National Rally
The National Rally (French: Rassemblement national, abbreviated RN) is a prominent French political party emphasizing national sovereignty, strict immigration controls, and protection of French identity.[1] Founded in 1972 as the National Front by Jean-Marie Le Pen to advance anti-immigration and nationalist policies, the party underwent a rebranding to its current name in 2018 under the leadership of Marine Le Pen, Jean-Marie's daughter, as part of efforts to broaden its appeal.[2][3] Currently presided over by Jordan Bardella, with Marine Le Pen serving as president of the party's parliamentary group, RN positions itself as the leading opposition force against perceived erosions of French interests by globalism and supranational entities like the European Union.[4] The party's platform prioritizes "France for the French" principles, including reserving social benefits for citizens, conditioning welfare access on years of residence and work in France, and renegotiating or exiting aspects of EU integration to restore economic protectionism and border security.[5][6] RN has achieved notable electoral gains, reflecting public concerns over immigration and national decline, culminating in Marine Le Pen's advancement to the presidential runoff in 2022, where she garnered 41.5 percent of the vote against incumbent Emmanuel Macron.[7] This surge underscores RN's transformation from a marginal entity to a major contender, though it has faced legal scrutiny and efforts by establishment institutions to marginalize its influence, highlighting tensions between populist nationalism and entrenched elites.[6]
History
Formation and Early Challenges (1972–1981)
The Front National (FN) was founded on 5 October 1972 in Paris by Jean-Marie Le Pen, a former paratrooper and politician, in collaboration with activists from disparate nationalist groups including the recently dissolved Ordre Nouveau, a neo-fascist organization, as well as monarchists, anti-communists, and former OAS members opposed to Algerian independence.[8][9][10] The party's initial platform emphasized French national sovereignty, opposition to immigration, and resistance to both Gaullist centrism and leftist influences, seeking to unify fragmented right-wing elements into a single electoral force.[11] Le Pen was elected its first president, but the FN started with limited resources, modest membership estimated in the low thousands, and no parliamentary representation.[12] From inception, the FN encountered severe internal challenges stemming from ideological heterogeneity among its founders, including tensions between revolutionary nationalists favoring direct action and more conservative elements prioritizing electoral respectability.[12][13] These divisions led to early factional disputes, such as the 1973 expulsion of Ordre Nouveau sympathizers who advocated radical tactics, weakening organizational cohesion and prompting Le Pen to centralize control through personal authority.[14] Financial constraints and isolation from established conservative parties, which viewed the FN as too extreme, further marginalized the group, resulting in negligible media coverage and public support.[12] Electoral performance underscored these difficulties: in the 1974 presidential election, Le Pen received 0.74% of the national vote (189,393 votes), failing to secure endorsement from mainstream right-wing voters.[15] The 1978 legislative elections yielded even less, with the FN obtaining just 0.25% overall and no seats, as candidates were often outpolled by established parties and boycotted by alliances.[15] By the 1981 presidential contest, amid economic stagnation and rising unemployment, Le Pen's share dipped to under 1%, reflecting persistent voter reluctance and the party's inability to capitalize on discontent without broader alliances or refined messaging.[16] These years highlighted the FN's struggle for viability, reliant on Le Pen's charisma amid chronic infighting and structural weaknesses.[12]Jean-Marie Le Pen's Consolidation and Breakthrough (1982–2010)
The Front National (FN), led by Jean-Marie Le Pen, achieved its initial national electoral breakthrough in the 1984 European Parliament elections, capturing 10.95% of the vote and securing 10 seats.[17] This result marked a shift from marginal status, with the party capitalizing on public concerns over immigration and economic issues amid rising unemployment under the Socialist government.[16] Building on this momentum, the FN gained representation in the 1986 French legislative elections conducted under proportional representation, obtaining approximately 9.7% of the national vote.[18] The party won 35 seats in the National Assembly, enabling Le Pen to form tactical alliances and influence debates on national preference and security policies.[19] However, the return to a majoritarian system in the 1988 legislative elections limited FN gains to a single seat despite a comparable 9.7% vote share, highlighting the impact of electoral rules on the party's parliamentary presence.[19] In the 1988 presidential election, Le Pen received 14.4% of the vote, approximately 4.4 million ballots, reflecting a significant increase from prior showings and establishing the FN as a protest force against mainstream parties.