From prison to Netflix to the National Rally

(Toulon) At the Mourillon market, in the heart of Toulon, a couple approaches Sébastien Soulé, the candidate of the National Rally in the legislative elections in the town on the Côte d’Azur. After enthusiastic words and pats on the back, they ask to have their photo taken with the candidate. Right in front of the olive and fish stalls.


Published at 5:00 a.m.



Friends ? “No, I had never met them, but they really liked the film BAC North and they support us,” the 47-year-old police officer replies with a smile.

BAC North, it is the film by director Cédric Jimenez which is based on his story. BAC Nord is also the name of the anti-crime brigade to which Sébastien Soulé belonged for nine years.

Toulon in brief

• Population : 600 000

• Party elected in the 2022 legislative elections (1re constituency): The Republic on the move (Macron)

• Dominant party in the 2024 European elections: List of Jordan Bardella and Marine Le Pen (RN)

• Why are we here? It is the major French city that showed the greatest support for the National Rally during the recent European elections. It is also in Toulon that a first far-right mayor was elected.

In 2012, after successfully carrying out a major police operation against a drug trafficking network in Marseille, Sébastien Soulé and 11 of his colleagues were arrested and accused of corruption, racketeering and drug trafficking.

Then a young father, Sébastien Soulé spent 69 days behind bars, in solitary confinement. Released in December 2012, he was cleared of all suspicion only a decade later. The film inspired by this saga – and in which Sébastien Soulé’s character was renamed Yassin – was presented at the Cannes Film Festival before the end of the trial and has been enjoying a resurgence in popularity on Netflix since May. Mr. Soulé also recently published a book about the whole affair.

“A reversal of values”

After his release from prison, transferred to Toulon, Sébastien Soulé was recruited by the police union to defend his colleagues. “Given everything I had experienced, the union came to get me to help other police officers when they had problems,” he says today. In this work, we realize that there is a lot of suffering and a lack of recognition. In fact, over the last 25 years I have seen a reversal of values. When I joined the police, there was a deep respect for the profession. Today we have become targets. They harass us even in our homes,” he says, aside from his campaign activity, coffee in hand.

Who are these “they”? “Young people and Islamo-leftists,” he sums up.

PHOTO LAURA-JULIE PERREAULT, LA PRESSE.

The city of Toulon, in the south of France, is home to one of the largest naval bases in Europe.

” The society [française] has gone wild,” he continues, convinced that France has an immense security problem, even if the most recent statistics show that the crime rate is falling in France. “We can make them say whatever we want, about statistics! », he retorts, with a smile on his lips and with his southern accent.

Hooked atoms

His speech is music to the ears of the National Rally. The party of Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella, described as far right or radical right, has made security a central theme of its electoral campaign.

The party proposes to impose minimum sentences for certain crimes. It also wants to give the presumption of self-defense to police officers who use their weapons.

When a police officer uses his weapon right now, he is immediately taken away and taken into custody. For doing his job. It doesn’t make sense!

Sébastien Soulé, candidate of the National Rally in Toulon

The recruit

When Laure Lavalette, outgoing National Rally MP in another Toulon constituency, approached him to run, he decided to go for it.

Even if he is a neophyte in politics. Even if the electoral campaign, which ended on Friday, only lasted two weeks. “It’s good to raise awareness about what’s going wrong, but at some point, things have to change,” he said. My candidacy is a bit like my response to what I experienced in the BAC North,” says the man who says he has been voting for the National Rally for just a few years.

PHOTO LAURA-JULIE PERREAULT, THE PRESS

Sébastien Soulé, candidate for the National Rally, has his picture taken by supporters in Toulon. The photographer is the outgoing member of parliament for the National Rally, Laure Lavalette, who came to lend a hand to her recruit during a final campaign event.

And how does he live with the “extreme right” label that the party, renamed in 2018, bears, but which struggles to make people forget that it is the heir to the National Front founded in 1972 by Jean-Marie Le Pen and former Nazi sympathizers? “What I see is that the tags that are made on the walls with Nazi symbols, they do not come from us, but from people who want to discredit us,” says Sébastien Soulé. However, he does not hesitate to make a direct link between insecurity and immigration, which, according to him, “overwhelms” France.

Toulon enthusiasm

At the campaign event we attended, the candidate did not have to fervently defend the party’s ideas. He received far more smiles and handshakes than disapproving glances.

This is not a huge surprise. In the European elections of June 9, Toulon is the French urban area where the National Rally achieved the best score, with 36% of the votes given to the list topped by Jordan Bardella, the young president of the party.

Is it easy, though? When a voter came to shake Sébastien Soulé’s hand and told him “I don’t want veiled women anymore!”, the new politician was left speechless. It was a young RN activist who was accompanying him who came to his rescue. “You know, madam, we defend everyone’s right to religion,” the young man replied. An angel has passed by.

Insecurity in France

“The homicide rate has quadrupled in 15 years. » This statistic caused debate in France after Marine Le Pen launched it in a speech on “the insecurity which is overwhelming the country”. What do the numbers say? Agence France-Presse, which studied the various statistics available, concluded that the rate of homicides in France has been relatively stable for 15 years and reaches around 1,000 per year. Furthermore, crimes and misdemeanors are on the rise, but serious violence has declined since the 1980s. Experts note that it is difficult to obtain meaningful statistics in this area, since measurement methods change. regularly. That said, in polls, we note a marked increase in the feeling of insecurity since 2022.

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