France's Le Pen gathers with Europe's populists for May Day

French far right leader Marine Le Pen poses for a selfie after laying a wreath in front of the statue of Joan of Arc, in Cannes, south of France, Tuesday, May 1, 2018. Le Pen gathers other anti-immigration populist leaders from around Europe for a May Day gathering aimed at energizing their campaigns for European Parliament elections next year.
AP Photo/Thibault Camus

PARIS — French far-right leader Marine Le Pen joined other anti-immigration populist leaders from around Europe for a May Day gathering yesterday aimed at energizing their campaigns for next year's European Parliament elections.

Populist leaders including Geert Wilders of the Dutch Party for Freedom, Harald Vilimsky of Austria's Freedom Party and prominent Czech nationalist Tomio Okamura descended on the southern French city of Nice as part of a joint effort to trumpet the gains far-right parties have notched up across the continent recently and to rail against their common foe — the European Union.

The head of Italy's nationalist Northern League party Matteo Salvini declined his invitation but sent a video message of support. Salvini is attempting to form a coalition government following this year's inconclusive elections where many Italian voters shunned mainstream parties.

In a speech to hundreds of supporters, Le Pen, who heads the National Front party, set out a vision of "another Europe," warning that the EU is having "catastrophic consequences for our countries."

Le Pen used Nice — a French Riviera hub that boasts a diverse population — to forward her anti-immigration stance, saying it has "suffered from very strong pressure from migration that has partly changed the face" of the city.

Other senior figures of the European far-right also spoke.

An anti-far-right demonstration was set to take place near the National Front rally in Nice.

France's National Front has been struggling since its defeat in last year's presidential election that elected centrist Emmanuel Macron.

Le Pen has been trying to cleanse the party of the racist stigma that has clung to its image while maintaining its core closed-borders agenda.

Earlier this year, the party severed its final ties with firebrand founder Jean-Marie Le Pen — Marine Le Pen's 89-year-old father — by eliminating his title of honorary president-for-life.

In March, former White House strategist Steve Bannon tried to re-energize the party by speaking at a congress in France. Some commentators warned that support from figures like Bannon could hinder the party's rebranding efforts.

Before heading to Nice, Le Pen laid a wreath at a monument of France's nationalist icon Joan of Arc in Cannes.

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