Jean-Marie Le Pen, who died on Tuesday aged 96, was the far-right bogeyman of French politics, infamously dismissing the Holocaust as a detail of history and spending half a century whipping up anger over immigration.
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The co-founder of the far-right National Front – later renamed the National Rally – was eventually booted out of the party by his daughter Marine for antisemitism.
A former paratrooper, Le Pen sent shock waves through France in 2002 when he made it to the second round of the presidential election, which was won by Jacques Chirac.
Le Pen, who seemed more at ease in the role of provocateur than would-be president, appeared as surprised as everyone else by his spectacular breakthrough.
Years later, he boasted that the rise of the far-right around Europe showed his ideas had gone mainstream.
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Born in the port of La Trinite-sur-Mer in the western Brittany region on June 20, 1928, he was the son of a seamstress and a fisherman.
His father’s fishing boat hit a mine during World War II, killing him – a loss that hit the young Le Pen hard.