56 am
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The Republicans' radical turn to the right, despite the eventual
victory of Valérie Pécresse, makes Le Pen seem like a fairly
moderate figure (something he is not). Éric Zemmour is a real
threat to French democracy. Despite being politically far-right,
he does not carry any far-right baggage (unlike Le Pen) and this
may persuade conservative voters to support him. Zemmour may
have a historic opportunity to rally large portions of the
conservative and far-right electorate. If he succeeds, he would
provoke a cataclysmic realignment of French politics, even more
dramatic than Macron's.
In the 2002 presidential election, when Jean-Marie Le Pen Phone
Number List
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socialist Lionel Jospin in the second
round, France held its breath, held its nose, and voted for
Jacques Chirac, the candidate of the Gaullist right. The
Republican trench worked: Chirac went from 20% to 82% of the
votes, while Le Pen only rose from 16.85% to 17.79%. Even the
Trotskyist left voted to ward off the fascistic threat harbored
by the National Front. The "cordon sanitaire" (which is still an
ugly expression that "medicalizes" politics) also worked, with
less vigor, in 2017, when.
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Emmanuel Macron beat Marine Le Pen 66% to 34%. Will this
barrier work in the second round on April 24? The extreme right
has become part of the political landscape in France and Europe,
in a double game of tensioning the system and adapting to it.
And Marine Le Pen went to the second round again as in 2017, in
the midst of a collapse of the left and right of the government.
Macron obtained 27.6% of the votes against 23.4% for Le Pen. The
left-wing candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon reached almost 22% (with
the bitter taste of missing the second round by a hair's
breadth) and Le Pen's far-right competition, Éric Zemmour, got
7% ​​(much less than what he expected when he
entered politics.
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