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Far-Right Leaders Loathe the European Parliament, but Love Its Paychecks

Vergennes

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STRASBOURG, France — Marine Le Pen, the far-right leader trying to become president of France, already has a day job as a lawmaker in the European Parliament, a position she regards with open contempt. She misses votes, mocks the process and cheers for the demise of the European Union.

Even so, Ms. Le Pen is willing to accept a salary of 101,808 euros (about $110,000), a generous per diem and an annual staff and office budget in excess of €340,000. In February, the Parliament halved her compensation after fraud investigators concluded that she had wrongly diverted money to pay for National Front party activities in France.

The scandal, which has not fazed Ms. Le Pen’s supporters in France, is another example of how Europe’s right-wing parties happily provoke populist fury by attacking the European Union — yet also happily pocket government salaries and other benefits. For some far-right politicians, a perch in the European Parliament can mean a lucrative sinecure, easy news media exposure and immunity from criminal prosecution at home.

“We are in a totally schizophrenic situation,” said Franck Proust, the leader of France’s center-right Republicans in the Parliament. “Europe should not have to finance people who instead of working spend their time destroying their source of funding.”

For decades, Ms. Le Pen’s National Front and other parties on Europe’s far right have drawn a strange legitimacy by winning seats in the European Parliament. They blame European institutions for being onerous bureaucracies and lacking democratic accountability even as they enjoy the perks of office and generally shun the daily grind of legislative work.

Winning seats in the European Parliament is often easier for them than winning at home, because turnout is anemic, boosting the chances for well-organized protest candidates. The National Front, with more than 20 lawmakers including Ms. Le Pen and her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, has the largest bloc of French representatives in the European assembly — even though it holds just two seats in the French National Assembly.

In 2014, anti-European fringe parties had their strongest-ever showing in European elections, and far-right lawmakers now hold about 10 percent of the 751 seats in the European Parliament. The U.K. Independence Party, which has no lawmakers in the British Parliament, has 20 seats in the European Parliament, including the party’s former leader, Nigel Farage.

27euparliament-2-master675.jpg

Marcel de Graaff, a Dutch far-right lawmaker, and Marine Le Pen of France at Parliament this month. Ms. Le Pen’s National Front has over 20 lawmakers in the European assembly, even though it holds just two seats in the French National Assembly.

European institutions in Brussels are routinely criticized for lacking democratic accountability. The European Parliament, whose members are directly elected, is supposed to be the answer to that complaint. But anti-Europe lawmakers instead often use the Parliament, based in Strasbourg, France, to attack the European Union.

The overall expenses of salaries, benefits and other funds for far-right Euroskeptic lawmakers and their staffs cost European Union taxpayers about €55 million this year, according to Thilo Janssen, a political scientist who has studied the far right and who advises a left-wing lawmaker in Parliament.

Even more ironic, the Parliament provides a platform for these lawmakers to network and coordinate their anti-Europe efforts — and to get paid for it. They have formed political groups, the main organizational units of Parliament, which allow them to qualify for an array of privileges.

Ms. Le Pen, for example, is co-president of the Europe of Nations and Freedom Group, founded in 2015, along with Marcel de Graaff, a Dutch right-wing lawmaker. The group billed for €1.6 million during its first year for staff and activities.

Mr. de Graaff, a fiery ally of the Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders, has argued that unauthorized migrants have carried out mass rapes and warned that “we must stop the invasion” of Islam in Europe.

“More and more people see through the lies of the E.U. establishment and are joining the patriots,” he told colleagues during a recent address on the floor of Parliament. “The E.U.’s end is approaching.”

Two years ago, when Ms. Le Pen was absent for some votes, Mr. de Graaff covered for her, casting her ballots. She later praised his “chivalrous spirit.” Other lawmakers were less amused. Mr. de Graaff was fined €1,530.

“Unsurpassed insolence,” Manfred Weber, a powerful conservative German member of the European Parliament, said at the time.

27euparliament-3-master675.jpg

Nigel Farage, former leader of the U.K. Independence Party, addressing Parliament this month. Mr. Farage soaks up free media attention by giving strident, anti-Europe speeches.

Yet Mr. de Graaff and others mostly shrug off the criticism. Mr. Farage, who helped lead the “Brexit” campaign for Britain to leave the European Union, soaks up free media attention by giving strident, anti-Europe speeches.

