Internewscast Journal
  • Home
  • US News
  • Local News
  • Health
  • People
  • Guest Post
  • Support Our Cause
Internewscast Journal
  • Home
  • US News
  • Local News
  • Health
  • People
  • Guest Post
  • Support Our Cause
Home Local news AP Analysis Reveals France’s Most Disadvantaged Areas Favoring Le Pen’s Party Amid Macron’s Declining Support
  • Local news

AP Analysis Reveals France’s Most Disadvantaged Areas Favoring Le Pen’s Party Amid Macron’s Declining Support

    AP mapping shows France's poorest regions backing Le Pen's party as support for Macron wanes
    Up next
    Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds' 'escape' from Justin Baldoni legal war
    Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds Steer Clear of Justin Baldoni’s Legal Dispute
    Published on 23 November 2025
    Author
    Internewscast
    Tags
    • backing,
    • Business,
    • Donald Trump,
    • Elections,
    • Emmanuel Macron,
    • for,
    • France039s,
    • François Hollande,
    • François Ouzilleau,
    • Jean-Marie Le Pen,
    • Laure Lavalette,
    • Luc Rouban,
    • macron,
    • mapping,
    • Marine Le Pen,
    • Party,
    • Pen039s,
    • poorest,
    • regions,
    • Sebastien Lecornu,
    • Shows,
    • support,
    • wanes,
    • William Jarrett,
    • world news
    Share this @internewscast.com
    FacebookXRedditPinterest


    PARIS – On May 7, 2017, Emmanuel Macron addressed an enthusiastic crowd, celebrating his victory as France’s new president. However, as his presidency draws to a close with just 18 months remaining, the pledge he made that evening seems increasingly elusive.

    Macron’s opponent, Marine Le Pen, garnered 10,638,475 votes in that election. While these votes were insufficient to secure a victory for Le Pen, they represented a significant milestone for her and her far-right National Front party, a legacy from her father known for his controversial Holocaust views. This marked a notable turning point for a party once shunned in French politics.

    Under the glow of countless French flags, Macron recognized the “anger” and “distress” that fueled support for Le Pen. He vowed to address these concerns, aiming to sway these voters away from extremist choices in the future.

    Yet, despite his intentions, Le Pen’s appeal has only grown. Her approach, characterized by a nativist stance against immigration, Muslims, and the European Union, has attracted a broader base. In 2018, she rebranded her party as the National Rally, distancing it from her father’s controversial legacy. Today, it stands as the largest party in the French parliament, positioning her closer than ever to potential leadership with the 2027 elections on the horizon.

    Macron’s tenure has also been marked by increasing poverty, a factor contributing to Le Pen’s rising influence.

    Several elements account for Le Pen’s growing popularity. Notably, her personal image plays a significant role. At 57, the mother of three, known for her love of cats, presents a more refined and approachable persona compared to her father, a former paratrooper with a history of convictions for inciting racial hatred and minimizing Nazi war crimes. Her father’s passing in January further marks a new chapter for her political journey.

    Others are external and include voter disgruntlement over wealth inequality that has worsened significantly under Macron.

    An additional 1.2 million people have fallen below the poverty threshold in the world’s seventh-largest economy since the 2017 election and 2022 reelection of France’s pro-business president.

    The former investment banker slashed business taxes and watered down a wealth tax to boost France’s allure for investment. Left-wing critics labeled Macron “president of the rich.”

    The poverty rate was 13.8% when Macron took power and had barely shifted during the previous presidency of François Hollande, a Socialist.

    By 2023, into Macron’s second term and the most recent year with official data from the French national statistics agency, the poverty rate had ballooned to 15.4%, which is its highest level in nearly 30 years of measurements.

    The following year, National Rally triumphed in French voting for the European Parliament. So heavy was the defeat for his centrist camp that Macron stunned France by then dissolving the National Assembly.

    Again, National Rally surged in the ensuing legislative election. It didn’t come close to winning a majority — no party did. But with 123 of the 577 lawmakers, National Rally vaulted past all other parties and surpassed its previous best of 89 legislators elected in 2022.

