'Mélenchon is threat to Jews': French Jewish leader calls for moderate government - exclusive

"We need to raise awareness among the moderate left, that it will not be acceptable to be in a coalition with Mélenchon," said CRIF president Yonathan Arfi.

 CIRF President Yonathan Arfi delivers a speech during a ceremony celebrating the 80th anniversary of the Council of French Jewish Institutions (CRIF - Conseil Representatif des Institutions juives de France) at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, March 18, 2024. (photo credit: YOAN VALAT/POOL VIA REUTERS)
CIRF President Yonathan Arfi delivers a speech during a ceremony celebrating the 80th anniversary of the Council of French Jewish Institutions (CRIF - Conseil Representatif des Institutions juives de France) at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, March 18, 2024.
(photo credit: YOAN VALAT/POOL VIA REUTERS)

Moderate French political parties must form a government coalition without La France Insoumise, Representative Council of Jewish Institutions of France (CRIF) President Yonathan Arfi told The Jerusalem Post in an interview after the second round of parliamentary elections on Sunday, warning that the far-left party leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon was undemocratic and a threat to the republic’s Jews.

The left-wing New Popular Front (NPF) coalition, which includes the far-left La France Insoumise (LFI), won the most seats in the National Assembly, according to exit polls, with President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist Ensemble and the far-right National Rally (RN) securing the second and third most seats, respectively. None of the blocs hold enough seats to form a majority government and must form a joint coalition to pass legislation.
“We are awaiting the outcome of the negotiations. We do not know what type of government we will have,” said Arfi. “Everything that happens next for the Jews depends on the government that is formed.”
CRIF and other French Jewish groups had waged a campaign calling for support for moderates, and against RN and LFI. Now, with a RN majority parliament averted, CRIF is looking toward the next fight, to ensure that LFI is not included in a coalition.
“The fight was against the extreme right and extreme left," said Arfi. "We need to raise awareness among the moderate left that it will not be acceptable to be in a coalition with Mélenchon."
 Yonathan Arfi, President of the Representative Council of the French Jewish Institutions (CRIF), attends a demonstration to protest against anti-Semitism in front of the City Hall of Courbevoie, near Paris.  June 21, 2024. (credit: REUTERS/DYLAN MARTINEZ)
Yonathan Arfi, President of the Representative Council of the French Jewish Institutions (CRIF), attends a demonstration to protest against anti-Semitism in front of the City Hall of Courbevoie, near Paris. June 21, 2024. (credit: REUTERS/DYLAN MARTINEZ)

After the success of NPF on Sunday night, local media reported far-left celebratory riots erupted in France, with some setting fires and detonating fireworks. Anti-Israel groups shared a video of a Sunday protest in which many participants waved  Palestinian flags.

Mélenchon made Gaza a chief campaign item, said Arfi, and the riots were typical of his encouragement of political violence. Mélenchon was attempting to also exert pressure through the media to be included in the coalition.

'A person who is a threat against the Jews'

“Mélenchon is a person who is a threat against the Jews,” said Arfi, accusing LFI and its leader of fueling the anti-Israel climate in France and putting a “target on the back of all Jews who support Israel.”

Arfi insisted that Mélenchon was the most hated politician in France. He was no democrat, obvious from the dictatorial way he ruled his party.
The way forward according to CRIF was for all moderates of the center, left, and right to work together to form a coalition. Arfi said that the exit polls showed that such a coalition was feasible.
“The only possible coalition is democratic and Republican,” he said. CRIF and other Jewish groups would continue to advocate for these values.
If Mélenchon were to enter the coalition, life would be difficult for French Jewry, but “as diaspora Jews we cannot escape fighting for our Jewish identity.”
Jews always needed to fight for recognition and against stigmatization of Zionist identity, and if LFI entered the coalition, Arfi said that they would fight even harder.
“I’m always concerned about the future, but French Jews are here to stay, and we are here to fight,” said Arfi.Arfi dismissed concerns that the tough stance CRIF, the Chief Rabbi of France, the Central Consistory, and other groups had taken against RN could foster more antisemitism on the right, saying that Jews were a small percentage of the voting population, and could not be held responsible for the outcome.
The Jews were not alone in their fight against extremism, according to Arfi, but he acknowledged that the Jewish people everywhere were living in a “very tough period.”
As Jews, Arfi believed that one had to hold true to one’s values, and that “our main responsibility is to tell the world, never to underestimate the extreme right and extreme left, and that another path is possible, and this path is in the middle -- a democratic and republican one.”