Mr. Farage leads another Euroskeptic bloc in Parliament, Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy, and that bloc in turn shares many members with a party called the Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe.

In November, Parliament ordered that party to repay €172,655. The money was supposed to help lawmakers compete in European elections and “contribute to forming a European awareness.” But the U.K. Independence Party used it instead to conduct opinion polls on Brexit, officials found. (The alliance’s executive director said the audit procedure was “biased” and aimed at “silencing” critics of European integration.)

Neither Mr. de Graaff nor Ms. Le Pen responded to requests for comment. But one Le Pen ally, Jean-Luc Schaffhauser, who helped the National Front secure a loan from a Russian-linked bank but is not himself a member of the party, said he believed that fraud investigators were unfairly singling out right-wing parties for scrutiny.

Other lawmakers fume at the antics of the far right, but have little recourse.

Far-right members are “hollowing out the whole structure from within, and it’s like tooth decay,” said Esther de Lange, a lawmaker with the Christian Democratic Appeal, a center-right Dutch party. “Are you going to wait until the whole thing falls out, or do you actually come up with a solution?”

Prominent members like Mr. Weber want to block funding for anti-European parties — including the Alliance for Peace and Freedom, which has three representatives from Greece’s neo-fascist Golden Dawn and one from the neo-Nazi National Democratic Party of Germany in Parliament. That entitled the party to nearly €400,000 last year.

Mr. Weber acknowledged last month that nothing could be done to turn off the money spigot immediately, partly because the rules need to be tightened.

There also are concerns about freedom of speech. “You want to gag us, basically,” Georg Mayer, an Austrian member of Mr. de Graaff’s and Ms. Le Pen’s bloc, told lawmakers recently. “I don’t like that reading of democracy.”

27euparliament-4-master675.jpg

The Dutch far-right politician Geert Wilders at a meeting in Koblenz, Germany, in January.

Ms. Le Pen, for one, has benefited from leading one of the far-right blocs. It entitles her to a prominent placement on the parliamentary benches and choice speaking slots. Eighteen months ago, when President François Hollande of France and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany tried to rally support for migration policies on the floor of Parliament, Ms. Le Pen rose to give a stinging, and widely publicized, rebuke.

She belittled Mr. Hollande as a German puppet, the “administrator of the province of France.” Her rant, which evoked the Nazi occupation of France during World War II, has been watched at least a half-million times on YouTube.

When he visited the Parliament in February, Justin Trudeau, the Canadian prime minister, did not have lunch with the heads of the political blocs — to avoid encountering Ms. Le Pen, officials speculated at the time.

A number of far-right lawmakers skipped Mr. Trudeau’s speech. Many also joined a boycott in December, when two young Iraqi women who had escaped sexual slavery by the Islamic State were honored with the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, the European Union’s top human rights award.

The boycott infuriated Anthony L. Gardner, who was the United States ambassador to the European Union until January and was present for the occasion. “They tried to turn a deeply moving ceremony about how these girls had survived unimaginable things into a political event,” he said in an interview. “It was shameful behavior for them not to be there.”

Meanwhile, Ms. Le Pen has also enjoyed another privilege of being a European parliamentarian: immunity.

Last month, French prosecutors persuaded European lawmakers to lift her immunity in a criminal investigation into images she shared on Twitter that showed brutal acts by the Islamic State. (Dissemination of violent images is a crime in France.) On Wednesday, they began a process that could lead to her losing immunity in another French case, concerning alleged abuse of European Union funds to pay for party assistants.

Lawmakers are still considering yet another French request to lift her immunity, in a case of alleged defamation against a former mayor of Nice.

But for now, Ms. Le Pen continues to receive legal protection from a European Parliament she wants to bring down.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/27/world/europe/marine-le-pen-european-parliament.html?_r=0

Interesting. @LA se Karachi @Taygibay @bobo6661 @A.P. Richelieu @Louiq XIV @Penguin @SMS Derfflinger @flamer84
 
. .
STRASBOURG, France — Marine Le Pen, the far-right leader trying to become president of France, already has a day job as a lawmaker in the European Parliament, a position she regards with open contempt. She misses votes, mocks the process and cheers for the demise of the European Union.