[20] The party's support grew steadily through the 1990s, with municipal and regional election victories providing local strongholds, particularly in southern France, where immigration concerns resonated strongly.[16] By the 1995 presidential election, Le Pen garnered 15% of the vote, totaling 4.3 million supporters, consolidating the FN's base among working-class and rural voters disillusioned with globalization and EU integration.[16] The 2002 presidential election represented the pinnacle of Le Pen's electoral impact, as he unexpectedly advanced to the second round with 16.86% of the first-round vote, eliminating the Socialist candidate and prompting widespread protests against perceived establishment failures.[21][11] Le Pen ultimately received 17.8% in the runoff against Jacques Chirac, who secured 82.2% amid a united anti-FN front.[21] Subsequent years saw stabilized but fluctuating support, with the FN achieving around 12-14% in regional and legislative contests through 2010, though internal controversies over Le Pen's provocative statements on historical events and immigration occasionally alienated potential allies.[10] Le Pen's tenure emphasized party discipline and ideological consistency, fostering a dedicated cadre despite media and legal challenges that portrayed the FN as beyond the republican pale.[11]Marine Le Pen's Leadership and Reorientation (2011–2021)
Marine Le Pen was elected president of the Front National (FN) on 15 January 2011, succeeding her father Jean-Marie Le Pen, with the aim of broadening the party's appeal beyond its traditional base.[22] Her leadership marked a shift toward a strategy of dédiabolisation, or de-demonization, which sought to moderate the party's image by reducing associations with extremism and emphasizing socioeconomic grievances such as deindustrialization and globalization alongside immigration concerns.[23] This approach involved recruiting new figures from diverse backgrounds and purging outspoken hardliners to present the FN as a viable alternative to the mainstream parties.[24] A pivotal moment in this reorientation occurred in 2015 amid escalating tensions with Jean-Marie Le Pen, who reiterated controversial views, including past minimizations of the Holocaust. The FN executive suspended him on 4 May 2015 for inflammatory remarks, and following his refusal to step back, the party expelled him on 20 August 2015 to distance itself from his legacy of anti-Semitic statements and to reinforce the dédiabolisation effort.[25][26] The expulsion, decided by the party's disciplinary committee, underscored Marine Le Pen's determination to reposition the FN as a modern nationalist force rather than a fringe protest movement, though critics argued it masked underlying ideological continuities.[27] Under Le Pen's guidance, the FN achieved electoral milestones that reflected growing voter support. In the 2012 presidential election, the party secured its best result to date, advancing Marine Le Pen to a strong showing in the first round.[28] The 2014 European Parliament elections saw the FN top the polls in France for the first time, capitalizing on discontent with the European Union.[29] In the 2015 regional elections, the FN led the first round with approximately 28% of the national vote but failed to secure any regional presidencies in the runoff due to tactical withdrawals by left-wing and center-right candidates to block far-right gains.[30][31] The 2017 presidential election represented a high point, with Le Pen qualifying for the second round against Emmanuel Macron, though she garnered 33.9% in the runoff amid a united establishment opposition.[32] The reorientation culminated in a formal rebranding, with party members voting on 1 June 2018 to rename the FN the Rassemblement National (National Rally), a move proposed by Le Pen earlier that year to signal further normalization and attract broader coalitions ahead of future contests.[33] Membership expanded significantly during this period, reaching record levels by 2014, reflecting increased grassroots engagement.[34] In the 2019 European elections, the party placed second with over 23% of the vote, maintaining momentum despite competition from Macron's centrists.[35] Le Pen's leadership through 2021 solidified the party's status as a major opposition force, though it continued to face cordons sanitaires preventing governance roles.[36]Rebranding and Electoral Advances (2022–2024)
In November 2022, the Rassemblement National (RN) underwent a significant leadership transition when Jordan Bardella, aged 27, was elected party president with nearly 85% of the vote at a party congress, succeeding Marine Le Pen who assumed the role of honorary president.[37] This marked the first time the party was led by someone outside the Le Pen family since its founding, aiming to project a younger, more polished image to broaden appeal beyond its traditional base while maintaining focus on core issues like immigration and national identity.[37] Bardella's selection, groomed by Le Pen as her protégé, emphasized social media savvy—with over 2 million TikTok followers—and avoidance of the provocative rhetoric associated with the party's past under Jean-Marie Le Pen.