    Put bluntly: the worse off France becomes, the better National Rally seems to fare.

    Showing the correlation

    Mapping by The Associated Press both of poverty in France and of the Le Pen vote in the four French legislative elections since she took over her father’s party in 2011 show how both have grown.

    The maps show particularly evident progress by National Rally in some of France’s poorest regions, especially in what have become National Rally strongholds: the deindustrialized northeast of France and along its Mediterranean coast.

    Region-by-region poverty rates were mapped through 2021, beyond which the national statistics agency INSEE doesn’t have data for all 96 of mainland France’s regions. The AP mapped support for the National Front and then National Rally by using the party’s showing in the first rounds of voting in legislative elections in 2012, 2017, 2022 and 2024.

    “We clearly see that the National Rally vote is very strongly correlated with issues of poverty, of difficulties with social mobility” and with voters “who are most pessimistic about the future of their children or their personal situation,” said Luc Rouban, a senior researcher at Paris’ elite Sciences Po school of political sciences who studies the party.

    François Ouzilleau, who stood for Macron’s party in the 2022 legislative election and lost to a National Rally winner in his district in Normandy west of Paris, puts it more simply.

    “It feeds off anger and people’s problems,” he said.

    Parallels with Trump are apparent

    But poverty is only part of the Le Pen success story and her appeal isn’t limited to voters who struggle to make ends meet. Combating immigration, the party’s bread and butter since its foundation, remains a central plank of Le Pen-ism.

    Rouban sees National Rally similarities with the playbook of U.S. President Donald Trump.

    “They’re doing Trump-ism à la française,” he said. “They say, ‘We’re wary of the justice system,’ like Trump. ‘We’re taking back control of our national borders,’ like Trump.”

    National Rally establishes strongholds

    The party says that its proposals to slash France’s spending on migrants and on the EU and to redirect money to people’s pockets by reducing the costs of energy and other necessities appeal to voters in financial need.

    “The French have clearly understood that the ones defending the purchasing power of the working and middle classes are the National Rally,” Laure Lavalette, a parliamentary spokesperson for the party, told the AP.

    Lavalette represents the southern Var region, one of National Rally’s new strongholds as Macron’s popularity has plummeted.

    In legislative elections that followed his election in 2017, Le Pen’s party failed to win any seats in Var. But after Macron’s reelection in 2022, National Rally grabbed seven of Var’s eight seats and repeated that feat in 2024.

    Poverty rates in the Var have long surpassed the national average, the AP’s mapping shows.

    Lavalette says that making ends meet is “crazy difficult” for some of her constituents and that “some tell me that they have to chose between eating or heating.”

    Voters hunger for change

    The 2024 legislative election produced a fractured parliament with fragile minority governments collapsing one after the other. To untangle that knot, Macron could have dissolved the National Assembly again this year, triggering a new election.

    That is what National Rally wanted, buoyed by polls suggesting it could perhaps win enough seats to form its first government.

    Mindful that such an outcome could saddle him with a National Rally prime minister for the remainder of his presidency, Macron held his fire.

    And for now at least, enough lawmakers have rallied around Macron’s prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, to keep him afloat, mindful of the risk of losing their seats if Macron called voters back to the ballot boxes.

    “There’s a sword of Damocles hanging over us, it’s called the National Rally,” said Ouzilleau, who serves as mayor in the Normandy town of Vernon and is a long-time friend of Lecornu.

    He says voters have increasingly been telling him that they are ready to test-drive National Rally, breaking decades of uninterrupted rule by mainstream parties.

    “It’s been two or three years that we’ve been hearing this: ‘We’ve tried everything except the National Rally, so what is the risk?’” he said.