Even so, Ms. Le Pen is willing to accept a salary of 101,808 euros (about $110,000), a generous per diem and an annual staff and office budget in excess of €340,000. In February, the Parliament halved her compensation after fraud investigators concluded that she had wrongly diverted money to pay for National Front party activities in France.

The scandal, which has not fazed Ms. Le Pen’s supporters in France, is another example of how Europe’s right-wing parties happily provoke populist fury by attacking the European Union — yet also happily pocket government salaries and other benefits. For some far-right politicians, a perch in the European Parliament can mean a lucrative sinecure, easy news media exposure and immunity from criminal prosecution at home.

“We are in a totally schizophrenic situation,” said Franck Proust, the leader of France’s center-right Republicans in the Parliament. “Europe should not have to finance people who instead of working spend their time destroying their source of funding.”

For decades, Ms. Le Pen’s National Front and other parties on Europe’s far right have drawn a strange legitimacy by winning seats in the European Parliament. They blame European institutions for being onerous bureaucracies and lacking democratic accountability even as they enjoy the perks of office and generally shun the daily grind of legislative work.

Winning seats in the European Parliament is often easier for them than winning at home, because turnout is anemic, boosting the chances for well-organized protest candidates. The National Front, with more than 20 lawmakers including Ms. Le Pen and her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, has the largest bloc of French representatives in the European assembly — even though it holds just two seats in the French National Assembly.

In 2014, anti-European fringe parties had their strongest-ever showing in European elections, and far-right lawmakers now hold about 10 percent of the 751 seats in the European Parliament. The U.K. Independence Party, which has no lawmakers in the British Parliament, has 20 seats in the European Parliament, including the party’s former leader, Nigel Farage.

27euparliament-2-master675.jpg

Marcel de Graaff, a Dutch far-right lawmaker, and Marine Le Pen of France at Parliament this month. Ms. Le Pen’s National Front has over 20 lawmakers in the European assembly, even though it holds just two seats in the French National Assembly.

European institutions in Brussels are routinely criticized for lacking democratic accountability. The European Parliament, whose members are directly elected, is supposed to be the answer to that complaint. But anti-Europe lawmakers instead often use the Parliament, based in Strasbourg, France, to attack the European Union.

The overall expenses of salaries, benefits and other funds for far-right Euroskeptic lawmakers and their staffs cost European Union taxpayers about €55 million this year, according to Thilo Janssen, a political scientist who has studied the far right and who advises a left-wing lawmaker in Parliament.

Even more ironic, the Parliament provides a platform for these lawmakers to network and coordinate their anti-Europe efforts — and to get paid for it. They have formed political groups, the main organizational units of Parliament, which allow them to qualify for an array of privileges.

Ms. Le Pen, for example, is co-president of the Europe of Nations and Freedom Group, founded in 2015, along with Marcel de Graaff, a Dutch right-wing lawmaker. The group billed for €1.6 million during its first year for staff and activities.

Mr. de Graaff, a fiery ally of the Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders, has argued that unauthorized migrants have carried out mass rapes and warned that “we must stop the invasion” of Islam in Europe.

“More and more people see through the lies of the E.U. establishment and are joining the patriots,” he told colleagues during a recent address on the floor of Parliament. “The E.U.’s end is approaching.”

Two years ago, when Ms. Le Pen was absent for some votes, Mr. de Graaff covered for her, casting her ballots. She later praised his “chivalrous spirit.” Other lawmakers were less amused. Mr. de Graaff was fined €1,530.

“Unsurpassed insolence,” Manfred Weber, a powerful conservative German member of the European Parliament, said at the time.

27euparliament-3-master675.jpg

Nigel Farage, former leader of the U.K. Independence Party, addressing Parliament this month. Mr. Farage soaks up free media attention by giving strident, anti-Europe speeches.

Yet Mr. de Graaff and others mostly shrug off the criticism. Mr. Farage, who helped lead the “Brexit” campaign for Britain to leave the European Union, soaks up free media attention by giving strident, anti-Europe speeches.

Mr. Farage leads another Euroskeptic bloc in Parliament, Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy, and that bloc in turn shares many members with a party called the Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe.

In November, Parliament ordered that party to repay €172,655. The money was supposed to help lawmakers compete in European elections and “contribute to forming a European awareness.” But the U.K. Independence Party used it instead to conduct opinion polls on Brexit, officials found. (The alliance’s executive director said the audit procedure was “biased” and aimed at “silencing” critics of European integration.)

