PARIS — The 93-year-old founder of France's main
far-right party, Jean-Marie Le Pen, goes on trial Wednesday over allegations of
once again inciting racial hatred, this time with comments targeting a Jewish
pop singer.
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He already has a string of hate speech convictions that
eventually became too much for his daughter Marine Le Pen, who expelled him
from the National Front's leadership in 2015 in a bid to achieve mainstream
respectability.
Le Pen senior, however, has continued to relish the outrage
prompted by his statements regarding Jews, Muslims, black people, and
immigrants.
The latest trial stems from a 2014 video on the party's
website in which Le Pen railed against artists who denounced his extremist
stances, including Madonna and the French tennis star-turned-singer Yannick
Noah.
Asked about the French singer and actor Patrick Bruel, Le
Pen referred to his Jewish origins with a pun evoking the Holocaust — "I'm
not surprised. Listen, next time we'll do a whole oven batch!"
The taunt sparked a torrent of indignation including from
leaders of his own party, with Marine Le Pen criticizing what she called a
"political error".
Jean-Marie claimed the comments carried no anti-Semitic
connotations "except for my political enemies or imbeciles".
He does not intend to appear in person at the trial in
Paris, where he is charged with inciting anti-Semitic hatred, according to
associates.
"This case is based only on part of a phrase taken out
of context," said his lawyer Frederic Joachim, who will seek to have the
charge dismissed.
Challenges loom
The trial was delayed for years while Le Pen claimed
immunity from prosecution as an MEP, a seat he won in 1984 and held until 2019.
But fellow lawmakers stripped his legal protections over the
case in 2016.
Le Pen, his daughter and others from the party — now
rebranded the National Rally — are also facing financial misconduct charges
over subsidies earmarked for paying their EU parliamentary aides.
Investigators say they used 6.8 million euros in public
funds to finance party work in France.
Despite the troubles, Jean-Marie Le Pen remains a regular
media presence and a lodestar for many on the far
right who brush off his
multiple hate speech convictions — not least his repeated insistence that the
Nazi gas chambers were just a "detail" of history.
His shock success in the 2002 presidential election —
getting to the run-off stage before being defeated by Jacques Chirac — sent the
leftwing Socialists into the political wilderness and proved to his supporters
that a rightward lurch in France was possible.
But a new conviction could complicate the bid by Marine Le
Pen to take on Emmanuel Macron again for the presidency next year, especially
after the National Rally failed to take control of any French region in
elections last June.
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