Okay kiddo, let me explain the history of the far-right movements in France in a way that you can understand!
You know how sometimes people can have different ideas on how the world should be, right? Some people might think that everyone should be treated fairly and with kindness, while others might think that some people are better than others and should have more power.
Well, in France, there have been some people who have ideas that are very different from what most people believe. These people are called the far-right, and they believe in things like nationalism (thinking their country is the best and should only be for their own people), anti-immigration (not wanting people from different countries to come and live in France), and sometimes they can be racist or homophobic (not liking people who are different from them).
The far-right movements in France have been around for a long time, even before you were born! In the 1930s, there was a group called the Action Française, which was very nationalistic and didn't like immigrants or anyone who wasn't born in France. They wanted France to be a very conservative country, where everyone was the same.
But things got really bad in the 1940s when France was occupied by Germany during World War II. There was a group called the Vichy regime, which collaborated with the Nazis and did terrible things to people who were Jewish or who resisted the occupation. After the war, the far-right movements in France were seen as very dangerous and anti-democratic.
In the 1970s, another far-right movement called the Front National (FN) started to gain support. They were led by a woman named Jean-Marie Le Pen, and they were really against immigrants and multiculturalism. The FN didn't become very popular until the 1980s, when there were a lot of economic problems in France and people were worried about their jobs.
Since then, the far-right movements in France have come and gone, but they are still around today. One of the most controversial is the movement called the Gilets Jaunes, which started in 2018 as a protest against the government's fuel tax. The movement attracted people from different political backgrounds, including some far-right members who were against immigration and multiculturalism.
So, kiddo, that's a brief history of the far-right movements in France. It's important to remember that not everyone agrees with these ideas and that we should always be kind to everyone, no matter where they come from or what they look like!