Neither Mr. de Graaff nor Ms. Le Pen responded to requests for comment. But one Le Pen ally, Jean-Luc Schaffhauser, who helped the National Front secure a loan from a Russian-linked bank but is not himself a member of the party, said he believed that fraud investigators were unfairly singling out right-wing parties for scrutiny.

Other lawmakers fume at the antics of the far right, but have little recourse.

Far-right members are “hollowing out the whole structure from within, and it’s like tooth decay,” said Esther de Lange, a lawmaker with the Christian Democratic Appeal, a center-right Dutch party. “Are you going to wait until the whole thing falls out, or do you actually come up with a solution?”

Prominent members like Mr. Weber want to block funding for anti-European parties — including the Alliance for Peace and Freedom, which has three representatives from Greece’s neo-fascist Golden Dawn and one from the neo-Nazi National Democratic Party of Germany in Parliament. That entitled the party to nearly €400,000 last year.

Mr. Weber acknowledged last month that nothing could be done to turn off the money spigot immediately, partly because the rules need to be tightened.

There also are concerns about freedom of speech. “You want to gag us, basically,” Georg Mayer, an Austrian member of Mr. de Graaff’s and Ms. Le Pen’s bloc, told lawmakers recently. “I don’t like that reading of democracy.”

27euparliament-4-master675.jpg

The Dutch far-right politician Geert Wilders at a meeting in Koblenz, Germany, in January.

Ms. Le Pen, for one, has benefited from leading one of the far-right blocs. It entitles her to a prominent placement on the parliamentary benches and choice speaking slots. Eighteen months ago, when President François Hollande of France and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany tried to rally support for migration policies on the floor of Parliament, Ms. Le Pen rose to give a stinging, and widely publicized, rebuke.

She belittled Mr. Hollande as a German puppet, the “administrator of the province of France.” Her rant, which evoked the Nazi occupation of France during World War II, has been watched at least a half-million times on YouTube.

When he visited the Parliament in February, Justin Trudeau, the Canadian prime minister, did not have lunch with the heads of the political blocs — to avoid encountering Ms. Le Pen, officials speculated at the time.

A number of far-right lawmakers skipped Mr. Trudeau’s speech. Many also joined a boycott in December, when two young Iraqi women who had escaped sexual slavery by the Islamic State were honored with the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, the European Union’s top human rights award.

The boycott infuriated Anthony L. Gardner, who was the United States ambassador to the European Union until January and was present for the occasion. “They tried to turn a deeply moving ceremony about how these girls had survived unimaginable things into a political event,” he said in an interview. “It was shameful behavior for them not to be there.”

Meanwhile, Ms. Le Pen has also enjoyed another privilege of being a European parliamentarian: immunity.

Last month, French prosecutors persuaded European lawmakers to lift her immunity in a criminal investigation into images she shared on Twitter that showed brutal acts by the Islamic State. (Dissemination of violent images is a crime in France.) On Wednesday, they began a process that could lead to her losing immunity in another French case, concerning alleged abuse of European Union funds to pay for party assistants.

Lawmakers are still considering yet another French request to lift her immunity, in a case of alleged defamation against a former mayor of Nice.

But for now, Ms. Le Pen continues to receive legal protection from a European Parliament she wants to bring down.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/27/world/europe/marine-le-pen-european-parliament.html?_r=0

Interesting. @LA se Karachi @Taygibay @bobo6661 @A.P. Richelieu @Louiq XIV @Penguin @SMS Derfflinger @flamer84

Well, I guess anti-EU politicians and Republicans have a lot more in common then I expected.
 
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Our Korwin-Mikke likes it too but he just said in beginning he is going there"to end EU from inside";p
Expose fraud and waste ;-)
But can they do anything to them right now i doubt, i think only the country they came from can do something.

The European Parliament accuses French presidential candidate Marine Le Pen's party of defrauding it of nearly five million euros ($5.5 million) in expenses, more than twice an initial estimate, a French legal source said Thursday.

http://www.france24.com/en/20170427-france-marine-le-pen-eu-parliament-fraud
 
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Expose fraud and waste ;-)
Of course. The EU is evil, but its paychecks and legal privileges aren't. ;)

"We are against the system!". yeah... but not much.