[38] The rebranding efforts intensified under dual leadership, with strategies centered on "de-demonization" through professionalized communication, emphasis on economic concerns like rising costs alongside security and immigration, and distancing from extremist associations to attract working-class and moderate voters disillusioned with Emmanuel Macron's policies.[39] In the April 2022 presidential election, Marine Le Pen advanced to the second round, securing 41.5% of the vote against Macron's 58.5%, a substantial improvement from her 33.9% in 2017, reflecting growing mainstream acceptance despite the loss.[40] This momentum carried into the June 2022 legislative elections, where RN achieved a historic breakthrough, winning 89 seats—up from just 8 in 2017—forming the third-largest group in the National Assembly and establishing itself as a key opposition force.[41] Bardella's prominence further propelled RN's advances, particularly in the June 2024 European Parliament elections, where his list topped the poll with 31.4% of the vote, securing approximately 30 seats and prompting Macron to dissolve the National Assembly for snap elections.[42] The party's campaign highlighted sovereignty, anti-immigration measures, and critiques of EU bureaucracy, capitalizing on voter concerns over purchasing power and insecurity.[39] In the ensuing July 2024 legislative elections, RN led the first round with 33.2% but faced tactical withdrawals by centrist and left-wing parties in the second round, ultimately securing around 125 seats for the party itself—more than doubling its 2022 tally—while its parliamentary group reached 142 members including allies, positioning it as the largest single-party force amid a hung parliament.[43] These results underscored RN's electoral normalization, though mainstream alliances limited absolute gains, with analysts attributing success to persistent rebranding that mitigated historical stigma without diluting policy priorities.[39]Recent Developments Under Jordan Bardella (2024–2025)
In the 2024 European Parliament elections held on June 9, the National Rally, led by Jordan Bardella as its head list, secured the largest share of votes in France with approximately 31.4%, translating to 31 seats and prompting President Emmanuel Macron to dissolve the National Assembly and call snap legislative elections.[44][45] In the subsequent legislative elections' first round on June 30, the National Rally and its allies obtained 33.15% of the vote, positioning them as frontrunners.[46] However, strategic withdrawals and alliances between centrist and left-wing parties in the second round on July 7 limited the party to 143 seats, making it the largest single bloc in the 577-seat Assembly but falling short of a majority.[43][47] Bardella, who had declared on election night that he would serve as prime minister only if the National Rally achieved an absolute majority, positioned the party in opposition, criticizing Macron's appointment of Michel Barnier as prime minister in September 2024.[48] The National Rally joined forces with the left-wing New Popular Front in December 2024 to pass a no-confidence motion against Barnier's government over its budget plans, leading to its collapse after just two months.[49] In early 2025, the party experienced a setback in a December 2024 by-election, losing a seat previously held, which critics attributed to voter rejection of its governance readiness.[50] Throughout 2025, Bardella has navigated internal party dynamics amid Marine Le Pen's ongoing trial for alleged embezzlement of European Parliament funds, with a verdict anticipated that could bar her from the 2027 presidential race; Bardella indicated in April his readiness to run as the party's candidate if Le Pen is ineligible.[51] Divergences emerged between Bardella's more pro-business, liberal economic stance and Le Pen's traditional protectionism, fueling discussions on the party's future direction during a September rally in Bordeaux where both leaders addressed supporters.[52][53] In October, amid France's deepening political crisis, Bardella and Le Pen declined invitations from interim Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu for talks aimed at stabilizing the government, with the National Rally positioning itself to capitalize on Macron's weakened authority and avoiding further elections.[54][55] The party has also pursued outreach to economic elites, softening its image while maintaining core stances on immigration and sovereignty.[56]Political Positions
Nationalism, Sovereignty, and Identity
