One of Europe’s most famous leftist radicals, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, is a party leader with the word “defiance” in its name. He thinks the country’s last big revolution — in 1789 — has further to go.
The contemporary politician believes that only more revolution can save humanity from capitalism and what he sees as the impasse in mankind’s progress. This is the story of a figure who has become an undeniable phenomenon in French life, and how his revolutionary strategy now looks self-destructive.
Mélenchon began his professional life in education, and was quickly drawn into the cut-and-thrust of ideological debate – and on to full-blown politics. The ideas of Leon Trotsky influenced him and he eventually embraced those of Venezuela's Hugo Chávez. Seen as having views along the lines of the former French president François Mitterrand, Mélenchon has also expressed admiration for Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin.
The idea of revolution has become an article of faith for this enthusiastic and outspoken orator. Mélenchon still believes he can change his country despite two failed runs for its highest office, in 2017 and 2022. He did not get beyond the first round both times.
And despite declaring his intention to retire from political life, Mélenchon remains active at the heart of a national debate transformed by a recent run of social anger – the stuff of which revolutions are made.
‘It is time to mobilize,' a French union leader said at a protest in Paris after France’s Constitutional Council gave a nod to President Emmanuel Macron’s flagship pension reform, which will boost the retirement age to 64 from 62 https://t.co/TM6OGi0Fr8 pic.twitter.com/ahiJYabsZA
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 15, 2023
But while social currents have looked to favour the far left, political conditions have not. Mélenchon's coalition has unravelled, having only been set up in 2022 in the run-up to European elections in 2024.
The demise of the New Ecological and Social People's Union shows the peril of populism and using electoral tactics usually associated with the far right. The coalition, consisting of communists, socialists, the Green Party and La France Insoumise, which translates as France Defiant, came as the right wing seems to be a growing force in the national debate.
Lifelong rebel
Mélenchon describes himself as a "lifelong rebel,” with a background to match.
He was born in August 1951 in Tangier, Morocco, to parents of Spanish origin and grew up in Oran, Algeria, during its time as a French colony.
After his parents divorced, he moved with his mother to France, where she continued her teaching career. They moved several times before settling in the Jura region in eastern France, where Mélenchon attended school, obtaining degrees in the humanities and modern literature.