The FN, under Le Pen, won 14% of the national vote in the 1986 National Assembly elections and 15% in 1997. Le Pen's 1988 and 1995 presidential bids attracted similar support on the first ballot, concentrated particularly amongst the unemployed, small-business owners, and young white males. In the 2002 presidential election he finished second, with 18%, but then attracted only about 10% in the first round of voting in the 2007 poll. He was elected to the European Parliament as head of the FN list in 1984, 1989, and 1994, but in early 1998 he was debarred from voting or holding elective office for two years (later reduced to one), following his conviction for assaulting a socialist woman candidate during the 1997 election campaign. In October 2000 he was stripped of his EU parliamentary seat. In December 1998, following a revolt against Le Pen led by FN's deputy leader, Bruno Mégret, the party split into two factions.
The son of a Breton fisherman, Le Pen graduated in law before serving in the 1950s as a paratrooper in French Indochina and Algeria, where he lost an eye during a street battle. He was elected to the National Assembly in 1956 on Pierre Poujade's right-wing populist party list. In the 1960s he actively supported General Salan's extremist Organization de l'Armée Secrète (OAS), devoted to perpetuating French rule in Algeria. In April 2003, his daughter Marine Le Pen, became one of the FN's vice-presidents.
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Le Pen, Jean-Marie
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