The National Rally positions nationalism as a core principle, emphasizing the prioritization of French citizens in access to public goods and services through the policy of priorité nationale (national preference). This entails reserving family allowances, non-contributory social benefits, and housing assistance exclusively or primarily for French nationals, with conditions such as five years of employment in France for eligibility.[57] The party advocates implementing this framework via a national referendum to ensure democratic legitimacy, framing it as a means to restore equity for native citizens amid perceived resource strains from immigration and supranational policies.[57] On sovereignty, the National Rally opposes further erosion of French decision-making authority by the European Union, pledging to refuse transfers of competencies in defense, diplomacy, and energy policy.[57] It calls for exiting EU directives on energy pricing to reclaim national control over economic levers and proposes restricting the Schengen Area's free movement to EU nationals only, while favoring a "European preference" for military procurement to balance alliance needs with autonomy.[57] These stances reflect a broader commitment to a confederation of sovereign European nations rather than deepened integration, viewing the current EU structure as a threat to unilateral French action in foreign and security affairs.[58] Regarding national identity, the party's platform is guided by "l’amour de la France et des Français" (love of France and the French), positioning the defense of French civilization, heritage, and cultural continuity as foundational.[57] Policies include bolstering family structures and natalist measures to sustain demographic vitality among the French population, thereby preserving ethnic and cultural cohesion against external pressures.[57] This identity-centric approach underscores patriotism as a unifying force, prioritizing the historical and linguistic roots of the French nation in governance and public life.[58]Immigration Policy
The National Rally advocates for a policy of drastically reducing immigration inflows, framing mass immigration as a threat to French sovereignty, cultural identity, and public resources. The party proposes ending "settlement immigration" and family reunification, which it views as drivers of demographic change without assimilation, through a constitutional referendum to enshrine these restrictions.[5] It calls for an immediate moratorium on immigration to halt legal entries and prioritizes national preference, reserving access to jobs, social housing, and welfare benefits exclusively for French citizens.[59] Social aids would require five years of employment in France for eligibility among non-citizens, while residency permits for unemployed foreigners would be revoked after one year of inactivity.[5] On asylum and legal entry, the party demands processing all claims abroad rather than on French soil, aiming to deter unfounded applications and reduce border pressures.[5] Birthright citizenship (droit du sol) would be abolished, with naturalization granted only based on proven merit, assimilation, and economic contribution, shifting from automatic to conditional acquisition.[5][60] Enforcement measures emphasize systematic deportations of illegal entrants, foreign criminals, and delinquents, including the removal of all legal barriers to expelling non-citizens convicted of offenses.[5][61] Jordan Bardella, the party's president since 2022, has reiterated these commitments in 2024, pledging accelerated expulsion procedures for delinquents and a broader crackdown on irregular migration to restore border sovereignty.[62] These proposals align with the party's broader platform under Marine Le Pen's influence, which has consistently linked immigration control to reducing crime rates and fiscal burdens, citing empirical data on foreign nationals' overrepresentation in certain offenses.[61]Economic Protectionism and Welfare
The National Rally endorses economic protectionism to shield French workers and industries from globalization's effects, advocating "economic patriotism" through measures like preferential procurement for domestic goods in public contracts and penalties for corporate offshoring.[63] The party proposes selective tariffs on non-EU imports deemed unfair, such as those from China, alongside subsidies for reindustrialization in sectors like agriculture and manufacturing to prioritize national production over free trade.[64] Under Jordan Bardella's leadership since 2022, this stance has incorporated pro-business elements, including deregulation for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to foster competitiveness while maintaining barriers against delocalization.[65] In welfare policy, the National Rally emphasizes "national preference," a principle conditioning access to social protections on citizenship or long-term contributions, aiming to reserve benefits for French nationals amid perceived strain from immigration.[66] Specific proposals include limiting revenue de solidarité active (RSA, France's minimum income guarantee) and other solidarity aids to non-EU foreigners only after five years of employment in France, projected to save approximately 2.5 billion euros annually by curbing expenditures on recent arrivals.[67] Family allowances would be restricted to households with at least one French parent, while pensions are defended at age 62 with full career contributions.[67] To enhance working-class purchasing power, the party advocates abolishing income tax for those earning under 2,000 euros monthly and slashing VAT on energy from 20% to 5.5%, though critics note these expansions could widen deficits without offsetting cuts.[67][68] This approach contrasts with universalist models, prioritizing causal links between national identity, labor contributions, and benefit eligibility over egalitarian distribution.[69]Law, Order, and Security
