France’s duelling far-right presidential candidates are holding back-to-back campaign rallies on Saturday, trying to steal each other’s thunder and keep their anti-Islam agenda for the April presidential election.
Marine Le Pen, who came in second in the last presidential election in 2017, is holding what is billed as her first major campaign event in the city of Reims in Champagne country.
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Anit-Islam and anti-Immigration
She will present her platform and try to reinvigorate her base after some high-profile defections to the campaign of rival Eric Zemmour.
Zemmour, a pundit and provocateur who has been repeatedly convicted of hate speech, planned a rally in the northern city of Lille on the same day as Le Pen’s, apparently to try to draw attention away from her.
Both hope to unseat President Emmanuel Macron in the two-round election on 10 and 24 April. If either of these two far-right candidates are elected they will drive the anti-Islam agenda throughout the European Union.
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France’s far-right presidential candidates rally anti-Islam agenda
His program includes banning women from wearing Muslim headscarves in public and prohibiting the construction of any “imposing” mosques or minarets.
Last month, he was convicted of inciting racial hatred for calling underage migrants thieves, rapists, and murderers.
Zemmour was previously convicted of incitement to racial hatred after justifying discrimination against Black and Arab people in 2010 and incitement to religious hatred for anti-Islam comments in 2016.
Macron moves to Far-right policies
Macron who previously stood as a centrist has shifted to the right amid growing support for conservative and far-right policies, notably on security and immigration.
Le Pen, a member of parliament, has been working for a decade to clean up the image of her National Rally party and build up its political base, to make it more palatable to a broader swath of voters and improve her chances at the presidency.
Zemmour has no political experience but is widely known for his role as a TV commentator that allowed him to spread his extreme views.
Le Pen, who used to campaign to leave the EU and the euro, now wants to reform it from within.
Meanwhile, the French left is deeply divided, with multiple candidates vying for the presidency, but none expected to have a chance of reaching the runoff.
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