    ___

    William Jarrett reported from London.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Share this @internewscast.com
    FacebookXRedditPinterest
    You May Also Like
    New video shows the minutes before immigration officer fatally shoots woman in Minneapolis
    • Local news

    Shocking New Footage Reveals Crucial Moments Leading Up to Fatal Shooting by Immigration Officer in Minneapolis

    In a dramatic development in Minneapolis, a newly released video sheds light…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    Judge is asked for emergency hearing after Congress members blocked from ICE facility in Minneapolis
    • Local news

    Congress Members Seek Urgent Judicial Intervention Following Denial of Access to Minneapolis ICE Facility

    WASHINGTON – In a move shrouded in secrecy, the Trump administration reinstated…
    • Internewscast
    • January 12, 2026

    Gray Hosts Saturday Morning Mobile Food Pantry to Aid Local Community

    A non-profit organization based in Middle Tennessee, One Generation Away, is set…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    Pentagon is embracing Musk's Grok AI chatbot as it draws global outcry
    • Local news

    Pentagon Adopts Musk’s Grok AI Chatbot Amidst International Controversy

    WASHINGTON – In a significant move for technological integration within military operations,…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026

    City of Bristol, Virginia Unveils Strategic Plan for New State Liners Facility

    BRISTOL, Va. (WJHL) — The City of Bristol, Virginia, is gearing up…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    Tensions flare in Minnesota as protesters and federal agents repeatedly square off
    • Local news

    Protesters and Federal Agents Clash Repeatedly in Minnesota: A Tense Standoff Unfolds

    MINNEAPOLIS – Tensions simmered across Minnesota on Tuesday, following a series of…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    Adelaide Writers Week canceled as 180 speakers withdraw after the exclusion of a Palestinian writer
    • Local news

    Adelaide Writers Week Called Off After Mass Speaker Withdrawal Over Palestinian Writer’s Exclusion

    WELLINGTON – Australia’s largest free literary festival was called off on Tuesday…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    Trump holds off on military action against Iran's protest crackdown as he 'explores' Tehran messages
    • Local news

    Trump Delays Military Response to Iran’s Protest Crackdown, Pursues Diplomatic Channels with Tehran

    In a pivotal moment for U.S. foreign policy, President Donald Trump is…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026

    VSP Launches Investigation into Fatal Collision on I-81 in Washington County

    On Monday morning, tragedy struck Interstate 81 in Washington County, Virginia, as…
    • Internewscast
    • January 12, 2026
    Feed the Hungry to hold 17th Annual MLK Community dinner after parade
    • Local news

    Feed the Hungry Hosts 17th Annual MLK Community Dinner Following Parade Celebration

    SAVANNAH, Ga. () — Following the Martin Luther King Jr. Parade on…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    VIDEO: Handcuffed woman shoots Marion County deputy with gun hidden in her pants
    • Local news

    Shocking Incident: Handcuffed Woman in Marion County Discharges Hidden Weapon, Injuring Deputy

    New details have emerged from Marion County, Florida, as surveillance footage captures…
    • Internewscast
    • January 12, 2026

    AT&T Revolutionizes Johnson City Call Center with Innovative Remote Work Transition

    JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (WJHL) — In a strategic move, AT&T has announced…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026

    City of Bristol, Virginia Unveils Strategic Plan for New State Liners Facility

    BRISTOL, Va. (WJHL) — The City of Bristol, Virginia, is gearing up…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    I have £200,000 invested in a Isa but just £3,000 in my rainy day fund: Should I keep more cash?
    • Business

    Is Your Investment Strategy Balanced? Exploring the Benefits of Boosting Your Rainy Day Fund

    There’s a common belief that investing yields better long-term returns than…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    Trump's impeachments removed from Smithsonian portrait
    • Politics

    Smithsonian Revises Exhibit, Omits Controversial Trump Era Amid 250th Anniversary Evaluation

    Recent changes at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery have sparked…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    Zara and Mike Tindall cosy up to Harry and Meghan's BFFs in Australia
    • News

    Zara and Mike Tindall Connect with Close Friends of Harry and Meghan in Australia

    Zara and Mike Tindall recently enjoyed the company of Nacho Figueras and…
    • Internewscast
    • January 13, 2026
    Internewscast Journal
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA Notice
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Guest Post
    • Support Our Cause
    Copyright 2023. All Right Reserverd.