The National Rally advocates for a robust enhancement of law enforcement capabilities, emphasizing the recruitment and empowerment of police and gendarmes to combat rising urban violence and delinquency. In its policy platforms, the party proposes instituting a presumption of legitimate defense for law enforcement officers, allowing them to use force without fear of prosecution, and mandating the creation of municipal police forces in all communes with populations exceeding 10,000 inhabitants to bolster local public order maintenance.[57] These measures aim to restore authority to security forces amid what the party describes as a degradation of public tranquility.[70] On the judicial front, the National Rally calls for doubling the number of magistrates to 20,000 through expanded external recruitment, including former police officers and lawyers, to address chronic backlogs and ensure swift enforcement of penalties. It supports reintroducing peines planchers (mandatory minimum sentences) for recidivists, attacks on public servants, and drug trafficking, while limiting sentence reductions to six months per year and prioritizing firm prison terms over alternatives like warnings or community service. For juvenile justice, the party proposes lowering the age of penal majority to 16 years and enabling immediate court appearances for young offenders, arguing that current leniency contributes to escalating youth crime.[57][70] A dedicated programming law for security and justice would allocate an additional €1.5 billion annually to expand prison capacity to 85,000 places by 2028, ensuring executed sentences for convicted criminals.[70] The party's security agenda also ties order maintenance to broader expulsion policies for foreign nationals convicted of crimes or delinquencies, with systematic deportation following sentences, and denial of French nationality to delinquent foreign minors. Under Jordan Bardella's leadership in the 2024 legislative program, these proposals were reiterated with a focus on reforming juvenile systems and enhancing functional protections for threatened public servants, including police, to counter what the party frames as systemic impunity.[57][71] Critics from left-leaning outlets have characterized these stances as overly punitive, but National Rally officials maintain they reflect empirical rises in violent crime statistics reported by French authorities.[72]Foreign Policy
The National Rally advocates a foreign policy centered on French sovereignty, national security, and the prioritization of domestic interests over multilateral commitments that dilute autonomy. The party emphasizes maintaining France's independent nuclear deterrence and a complete military structure, refusing any transfer of defense or diplomatic competencies to supranational bodies. In its 2024 legislative program, the RN commits to sanctuarizing the existing Military Programming Law budget trajectory while pushing for rearmament, including raising defense spending toward 3% of GDP as stated by leader Jordan Bardella at the Eurosatory defense exhibition on June 19, 2024.[57][73] On NATO, the party has evolved from Marine Le Pen's earlier proposals to exit the alliance's integrated command structure, opting instead under Bardella to retain membership amid heightened geopolitical tensions but with demands for renegotiated burden-sharing and a focus on European strategic autonomy. The RN opposes Ukraine's accession to NATO, viewing it as premature and escalatory, while condemning Russia's 2022 invasion as a "multidimensional threat" to European security—a shift from the party's historically more accommodating stance toward Moscow, which included past suggestions for military dialogue. Support for Kyiv is limited to logistical and defensive aid, explicitly rejecting French troop deployments, long-range missiles capable of striking Russian territory, or unconditional financial packages like the €3 billion allocated in 2024, with an emphasis on pursuing negotiated peace to avoid broader escalation.[73][74][73] In the Middle East, the RN maintains strong support for Israel, with Le Pen describing the party's historical position as "Zionist" in response to the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, while advocating a two-state solution conditioned on not legitimizing terrorism and calling for a ceasefire to address humanitarian concerns without undermining Israel's security. Foreign aid is conditioned on recipient countries' cooperation against illegal immigration, reflecting the party's linkage of global engagements to domestic border control. The RN favors "European preference" in military procurement to bolster strategic industries like Airbus and Ariane, while critiquing interventions that entangle France in distant conflicts without clear national benefits.[74][73][57]European Union and International Alliances
