Le Pen’s father slams her performance in French debate

French presidential candidate Marine Le Pen’s estranged father Jean-Marie says his daughter failed to “rise to the occasion” in a bruising debate with election frontrunner Emmanuel Macron.

“I always want my champion to win hands down,” Le Pen senior says of Wednesday’s debate viewed by more than 16 million people. But the 88-year-old deemed the duel a “draw,” saying his daughter — who kicked him out of her National Front (FN) party in 2015 — “perhaps did not rise to the occasion.”

Speaking on French radio, he blames the candidate’s advisers for underestimating a “very solid” Macron, wrongly “hoping for a collapse or a psychological meltdown.”

France's former far-right National Front party leader Jean-Marie Le Pen (R) and his daughter and current party leader Marine Le Pen (L) on November 29, 2014 (Jeff Pachoud/AFP)
France’s former far-right National Front party leader Jean-Marie Le Pen (R) and his daughter and current party leader Marine Le Pen (L) on November 29, 2014 (Jeff Pachoud/AFP)

A poll by French broadcaster BFMTV found that 63 percent of viewers thought Macron was the “most convincing” of the two, broadly mirroring the forecast result for the decisive election on Sunday.

Marine Le Pen has sought to purge the FN of associations with her xenophobic, anti-Semitic father, who co-founded the party in 1972. When Le Pen senior was a shock finalist in France’s 2002 election, his rival Jacques Chirac refused to debate him out of fear of “normalizing hate and intolerance.”

— AFP

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