Daily Stormer
March 25, 2014
Jews are flipping out about France’s marked turn to the right in recent elections.
From the Jerusalem Post:
The right and the far Right made big gains in the first round of municipal elections held in 36,000 towns across France on Sunday.
The right-wing UMP of former president Nicolas Sarkozy and the far-right National Front led by Marine Le Pen together garnered about 52 percent of the votes – some 47% and 5%, receptively. The Socialist Party of President François Hollande managed about 38%, with the Green candidates and the Radical Party of the Left getting most of the rest.
Some 38.5% of the electorate stayed home, the highest level of non-participation since the Fifth Republic was created in 1958, and 4.5 percentage points more than in the previous local elections six years ago. Political analysts said the high abstention rate was very positive for the opposition (the Right), and was due to “economic pessimism in the country” and a “rejection of the political class.”
Most observers are talking about a “vote of sanction” against the government’s politics, and in particular against Hollande, the most unpopular French head of state ever.
If the vote is confirmed in the second round next Sunday, when most municipalities will hold runoffs, he may to dismissing prime minister, Jean-Marc Ayrault, and replace him with the popular interior minister, Manuel Valls.
…
The strong move to the Right was not entirely welcomed by the main rightwing party, the UMP, which has seen the Front National make a major advance, stealing some of its expected support.
“The results are worrying,” Sarkozy’s ex-advisor Henri Guaino said.
In Paris, there is a close all-female race for mayor: Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, the spokeswoman for Sarkozy and the UMP during the presidential elections in 2012, is in the lead after the first round with 34.8%, followed closely by Anne Hidalgo of the Socialist Party, with 33.6%. In Marseilles, incumbent Mayor Jean-Claude Gaudin of the UMP is leading with 33.5%, and in Pau, in the Pyrenees, François Bayrou, the former presidential candidate of the Center, won an outright victory in Sunday’s first round.
This swing to the Right, and in particular to the far Right, is a major setback for Hollande and his Socialist government.
They are engaged in an all-out cultural battle against the National Front, considering it to be a danger to the French Republic, a view shared by most of the Jewish community.
The thing is, none of these politicians are openly antisemitic. The right-shill Sarkozy is himself a Jew.
But Jews instinctively understand that liberalism is their cloak of invisibility, and any return toward conservative politics is a threat to them. Antisemitism can break out at any time, when people are openly and actively attempting to preserve their society.
And in France, Antisemitism is already breaking out in a very serious manner. Following mass marches against the Jews where it was chanted that the gas chambers were bullshit and that Jews needed to leave France, things have continued to intensify.