Our Korwin-Mikke likes it too but he just said in beginning he is going there"to end EU from inside";p

But can they do anything to them right now i doubt, i think only the country they came from can do something.

The European Parliament accuses French presidential candidate Marine Le Pen's party of defrauding it of nearly five million euros ($5.5 million) in expenses, more than twice an initial estimate, a French legal source said Thursday.

http://www.france24.com/en/20170427-france-marine-le-pen-eu-parliament-fraud

Must be noted that she refused to go to the Police to be questionned. What image does she give to the population ?

As for the instutions she keeps vomiting on,if it wasn't for her immunity,she would be probably decaying in a dungeon as I speak.
 
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How Le Pen’s party obstructs EU moves to defend workers

eu-lepen.jpg

© Frédérick Florin, AFP (Archive) | Marine Le Pen has been a member of the European Parliament since 2004.


Text by Bahar MAKOOI

Marine Le Pen’s National Front party claims its Eurosceptic platform is aimed at protecting workers. But in the European Parliament, critics say the French far-right party has done everything to scuttle workers' rights.

Two days after she made it past the first round of the 2017 French presidential election, Le Pen was live on national TV, trying to position herself as the "candidate of the people". The 48-year-old National Front (FN) presidential candidate was ticking the boxes when she declared, "The choice I offer is the choice of the nation, the choice of the homeland, for the protection of the French people against the excesses of regulations, and the drifts of the market."

Le Pen has long cast herself as the saviour of French workers against a rapacious global financial system – stealing the thunder of the French left in the process.

However the voting history of FN members in the European Parliament reveals a pattern of choices that contravene Le Pen’s stated intentions.

The 23 French far-right European Parliament members (MEPs) almost systematically choose to vote against measures aimed at improving the lot of Europe’s workers, according to critics. These include the fight against de-industrialisation, directives to reduce tax evasion, as well as measures against social dumping (the practice of employing cheap labour or moving work sites to low-wage countries). The far-right bloc has also voted against a directive seeking to prevent and deter undeclared work – or paid activities that are not declared to public authorities and therefore not taxed.

Despite the party’s staunchly anti-EU platform, the FN has had no qualms about running for European parliamentary elections – and generally does better than in national legislative elections, benefitting from low voter turnouts for EU elections. While the party has more than 20 seats in the European Parliament, it has only three in the French National Assembly.

Once in, the elected FN MEPs benefit from EU salaries, perks and privileges. Earlier this week, the party was accused of defrauding the European Parliament of nearly €5 million, more than twice an initial estimate.

The allegations however have not appeared to affect her popularity ratings among the party’s core base of supporters, who are overwhelmingly Europhobic.

‘We have never seen the FN’


For anti-National Front MEPs though, the French far-right party’s obstructionist voting track record is particularly galling.

"What strikes me most is that they act, in the European Parliament, in opposition to everything they say in France," said Elisabeth Morin-Chartier, an MEP from the French centre-right Les Républicains party and member of the EU’s Employment and Social Affairs Committee.

"Because the National Front rejects the legitimacy of European institutions, they vote against everything that gives power to these institutions to invest locally, even if their intervention is positive for social rights," said Doru Frantescu, director of VoteWatch, a Brussels-based think tank that monitors the votes of European parliamentarians.

Thiébaut Weber of the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC), which includes almost all the French trade unions, agrees. "Social and labour rights issues at the European level and the National Front are two different things. They are totally absent on these issues," he said, explaining that he does not count on the elected representatives of the French far-right party to defend the interests of European workers. "We have never seen the FN, no effective work, no initiatives, only speeches. Their position is not to engage," explained Weber.

‘They cannot claim they defend the most precarious workers’

The most striking example of this disengagement was during the initiative to pass the “posting of workers directive”, which aims to ensure “the same pay for the same job at the same place”. The measure was pushed by a group of countries including France, Germany and Belgium, who argue that existing EU rules on the posting of workers could be abused by employers to undercut local labour laws.


In April 2014, Le Pen was the FN representative in the Employment and Social Affairs Committee responsible for examining the directive. "She was never seen, except on the day of the inauguration, and in plenary session, she abstained [from voting]," said Morin-Chartier.

