Le Pen Embraced by Workers on Strike in Opposition Pervert’s Hometown

Eric Striker
Daily Stormer
May 1, 2017


Marine Le Pen recently visited a factory in Amiens, where workers are protesting plans by Whirlpool to outsource their jobs to Eastern Europe. Le Pen’s opponent Emmanuel Macron, a literal Rothschilds banker, is an Amiens native. At the site, Le Pen promised to stand with the people against global finance and save their jobs.

Macron refused to visit the political flashpoint until after Le Pen – and was then met with boos and chants of “Le Pen President!” He went to the plant to tell the workers that the plant was going to move no matter what and to learn to love being 40 years old and working for minimum wage at McDonald’s. That is if automation doesn’t get there first (Macron is running on a platforming of publicly subsidizing technology to help corporations automate).

I’m in the minority here (not the Daily Stormer’s official position) when I say Le Pen can win – just as long as she makes zero mistakes and destroys Macron at the debate on Saturday. I consider her leaving the party to be a wild card, not sure what to think of it, but it could be good to distance herself from the Milo Yiannopolous types that have grown in influence over Front National under her command.

Daily Mail:

Marine Le Pen is closing the gap between rival Emmanuel Macron in the latest French election poll after the centrist was accused of taking victory for granted.

Macron is still predicted a win on May 7, but his share of the vote could be 59 per cent, down four points, according to an Odoxa survey.

Marine Le Pen is on 41 per cent, up four points from earlier in the week.

Macron was criticised for taking victory for granted after he hosted a celebratory dinner when he won the first round of voting.

He celebrated at Paris’s upscale Rotonde restaurant and was accused of ‘speaking as if he had won already’ by Florian Philippot, deputy leader of the National Front.

The poll comes after the former National Front leader hijacked Macron’s visit to a Whirlpool factory in his hometown of Amiens when she went to see them earlier in the day.

Macron was forced to make a detour and visit a factory several miles away, where he was booed and heckled by workers.

When Le Pen visited Whirlpool workers in the northern French city, she said: ‘I am for French workers.

‘When I heard that Emmanuel Macron was coming here and did not plan to meet the workers, did not plan to come to the picket line but would shelter himself who knows where in the chamber of commerce … I considered it was such a sign of contempt for the Whirlpool workers that I decided to … come here and see you.’

Many on the Alt-Right have a negative opinion about democracy, and they should, as it traditionally favors candidates Jews vet and throw money and good press behind.

But in the age of the internet, where mass communication between goyim is relatively free (for now), underdogs that represent the interests of the majority can win. The masses aren’t quite so uninformed anymore, which is why the European Union is spending a small fortune working out ways to stamp out “fake news” AKA real news.

With that said, while I think Le Pen can win, I doubt she will be able to get much done. Front National only has two candidates in the parliament, and France has a “deep state” Jewish veto just like the one destroying Donald Trump’s Presidency.

Nevertheless, electoral politics are important to engage with. Ultimately, they’re probably ineffective without tearing the system out at the roots, but voting for the opposition candidate and getting the opposite of what you asked for only makes the masses angrier than before.


Can a candidate running on “free market principles” (re: French Paul Ryan), unrestricted globalism and foreign wars, Jewish exceptionalism, more black and brown immigration, and losing your job win even with the momentum of the entire establishment (money, media, political class) championing him?

If he does, the margin will be more narrow than the polls suggest. We’ll see next weekend.