The National Rally espouses a Eurosceptic vision for the European Union, seeking to dismantle its supranational structures in favor of a confederation of independent nation-states prioritizing sovereignty over integration. The party contends that the EU's current framework undermines French control over key domains including borders, budgets, and legislation, advocating for the repatriation of competences through treaty renegotiation rather than outright withdrawal. This stance evolved from earlier calls for Frexit under Jean-Marie Le Pen; in 2019, Marine Le Pen explicitly abandoned demands for euro exit or EU dissolution, opting instead to retain membership while pushing for reforms to curb Brussels' authority, such as vetoing EU migration pacts and fiscal transfers.[75] Under Jordan Bardella's leadership, the party has intensified criticism of EU policies perceived as infringing on national autonomy, particularly the Green Deal's economic burdens and the migration pact's redistribution mechanisms. In the 2024 European Parliament campaign, Bardella positioned the elections as a referendum on reclaiming sovereignty, pledging to block federalist initiatives and promote an "alliance of nations" over supranational governance.[76] Within the Parliament, National Rally MEPs have aligned with sovereignist factions, co-founding the Patriots for Europe group on July 8, 2024, which Bardella leads and which incorporates parties like Hungary's Fidesz and the Czech ANO to advocate intergovernmental cooperation on security and trade while opposing enlargement and deeper integration.[77][78] On international alliances, the National Rally prioritizes French strategic autonomy, drawing on Gaullist traditions to favor bilateral partnerships and multipolarity over entanglement in U.S.-dominated structures. The party has historically critiqued NATO's integrated command as compromising independence, with Marine Le Pen proposing in 2022 a rapprochement between the alliance and Russia to reduce tensions, though without committing to full withdrawal.[79] Post-2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, leaders including Bardella shifted to conditional support for Kyiv's self-defense, affirming arms deliveries but opposing open-ended escalation or strikes into Russia, while questioning NATO expansion as provocative.[80] Relations with Russia have featured ideological affinity on sovereignty and anti-Atlanticism, evidenced by a 2014 loan from a Moscow-linked bank to the Front National (predecessor to National Rally) and shared opposition to liberal globalism, though the party denies undue influence and has distanced itself amid the Ukraine conflict.[81] Beyond Europe, the National Rally expresses wariness toward U.S. hegemony, advocating reduced reliance on Washington in defense and trade, and has forged informal ties with global populist movements, such as endorsements from figures like Jair Bolsonaro, but maintains no formal international bloc outside EU parliamentary groupings.[82]Climate and Environmental Stances
The National Rally (RN) positions itself as proponent of a "patriotic ecology" or "ecology à la française," emphasizing environmental protection aligned with national sovereignty, economic competitiveness, and the preservation of French living standards, rather than adherence to supranational mandates or measures perceived as ideologically punitive. The party accepts that climate change is real and at least partially anthropogenic, advocating policies grounded in "scientific realities" while rejecting what it describes as alarmist narratives that prioritize global targets over practical, France-centric solutions. In its 2022 environmental platform, RN outlined goals including a transition to energy autonomy via decarbonization, biodiversity restoration through stricter controls on invasive species and habitat protection, and opposition to urban sprawl via reinforced planning laws.[83][84][85] On energy policy, RN prioritizes a "renaissance" of nuclear power, calling for construction of six to 14 new reactors by 2050 and extension of existing plants' lifespans to achieve energy independence and low-carbon electricity at competitive costs, while criticizing intermittent renewables as unreliable and visually intrusive. The party proposes halting new onshore wind farm developments, limiting offshore wind to non-migratory bird zones, and reviewing solar projects to avoid agricultural land use, arguing these sources increase system costs without sufficient benefits. In the 2024 legislative program, RN pledged to end subsidies for renewables that compete with nuclear and to redirect funds toward small modular reactors and research into fusion.[57][85][86] RN vehemently opposes the European Green Deal, portraying it as an EU-imposed regulatory burden that harms French farmers, industries, and consumers through measures like the Common Agricultural Policy's nitrate directives and carbon border taxes. Marine Le Pen's 2022 presidential program vowed to renegotiate or exit elements of the Deal conflicting with national priorities, while Jordan Bardella, as RN president since 2022, has urged suspension of its climate legislation and sought alliances with European conservatives to dismantle it, citing threats to sovereignty and energy prices. The party supports citizen referendums on major environmental policies, such as pesticide bans or protected area expansions, to ensure democratic legitimacy.[87][88][83] In agriculture and land use, RN defends farmers against what it terms "eco-diktats," proposing exemptions from EU environmental standards that reduce productivity, such as fallow land requirements, and prioritizing food sovereignty through tariff protections and relocalization. The party advocates protecting rural landscapes from renewable infrastructure and industrial pollution linked to immigration-driven urbanization, while promoting reforestation and water management adapted to French terroirs. Critics from environmental NGOs and left-leaning outlets, such as Le Monde, contend these stances effectively undermine mitigation efforts by deprioritizing emissions reductions and global cooperation, though RN counters that its approach avoids deindustrialization and protects vulnerable populations from policy-induced inflation.[89][85][57]Social and Cultural Issues