Today, while the abolition of the directive is one of the measures put forward in the FN election platform, the MEPs from the FN continue to desert the ranks of the European Parliament right at question time. Morin-Chartier, rapporteur of the directive currently under review, notes that Dominique Martin, the FN MEP who represents the extreme right on the committee, did not participate in the first meetings.

"They cannot claim they defend the most precarious workers," said Morin-Chartier.

‘Just cinema’


Examples of the FN’s disinterest on labour issues abound in the annals of the European Parliament. Morin-Chartier recalled that in September 2016, the FN MEPs voted against the introduction of national minimum wages to at least 60 percent of the national average wage in the framework of a social anti-dumping report. In the same vote, they abstained on a measure to draw up a European blacklist of enterprises responsible for serious violations of social legislation.

VoteWatch has also noted similar inconsistencies, such as the refusal to vote for a resolution on the fight against tax evasion in December 2015. When asked about the abstention, the FN’s Bernard Monot said the party did not want to “encourage a European fiscal union". At a plenary session, Monot claimed, "The National Front has joined all the texts in favour of fiscal transparency, but categorically refuses to move towards a fiscal union."

This record has incensed Weber. "What interest do they have in solving European problems?" he fumes. "The FN has no interest in supporting the European policies that are needed, as Europe is the basis of their business. It uses the European Parliament as a forum to get media attention during plenary sessions. But once that happens, the party’s elected representatives are absent most of the time.”

For their part, MEPs from the FN complain that their voices are ignored in parliament. "Our counter-proposals, our amendments are rejected in all areas, proof that this is all just cinema," dismissed Monot.

But for the pro-EU MEPs in the chamber, this discourse is yet another example of the FN’s theatrics in Brussels, or “just cinema”, as Monot describes it.

This article was translated from the original in French.
http://www.france24.com/fr/20170426...dre-travailleurs-droits-sociaux-marine-le-pen
http://www.france24.com/en/20170428-france-le-pen-eu-national-front-party-workers-labour
 
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@Vergennes

You dont get the point. The EU is a joke. Weak and against national interests. Whats the problem with exploiting it to the maximum?

You voted for a liberal bankster who wants crush french worker rights, install turbo capitalism, get rid of any social system, press down wages and cares more for Algeria than France and you seriously accuse le Pen for taking EU money?

Thats laughable at best.
 
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EU is Haram but its money is Halal nice one politicians nice one :D
@Penguin @Vergennes
That's an interesting analogy. :sarcastic:

@Vergennes

You dont get the point. The EU is a joke. Weak and against national interests. Whats the problem with exploiting it to the maximum?

You voted for a liberal bankster who wants crush french worker rights, install turbo capitalism, get rid of any social system, press down wages and cares more for Algeria than France and you seriously accuse le Pen for taking EU money?

Thats laughable at best.
I think your characterisation is laughable ... at best.
 
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That's an interesting analogy. :sarcastic:


I think your characterisation is laughable ... at best.
DOnt let your hate for Algeria be greater than your love for France or you will end up like post Brexit Britian
 
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@Vergennes

You dont get the point. The EU is a joke. Weak and against national interests. Whats the problem with exploiting it to the maximum?

You voted for a liberal bankster who wants crush french worker rights, install turbo capitalism, get rid of any social system, press down wages and cares more for Algeria than France and you seriously accuse le Pen for taking EU money?

Thats laughable at best.

You don't seem to know much about his policies. No he doesn't want to crush the workers rights. Additionally,more efficiant and strenghtened public services,higher purchasing power,lower taxes,investments plans,strenghtened security and of course the fight against unemployment.
Six Pillars of Emmanuel Macron's Presidential Election Policy

Independent candidate Emmanuel Macron, who remains one of the favorites in the French presidential race, has vowed in his presidential campaign to create "new France," allowing French citizens to feel confident in their homeland and the country's ability to respond to the existing challenges.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — Macron's policy is based on six pillars: maintaining culture and education as a necessary condition for national cohesion, increasing employment level, modernizing the economy, enhancing security, strengthening democratic institutions and principles, and defending French interests abroad.

Institutional Reforms

Macron, the leader of the "En Marche!" movement, seeks to reform the institutional system by proposing a law "moralizing the public life." This would introduce measures which will put an end to the conflict of interest in parliament, ban lawmakers from hiring family members, and remove the special pension regime from the parliamentarians.

