France's Jean-Marie Le Pen steps back to ease family feud

Marine Le Pen (R), France's National Front political party leader, and her father Jean-Marie Le Pen arrive for a meeting in Cormont, in this file picture taken August 29, 2010. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/Files

By Ingrid Melander and Gérard Bon PARIS (Reuters) - Jean-Marie Le Pen, founder of France's far-right National Front, said on Monday he would not seek its ticket to stand in regional polls, taking some of the sting out of a damaging public row with his daughter Marine, the party's current leader. But the 86-year-old former paratrooper told Le Figaro in an interview that he was disappointed by his daughter and would not quit politics, showing that the family feud that could emerge as a threat to the FN's bid for power is not necessarily over. Marine Le Pen, who in 2011 took over as FN party leader from her father, has been trying to persuade him to retire both from the December regional polls and from politics altogether. Jean-Marie Le Pen last week reiterated his view that Nazi gas chambers were a mere "detail" of war and defended Philippe Petain, the leader of the war-time government that cooperated with Nazi Germany. That prompted his daughter to demand that his role in the party be discussed at an FN meeting on Friday. Jean-Marie Le Pen said in a statement he would not stand in the south-east Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region because the party was at risk of being "dangerously weakened" over what he called a severe but unjustified crisis over his comments. FN deputy leader Florian Philippot, a close ally of Marine Le Pen who last week even suggested her father could be thrown out of the party, told iTele his move was "a wise decision". In a sign of his family's strong grip on the party, Le Pen said the best replacement candidate would be his grand-daughter Marion Marechal-Le Pen. The 25-year-old confirmed shortly after that she would seek the party's nomination While considered close to her grandfather she has criticised his latest World War Two comments, a first for her, and told La Provence daily on Monday: "I've never been at the beck and call of my grandfather." "DISAPPOINTED" Marion is seen as linked with the socially conservative side of the party. Whereas her mother Marine, for example, did not publicly criticise a 2013 law permitting same-sex marriage in France, Marion was firmly against it. Opinion polls see Marine Le Pen as likely to make it to the second round of the 2017 presidential election but not win. How she handles relations with her father will be one of the key factors to how her party fares in 2017. Asked if he felt betrayed by his daughter, Le Pen, who remains the Front's honorary president and will retain his seat in the European Parliament, told Le Figaro Magazine: "Betrayed would be going a bit far, but let's say I'm disappointed." (Additional reporting by Brian Love and Jean-Francois Rosnoblet; Editing by Mark John and Gareth Jones)