One of France’s most famous family feuds has been rekindled.<br /><br /> Jean-Marie Le Pen, founder of the <br />National Front movement has vowed to fight to stay in the party his daughter leads, despite an executive committee voting to oust him for a second time.<br /><br /> Speaking shortly before the vote, he said:<br />“To be persecuted by the leadership of the political movement you have founded, particularly when the president of the movement is your daughter, is very difficult.”<br /><br /> The Honorary Party President triggered the showdown by repeating his view that the Nazi gas chambers were a “mere detail” of the Second World War.<br /><br /> In 2015 alone, courts have twice ruled as illegal the National Front’s attempts to sideline Jean-Marie, who has also launched a series of attacks on his daughter and party leader Marine.<br /><br /> He claims he hasn’t received official notification of the decision to exclude him, but says when he does he will contest it, as he has done previously.<br /><br /> Watchers say it is the far-right party’s lat