The National Rally advocates policies aimed at bolstering traditional family structures and promoting natalism to counteract declining birth rates in France, which fell to 1.68 children per woman in 2023. The party supports expanding family allowances, tax incentives for larger families, and measures to facilitate work-life balance for parents, while emphasizing the role of the nuclear family in preserving social cohesion.[66] In response to President Macron's 2024 pronatalist initiatives, party spokesman Philippe Olivier endorsed efforts to boost fertility, framing them as essential for national sustainability amid demographic pressures from immigration.[90] On bioethical matters, the party has adopted a pragmatic stance toward abortion, with Marine Le Pen announcing in November 2022 her support for enshrining access to voluntary termination of pregnancy in the French Constitution, marking a shift from prior reservations about the procedure as a societal "tragedy" requiring alternatives like adoption support.[91] This position aligns with maintaining the existing Veil Law framework, extended to 14 weeks in 2022, without plans for repeal, though the party critiques late-term procedures and promotes preventive education on contraception.[92] Regarding LGBT issues, the National Rally opposes same-sex adoption and surrogacy (gestation pour autrui, GPA), viewing them as incompatible with child welfare and traditional parenting models, but has eschewed repeal of the 2013 Taubira law legalizing same-sex marriage.[93] Jordan Bardella, party president since 2022, stated in 2024 that he would not seek to overturn marriage equality, deeming the debate "closed" to focus on security threats to the community from Islamist extremism rather than internal cultural reforms.[94] The party frames its approach as protective of individual freedoms within a framework prioritizing biological family units and national identity over expansive redefinitions of kinship.[93] In cultural and religious domains, the National Rally upholds strict laïcité (state secularism) as a bulwark against political Islam, while invoking France's Christian heritage as a secularized marker of civilizational identity rather than doctrinal faith.[95] Policies include banning foreign funding of mosques, prohibiting communal attire like the abaya in public schools since 2023, and restoring national symbols tied to historical Christian sites to counter perceived erosion by multiculturalism.[96] This "post-religious" orientation mobilizes cultural references to Christianity symbolically against Islamist separatism, without endorsing confessional politics or challenging laïcité's neutrality toward domestic religions. Culturally, the party seeks to prioritize French language, literature, and history in education, critiquing globalist influences and advocating a "national and homogenous vision of heritage" to foster unity.[97]Electoral Performance
Presidential Elections
In the 2002 presidential election, National Front candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen secured 4,804,713 votes (16.86%) in the first round on April 21, unexpectedly advancing to the runoff by eliminating Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, who received 16.18%.[98] This result, driven by voter fragmentation among 16 candidates and discontent with establishment figures, led to widespread protests and a landslide defeat for Le Pen in the second round on May 5, where he garnered 5,525,032 votes (17.79%) against incumbent Jacques Chirac's 82.21%.[99] Subsequent campaigns under Le Pen yielded lower shares: 10.44% in 2007 and 17.90% in 2012 for his daughter Marine Le Pen, who assumed party leadership in 2011 and pursued a strategy of "de-demonization" to broaden appeal beyond core nationalist voters. In the 2017 election, Marine Le Pen obtained 21.30% (8,653,296 votes) in the first round on April 23, qualifying for the runoff amid high abstention and anti-establishment sentiment following terror attacks and economic stagnation.[100] She received 33.90% (10,638,475 votes) in the second round on May 7 against Emmanuel Macron, reflecting gains in northern and southern regions with industrial decline but a barrier from the "republican front" uniting opponents.[100] The 2022 election marked further progress, with Marine Le Pen achieving 23.21% (8,133,828 votes) in the first round on April 10, her strongest first-round performance, fueled by inflation, energy crises, and immigration concerns.[101] In the runoff on April 24, she secured 41.46% (13,288,686 votes) versus Macron's 58.54%, narrowing the gap from 2017 and winning majorities in 11 departments, primarily in rural and deindustrialized areas, though urban and coastal centers remained resistant.[102][103]| Year | Candidate | First Round Vote Share | Second Round Vote Share (if applicable) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Jean-Marie Le Pen | 16.86% | 17.79% |
