Marine Le Pen has accused France’s new Left-wing bloc of being “Islamo-Leftists” who want to strip the French of their freedoms.
Ms Le Pen, who leads the hard-Right National Rally, said that the New Popular Front, an alliance of Left-leaning parties formed in recent days, would be an “abomination for the country” as she went on the offensive in the election campaign.
Polls show voters in France are divided largely between the new Left and Right coalitions formed after Emmanuel Macron’s centrist party was heavily defeated by Ms Le Pen at the European elections.
In an interview with Le Figaro published on Sunday, Ms Le Pen said that defeating the Left bloc in the snap election called by Mr Macron was her “priority fight”.
While she characterised both Mr Macron and the Left alliance as “dangerous”, the New Popular Front – composed of the Socialists, Greens, Communists and France Unbowed – poses a threat to freedom, she claimed.
“It is Islamo-Leftism which almost openly advocates the disappearance of all of our freedoms,” she said, revealing a flash of her more strident hard-Right views.
“The first of these being the freedom to be French and to benefit from it: the freedom to own, the freedom to demonstrate, the freedom of expression.
“They want the physical and moral disarmament of the police, and are for the overthrow of our constitutional and republican structure.”
One in two voters worry about Le Pen victory
Ms Le Pen’s attack came as new polling projects a tight race between the National Rally and the New Popular Front, with the far-Right party on 32 per cent and its Left-wing rivals on 26 per cent.
The Elabe survey for BFM TV and La Tribune Dimanche found one in two French people worry about a possible victory for the National Rally, while 30 per cent would be satisfied, and 20 per cent indifferent.
In his analysis, Bernard Sananès, president of the Institut Elabe, said the results point to a “relative victory in the de-vilification of the National Rally”.