The leader of a far-right political party in France said he would not address as planned the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) after Steve Bannon, a close ally to President Trump,
Prime Minister Francois Bayrou’s recent remarks that there was a feeling France was being "flooded" by foreigners outraged the left, but were welcomed by conservatives and the far right. While
The National Rally president took a more nuanced stance than his party’s presidential candidate, Marine Le Pen.
Jordan Bardella flew to America last week on a trip he had long boasted about. The president of the National Rally – and all his party – had been a little put out that the only French
The New Popular Front alliance looked like the best hope the left had against Macron and Le Pen. But after months of internal conflicts, it’s on the brink of collapse.
A gesture by Stephen Bannon at CPAC, outside Washington, echoed a move by Elon Musk and prompted the president of France’s far-right National Rally to say it had evoked “Nazi ideology.”
The Foreign Ministry will engage in dialogue with the three main far-right parties in France, Sweden, and Spain, Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar said on Monday. The three parties are France’s National Rally, led by Marine Le Pen, the Sweden Democrats, and the Spanish Vox party.
A prominent French far-right figure is backing out of a highly-anticipated speech to CPAC over after former Trump aide Steve Bannon ended his own remarks with what critics described as a Nazi salute.
FM Sa'ar says opening of dialogue with Sweden Democrats, France’s National Rally, Spain’s Vox is based on their present actions, not antisemitic roots: 'I didn't see reason not to'
Some experts argue that France's growing war of words with its former colony stems partly from the government's desire to appease the far right on migration.