| 2017 | Marine Le Pen | 21.30% | 33.90% |
| 2022 | Marine Le Pen | 23.21% | 41.46% |
National Assembly Elections
The National Rally (RN), formerly the National Front (FN), first contested National Assembly elections in 1978 but secured no seats until the 1986 vote, held under exceptional proportional representation due to a center-right initiative. With 9.73% of the national vote, the FN obtained 35 seats, marking its initial parliamentary breakthrough amid voter concerns over immigration and economic insecurity.[105] The return to the standard two-round majoritarian system in 1988 severely constrained further gains, as the system's winner-take-all nature favored established parties and facilitated tactical withdrawals against FN candidates in runoffs—a strategy known as the republican front. Subsequent elections yielded marginal results: one seat in 1997 (held by Yann Piat before her assassination, later by others amid internal strife), zero in 2002 and 2007 despite vote shares around 11-12%, two in 2012, and eight in 2017 following Marine Le Pen's presidential run.[106] These outcomes reflected structural disadvantages in the electoral system, coupled with media and elite opposition that amplified perceptions of the party as beyond the pale, limiting broader voter mobilization despite consistent protest vote levels of 10-15%. Internal divisions, such as the 1998 schism with Bruno Mégret's faction, further hampered organization.[107] The 2022 legislative elections represented a turning point, with RN capturing 89 seats—over tenfold the 2017 tally—after securing 18.68% in the first round and benefiting from targeted campaigning in northern and southern strongholds. This established RN as the principal opposition force, enabling group formation and amplified legislative voice under the de-demonization strategy pursued since 2011, which distanced the party from founder Jean-Marie Le Pen's more provocative rhetoric.[108] The July 2024 snap election, triggered by President Emmanuel Macron's dissolution after RN's European Parliament triumph, saw RN and allies lead the first round on June 30 with 33.21% of votes across 216 constituencies qualified for runoffs. Voter turnout reached 66.7%, the highest since 1997, signaling widespread discontent with macroeconomic stagnation and insecurity. Yet, second-round tactical pacts between the New Popular Front (left alliance) and Macron's centrists—evident in over 200 withdrawals to consolidate anti-RN votes—confined RN to 143 seats on July 7, despite aggregating the most overall suffrages. This yielded a hung parliament (left: 182 seats; centrists: 168), underscoring causal limits of vote efficiency in France's system while affirming RN's normalized appeal among working-class and rural demographics. RN's seat total remained a historical peak, with projections indicating potential for absolute majority (289 seats) absent such interventions.[109][110][111]| Election Year | First-Round Vote Share (%) | Seats Won |
|---|---|---|
| 1986 | 9.73 | 35 |
| 1997 | 12.98 | 1 |
| 2002 | 11.34 | 0 |
| 2007 | 10.44 | 0 |
| 2012 | 13.60 | 2 |
| 2017 | 13.20 | 8 |
| 2022 | 18.68 | 89 |
| 2024 | 33.21 (with allies) | 143 |
European Parliament Elections
The National Rally, known as the Front National until 2018, first contested European Parliament elections in 1984. In its initial participations from 1984 to 1994, the party secured between 10.5% and 11.7% of the vote, translating to 10 or 11 seats out of France's allocation of 81 seats at the time.[112] This period reflected modest support amid a fragmented political landscape. Vote shares declined in the late 1990s and 2000s, reaching a low of 5.7% and 5 seats in 1999, followed by 9.8% (7 seats) in 2004 and 6.3% (3 seats) in 2009.[112] These results coincided with internal challenges and competition from other parties emphasizing similar themes of sovereignty and immigration control. A significant resurgence occurred in 2014, when the party, led by Marine Le Pen, achieved 24.86% of the vote and 24 seats, placing first nationally for the first time.[112] This breakthrough capitalized on dissatisfaction with the European Union and domestic economic issues. The party maintained first place in 2019 with 23.3% and 23 seats, under the leadership of Jordan Bardella.[112][113] In the 2024 elections, held on June 9, the National Rally, again headed by Bardella, recorded its best performance with 31.37% of the vote and 30 seats out of 81, amid heightened concerns over immigration and EU policies.[112][114] The result marked a continuation of dominance in European polls since 2014, with the party attributing success to its platform prioritizing national sovereignty.[115]| Year | Vote Share (%) | Seats Won |
|---|---|---|
| 1984 | 10.95 | 10 |
| 1989 | 11.7 | 10 |
| 1994 | 10.5 | 11 |
| 1999 | 5.7 | 5 |
| 2004 | 9.8 | 7 |
| 2009 | 6.3 | 3 |
| 2014 | 24.86 | 24 |
| 2019 | 23.3 | 23 |
| 2024 | 31.37 | 30 |