Far right
Jean-Luc Mélenchon positions himself as embodiment of antifascist arc
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Following the death of a far-right militant in Lyon on February 14, 2026, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of La France insoumise, intensifies his populist strategy by positioning himself as the spearhead of an 'antifascist arc' against the Rassemblement national ahead of 2027. His recent statements in Lyon, deemed antisemitic by some, widen the rift with the rest of the left, while the far right calls for a front against him.
Oriol Junqueras, ERC president, has firmly rejected Gabriel Rufián's push for a left-wing electoral coalition, stating he did not go to jail for Catalonia so Ada Colau could run for ERC. At a book launch in Barcelona, he advocated understanding among democratic parties without electoral alliances. Parlament president Josep Rull called for updating Catalan identity to counter the far right.
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The far-right Nemesis collective has announced it will not join the Paris procession of the International Women's Day march on March 8, 2026. Instead, it will hold a tribute to victims in Paris's 16th arrondissement. This comes after requests from feminist groups and unions to ban its involvement.
France's municipal elections on March 15 and 22, 2026, loom as a key test for local democracy, one year before the presidential vote. They may reveal rising abstention rates signaling distrust in elected officials and point to the far right's growing influence. Mayors, the most popular figures, handle vital issues like housing and transport.
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In a Le Monde op-ed, Pascal Brice, president of the Federation of Solidarity Actors, examines how France's immigration shifts over the past 40 years—from lone workers to families—align with declassement feelings that bolster the far right. He criticizes the normalization of xenophobic ideas and growing support for rights-eroding measures. These trends unfold in a French society plagued by economic, social, and identity doubts.
Nicolas Sarkozy has broken the cordon sanitaire inherited from Jacques Chirac by promising Marine Le Pen not to call for a republican front in future elections. This stance has sparked outrage among Chiraquian heirs, who uphold an uncompromising line against the far right. Solenn de Royer, in a Le Monde chronicle, notes the gradual disappearance of this circle on the right.
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In his book 'Journal of a Prisoner', Nicolas Sarkozy advocates for the broadest possible political gathering without exclusions, implying an inevitable alliance with the far right. This stance marks a profound break from Jacques Chirac's legacy, who had established a cordon sanitaire against the National Front. The former president justifies this strategic shift amid the weakness of his former party, The Republicans.