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France's Front National in brainstorming rethink of policies and name

The far-right party, shaken by its collapse in support at the final post of May's presidential election, is holding a two-day closed-door meeting to debate what its leader Marine Le Pen called a 're-founding of the Front National', including a re-think of its policies that France should leave the eurozone and European Union, while also pondering a change of its name.

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This article is freely available.

Marine Le Pen’s far-right Front National party is holding a high-tension meeting that could lead to a name change and a rethink of the party’s demand to pull France out of the euro, reports National Post.

The populist, anti-immigration party is trying to stay relevant after a roller-coaster election season, in which Le Pen dominated the presidential campaign but was crushed in the runoff.

Changing the party’s name — associated with Le Pen’s outspoken father — is among sensitive items on the agenda at a closed-door “seminar for reflection” Friday and Saturday at the party’s headquarters in the Paris suburb of Nanterre. A final decision on such changes would be put to party members later.

Even more explosive is the party’s internal debate over its anti-euro policy. That stance is believed to have cost Le Pen votes in the presidential campaign and has deeply divided party leadership — and worried global financial markets because of its potentially devastating impact on Europe’s economy.

Le Pen acknowledges that leaving the euro makes people “anxious” yet stuck to the strategy during the campaign, largely on the guidance of party No. 2 Florian Philippot. Le Pen’s clumsy defence of her anti-euro stance in the final campaign debate was particularly devastating.

Philippot is now under fire from some party heavyweights who accuse him of burying their presidential chances.

“Even if economically, we were right, politically we were wrong,” Bernard Monot, a Front National economic strategist and European Parliament member, was quoted as saying in business daily Les Echos. He plans to push a more “euro-compatible” programme at the party seminar.

Others, however, see leaving the euro as central to the party’s nationalist agenda and economic strategy. And Philippot is threatening to quit the party if it reverses its position on the euro, arguing that would not be the solution to the party’s problems.

Le Pen says the weekend meeting is meant to be “the basis of a re-founding of the Front National,” but hasn’t come down clearly on the euro issue.

Read more of this AP report published by National Post.