Something extraordinary is unfolding in France. This weekend, in the heart of Paris, thousands of French citizens gathered in the very square once graced by Joan of Arc. On Europe Day, no less, they demanded a bold move: France's exit from the European Union. Frexit, France’s version of Brexit, is back with a vengeance. Stay with me as we explore how this civilizational awakening mirrors the wave that swept Donald Trump into the White House and toppled the British Labour Party. It's a movement that may soon shatter the European order.
- Rising energy costs fuel populist sentiments against Brussels.
- National Rally's leadership wavers, yet public support for Frexit intensifies.
In America, a redistricting earthquake promises to box Democrats out of power for a generation. Similarly, in Britain, a political upheaval is dismantling the leftist Labour Party. Now, that same civilizational populism is exploding across France. What's happening there may be the most dramatic political story in Europe. Frexit is not just a call for reform; it's a demand for exit.
On May 9th, Europe Day, French patriots rallied at Place de la Pyramide in Paris, led by former National Front firebrand Florian Philippot. Philippot took to the podium, held up an EU flag, and tore it in half, declaring it a "rag." The message was clear: this is a movement demanding Frexit, the withdrawal of France from the EU. Sovereignty advocates argue that EU membership costs France control over its borders, energy policy, trade, and national identity.
For years, Frexit was dismissed as fringe—an obsession of Marine Le Pen's hardcore base. But something has changed. On a recent French broadcast, a commentator noted that France once had the world's cheapest electricity, thanks to its nuclear power, hydroelectric dams, and the state energy monopoly EDF. Then the EU intervened, forcing artificial competition that raised prices and introduced "parasites"—middlemen profiting without producing a single kilowatt.
A mainstream commentator argued on national television that France should leave the EU, reassert national sovereignty, and watch energy prices collapse.
Now, here's the political reality: while the Frexit movement and the National Rally are related, they are not identical. Marine Le Pen, the longtime figurehead of the French nationalist right, faces a five-year ban from public office after a conviction in a kangaroo court for allegedly misappropriating EU funds. Her successor, Jordan Bardella, is taking the nation by storm at just 30 years old. Polls project him as a formidable contender in the next presidential election, potentially winning against any opponent, including a landslide against far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon. Recent surveys reveal that 54% of French citizens believe the EU is heading in the wrong direction, with France ranking last in trust for EU institutions.
This creates a fascinating dynamic: a cautious National Rally leadership and a public increasingly leaning towards Frexit. Meanwhile, Philippot and his group Les Patriotes keep the Frexit flame alive, refusing to let the political class bury the question.
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Let's step back and look at the broader picture. In America, the Supreme Court's Callais ruling has ended decades of racial gerrymandering, securing Republican dominance. In Britain, Reform UK is poised for a historic parliamentary victory. And in France, citizens are tearing EU flags in the shadow of Joan of Arc, and a young nationalist is on the brink of presidency.
What ties all of this together? One word: sovereignty. Ordinary people have watched as an unelected managerial class dismantled borders, exported industries, destroyed energy independence, censored speech, and labeled dissenters as bigots. They've had enough. Donald Trump called it America First. Nigel Farage called it Brexit. Florian Philippot calls it Frexit. But it's all the same: a refusal to surrender nations, identities, economies, and futures to a globalist architecture that serves elites and punishes everyone else.
The populist wave is coming to France. When it arrives—when a French president stands up and declares, "Vive la France!"—it will shake the European project to its core. If Britain's exit was a tremor, France's would be the earthquake. And right now, the fault lines are cracking. What do you think? Is Frexit coming? Is the civilizational wave set to reach Paris?
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