November 15, 2021 - 4:00pm
The French far-Right pundit and likely presidential candidate, Éric Zemmour, offended against good taste and the unwritten rules of political life last week by using the anniversary and site of the Bataclan terrorist attacks in Paris to advance his election campaign.
On Saturday — the sixth anniversary of the Bataclan and other Islamist terrorist attacks in Paris which killed 130 people — Zemmour invited TV cameras to film him outside the concert hall in the French capital where 90 concert-goers were murdered on 13 November 2015.
He accused former President François Hollande of making a “criminal decision” earlier that year to allow Syrian refugees to enter France although he knew that terrorists were hiding among them.
Zemmour has since been accused by the survivors’ association, Life for Paris, of “crossing a new frontier of ignominy” and “profaning tombs”. He has also been attacked by politicians of almost all persuasions for breaking a taboo against using the Bataclan anniversary and site for political advantage. That includes his hard Right rival, Marine Le Pen.
Le Pen is often accused by Zemmour’s supporters of being too vulgar or too limited intellectually to appeal to educated, middle-class French voters. On France-Info TV this morning she turned the tables on the man who threatens to tip her out of the two-candidate second round of the presidential election next April. She said:
The problem with Éric Zemmour is that he is only a polemicist… There are places which are places of suffering and martyrdom. They are not places to make polemics.
- Marine Le Pen
Is Zemmour right that Hollande kept frontiers open knowing that terrorists would enter France? Technically, yes, but his accusation is — as is often the case with him — vastly exaggerated.
Ex-President Hollande was called to give evidence last week to the trial of 20 people accused of planning or aiding the Bataclan and related attacks. The enormous proceedings – 300 lawyers, 200 witnesses, 1,800 civil complainants, 46,000 witness statements – have become not just a trial of the accused but a kind of Nuremberg Trial of Islamist terrorism, the French security services and the actions of the Hollande presidency.
The former President told the court that he was aware that terrorists would probably use the Syrian refugee crisis to enter the European Union and therefore France.
Yet almost all the terrorists who carried out the attack were French or Belgian citizens. Only the presumed operational leader, the Belgian Abdelhamid Abaaoud, killed several days after the murders, is thought to have re-entered Europe as part of the flood of people displaced by Syrian civil war.
But there is also another question that arises from this stunt: will Zemmour — or his supporters — care that he is accused of being a vulgar profaner of public standards by a political establishment which he despises?
The controversy comes at a pivotal moment in a Zemmour campaign (which has not yet been declared but will be soon). For the first time since he zoomed in September from 0% to 17-18% of first round voting intentions, Zemmour has fallen by 2 percentage points in two polls.
Doubts are beginning to be expressed even by some of his supporters about his egregious re-writing of French history (“The Vichy regime was kind to French Jews; D-day was a colonial invasion by the US.”)
The next wave of polls will be interesting. The Zemmour bubble will not burst easily, but it may have stopped growing.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
SubscribeBravo, Messr. Zemmour!
It is certainly fair play to use the site of a massacre to remind the people of the massacre. Well done!
Question for UnHerd commentators: why is Messr. Zemmour referred to as “far right,” and Madame Le Pen referred to as “hard Right?” What does this even mean? Doesn’t seem like a useful distinction to me.
And as a Seppo (new word for me, Cockney rhyming slang), may I suggest that it is sometimes better to have a vulgarian with mostly excellent policies (i.e. Trump), than someone less vulgar, more adhering to accepting norms–including horrific policies (I.e. Biden, though the myth that Biden is normal is just that, a myth. Biden is a demented doddering dotard who is quite vulgar)? Or for a European example, the seemingly normal but deeply evil “Wir Schaffen das!” Angela Merkel?
Finally, why do you include the quote below? Seems to me you’re suggesting that–Hey, it’s ok, to take in some terrorists in the Wir Schaffen das a la Francais, but we should take heart that “almost all of the terrorists who carried out the attack were French or Belgian citizens.” Is that your point? Am I supposed to feel better?
“Yet almost all the terrorists who carried out the attack were French or Belgian citizens. Only the presumed operational leader, the Belgian Abdelhamid Abaaoud, killed several days after the murders, is thought to have re-entered Europe as part of the flood of people displaced by Syrian civil war.”
“Seppi” isn’t Cockney. It’s Australian, rhyming slang derived from “septic tank” (which would not be something that many Cockneys would know about).
My education grows! Someone called me that the other day and others said it was Cockney. I’ll have to check that reference again. Cheers, mate!
French politics is never dull!
D-Day was a colonial invasion? I wonder how he argues that one.
Yeah, that seemed a bridge too far, mate, but no one is perfect….
Perhaps that is why so many people in France joined the Resistance after the allies removed the Germans .