Le Pen's Party Complains Over Reported Torn Election Information Packages More Reuters Marine Le Pen, French National Front (FN) party candidate for 2017 presidential election, attends a meeting at Guisnel company during a campaign visit in Dol-de-Bretagne, France, May 4, 2017. REUTERS/S...
PARIS, Jan. 16 (Xinhua) -- Marine Le Pen, leader of France's far-right "National Rally" (RN) party, announced on Thursday that she will run for president in 2022. In her New Year greetings message to the media, Le Pen said her candidacy to the upcoming presidential elections was "no...
French far-right National Rally party candidate Marine Le Pen addresses a press conference on diplomacy and foreign policy in Paris, France, April 13, 2022. France's Constitutional Council announced on Wednesday the official results of the first round of the country's presidential election, confirmi...
Reports on the campaign of presidential candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen in France as of April 25, 2002.EBSCO_bspWall Street Journal - Eastern EditionWinestockGeoffFlemingCharles
“The aide works for his MEP and [therefore] can work for his MEP for the benefit of the party,” she insisted. Le Pen also drew a parallel with France’s lower house of parliament. “The National Assembly is very clear: it considers the political activity...
Jordan Bardella, president of the National Rally as the party is now known, confirmed Le Pen’s death in a post on social media platform X. Bardella’s unusually warm tribute described Le Pen as a “tribune of the people” who “always served France...
Before the decision, the party’s broader political bureau said it “disapproves the comments made and reiterated by Jean-Marie Le Pen,” and affirmed its confidence in his daughter, to ensure that “nothing can divert (the party) from its goal of gaining power in the service of France and...
STRASBOURG, France — France’s Marine Le Pen, one of the leading voices of the far right in the European Union, is throwing her political weight behind Italian hard-…
In turn, she proposed "major radical reforms," and a "renewed" and "more decentralized" party so that "France remains the country for its children and for the world." After a disappointing performance in the May 7 presidential campaign, Le Pen was dogged by internal rifts among the party'...
"The name change will mark the end of a chapter and the start of a new one, that of a party suited to being in power and striking alliances," she added. Le Pen brought the anti-establishment FN party into the country's political mainstream during France's presidential election in April...