Citing an altercation two years ago between Nakamura and her former partner in the basement studio of their home which ended before a Paris court,Bardella declared that Nakamura’s part in the fracas – she slapped her partner to the ground – should preclude her from singing at the Games.
Nakamura was fined €10,000 ($16,340) and her former partner €5000 over the altercation.
“That’s my personal belief,” Bardella said. “I think that when we have been convicted of domestic violence,we cannot represent France.”
Both of these attacks obscure the primary reason why Le Pen,Bardella and their supporters don’t want Nakamura,a black,Muslim woman,singingNon,je ne regrette rien beneath the Eiffel Tower before a gathering of world leaders and an expected global television audience of more than 1 billion people.
Nakamura,born Aya Daniolo,immigrated to France as a child and spent her teenage years in foster homes. Through her unique patois of French,English,Arabic and Bambara,she speaks to young,multi-ethnic France in a way that has made her the most streamed French language artist in the world and the face of Lancome,a leading brand within the L’Oreal empire.
Her success,although celebrated across the Seine-Saint-Denis local government area which takes in the Olympic athletes’ village,media village and venues for the athletics and swimming,is politically inconvenient to a movement that holds mass immigration,particularly Muslim immigration,as the root cause of France’s ills.
Le Pen,due to her family ties to the far-right movement and her previous failed tilts at two presidential election campaigns,is better known than Bardella,a political protege groomed,in part,to help separate her party’s public image from the overt racism of her father.
But Bardella,like Le Pen,does not eschew the anti-Islamic sentiment that underpinned the Front National.
Like Nakamura,Bardella grew up in Seine-Saint-Denis,a collection of working-class banlieues or suburbs on Paris’ northern fringe which,depending on your political perspective,are emblematic of the vibrant multiculturalism of modern France or what Bardella describes as the “relentless rise of Islamic ideology”. He joined the Front National at the age of 16.
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In announcing the dissolution of parliament ahead of an election later this month,Macron lamented the rise of “demagogues and nationalists on the right” at a time when he has just returned from D-Day celebrations,and is preparing to welcome an expected 15 million visitors to Paris for the Games.
“The far right is bad for the French people and the French nation,” he declared. “There is a feverish tone in the political debate in our country recently.”
Bardella said the European vote demonstrated the attachment French people still had to French identity,security,sovereignty and prosperity. “The French people tonight have said they want to take control of immigration policy,” he said. “They want the French state to control every square inch of France.”
If the European results are reflected in France’s national elections,the resultant shift to the right should not alter how the Olympics are staged. Two years ago,when political opposition to Macron’s pension reforms prompted a short-lived boycott movement against the Games,the president reminded everyone where power over Olympic decision-making ultimately resided.
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“The Elysee is the boss of the Games,” he said.
However,the European election and a national poll in France will further heighten security concerns surrounding the Games,which due to Macron’s outspoken support of Ukraine and the war raging in Gaza are already facing possible Kremlin-sponsored cyberattacks and an increased risk of terrorism. The Vigipirate,France’s national security alert system,has been set to its highest level since March.
Nakamura and Bardella are the same age,grew up in similar neighbourhoods in Paris,and in their respective ways are precocious talents. The six weeks between now and opening ceremony will decide which of these faces France wants to show to the world.
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