Michel Barnier, the former European Commissioner and EU Brexit negotiator now a challenger for the French presidency, seemingly intent on stealing votes from Marine Le Pen by adopting her policies on migration, said France had lost control of immigration and that a sense of impunity prevailed.
Barnier, who is locked in a five-way race for the centre-right Les Republicains party’s nomination, lamented France’s “big decline” and said President Emmanuel Macron’s leadership style was too arrogant and single-minded to heal divides.
“Immigration is out of control,” Barnier, 70, told Reuters before addressing party members in Paris late on Monday. “Our security is no longer guaranteed. There is a sense of impunity and insecurity throughout the country.”
Barnier proposes a moratorium on immigration to fix Europe and France’s broken rules on migration, wants soldiers to patrol some communities where police are seen to have lost control and advocates a referendum on restoring military service.
An erstwhile moderate of the centre-right, Barnier dismissed the suggestion he was being drawn onto far-right turf to win back conservative voters from far-right figures Marine Le Pen and Eric Zemmour.
“I’m looking at the problem my country faces,” he said.
Macron’s government rejects the accusation it has lost control of the number of foreigners in France. INSEE, the official statics agency, says net migration numbers have been rising since the start of the 2000s.
Official INSEE data shows 272,000 immigrant arrivals on French territory in 2020, compared with 259,000 in 2016, the last year of former President Francois Hollande’s mandate and 211,000 in 2010, when the conservative Nicolas Sarkozy was leader.
The race for the centre-right ticket is led by Xavier Bertrand, who heads the northern Hauts-de-France region, and Valerie Pecresse, leader of the Ile de France region around Paris, but Barnier has emerged as a credible challenger.
CHASING VOTES
The party rivals have said they will back whoever wins next week’s two-round vote by signed-up party members. Registrations have nearly doubled in recent weeks to about 150,000 and the outcome is uncertain.
All are running on ideologically similar platforms, and trail Macron, Le Pen and Zemmour in opinion surveys.
“France doesn’t need a third candidate who gets too close to the far-right of politics. It needs someone who pulls us together,” said one Barnier supporter.
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