He has said that he wants to see the number of the lawmakers cut by one-third, with the work of the remaining officials evaluated by ordinary people via special juries and services.

Elected mandates will be limited to maximum three of the same kind.

Security

In his presidential campaign, Macron has pointed out that "living in fear means living without feeling free," which is why he made maintaining national security a cornerstone of his campaign.

The independent candidate said that he intends to hire an additional 10,000 police officers and give them more authority. He has also stated his plans to increase the defense budget to 2 percent of France's GDP.

At the same time, the presidential hopeful has stressed the importance of the joint European defense system and called for the creation of a protective force of 5,000 troops to defend the borders of the European Union. Macron has added that France and Germany might come with a joint proposal to create a special fund for the allocation of money for equipment of joint European forces.

Moreover, Macron has considered it necessary to build 15,000 extra prison places.

Immigration

Macron has vowed to step up requirements of the French language reference level, stressing that it will be the best indicator of one's intention to integrate into the society.

All asylum requests will be considered within six months, according to the candidate, with all those refused asylum to be immediately sent to their home countries so as not to become undocumented migrants.

Taxes, Welfare

Ensuring high employment rates has been another key pillar in Macron's policy. He has called for supporting those searching for a job via skills-training centers, as well as for securing the right to receive unemployment insurance for all categories of workers.

The independent candidate has promised to increase the purchasing power, cut the corporate tax from 33.3 percent to 25 percent, and convert the current CICE tax credit system for firms into permanent payroll tax breaks for low-wage workers. At the same time, Macron has stressed the importance of curbing tax evasion.

He also intends, if elected, to try and eliminate the wage gap between female and male employees by publishing a list of firms which discriminate its workers on the basis of gender.

With regard to the elderly, Macron has vowed to maintain the retirement age as it is and raise the minimal pension to at least 100 euros ($106) per month.

Investment, Economy

Macron has stated his intent to initiate a great investment plan, envisaging 50 billion euros of public investment over five years.

The money would be allocated for a number of economic goals, like training and acquiring skills necessary to find jobs or the development and support of agriculture producers.

The funding will also be used for reaching environmental and energy targets, particularly in the development of renewable energy sources.

He has pledged to create a special fund to support innovations and hopes to reach the 60 billion euro target in public spending.

Regarding foreign investments, Macron has proposed the creation of a special mechanism which would be charged with controlling said investments in order to preserve France's strategic sectors.

Macron has opposed the tax arrangements between states and multinational corporations, like the one between Apple Inc. and Ireland, stressing that they destroy competition in the European market.

In that vein, the candidate stands for the integrity of the European market and has proposed the creation of a common European energy and digital market, and the setting of a price on carbon for all European states.

Education, Health Care

For Macron, education has remained one of the key pillars of his presidential platform, with his main focus being on primary schools. The candidate believes it is necessary to limit the number of pupils in a class in 12,000 low-income zones to ensure a higher quality of education. He has added that it was important a bonus of 3,000 euros per year is paid to teachers who work in such low-income areas. Macron also announced his plans to open additional arts and sports courses for the youth, prolong the working hours of libraries and possibly introduce several bilingual courses.

As for higher education, Macron has announced his intention to institute some reforms in this field as well, by way of creating more academic jobs and extending the Erasmus program, an EU student exchange program established in 1990.

The health care system should be renovated, according to Macron. He has pledged to increase the number of medical staff and modernize hospitals. Particular attention is set to be paid to disabled peoples.

Foreign Policy

Speaking about Syria, Macron's priority is the fight against terrorists, while he does not have a certain position on Syrian President Bashar Assad, considering that temporal cooperation with him is possible. Macron also thinks Russian President Vladimir Putin to be key to the conflict resolution, however, stresses that Russia "should face its responsibilities" when it comes to pressuring Damascus.

In general, he has a rather tough stance on Russia, saying that Paris should not move closer to Moscow. As regards anti-Russian sanctions, the presidential hopeful says they can be gradually lifted in accordance with the progress of the stabilization of the situation in eastern Ukraine.

Among the Middle Eastern countries, Macron pays special attention to Lebanon, stressing France's commitment to the country's stability and peace.

https://sputniknews.com/europe/201704231052881520-macron-election-policies/
 
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