The anti-immigration eurosceptic party led by Marine Le Pen is desperately seeking a makeover to broaden its voter appeal and dispel its xenophobic image.
The National Front recently won a key by-election and is tipped to be the leading French party in European elections also due next year, according to a new poll.
Anne-Sophie Leclere, the FN candidate for Rethel in the northeastern Ardennes region provoked a storm by comparing Justice Minister Christiane Taubira to a monkey on French television.
The caption underneath the baby monkey said "At 18 months," while the one under Taubira's photograph read "Now".
The 33-year-old mother-of-three told France 2's Envoye Special (Special Correspondent) programme she would prefer to see Taubira "in a tree swinging from the branches rather than in government."
"She is wild," Leclere said, adding: "I have black friends and it doesn't mean I call them monkeys."
Florian Philippot, the National Front's vice-president, said the choice of Leclere as a candidate had been a "casting error".
The incident came on the heels of insults and attacks against Italy's first black minister, Cecile Kyenge, which sparked a pledge by 17 European countries to fight racism.
The attacks against the Congolese-born Kyenge have ranged from a senior member of the far-right Northern League party likening her to an orangutan, to having bananas thrown at her and nooses hung in a town where she was due to speak.
In a climate of growing outrage and concern over the rise of racism and xenophobia in Europe, the FN has increasingly taken a hard line on slurs expressed by its members.
The party has also expelled activists for making bigoted public statements and the FN lists in next year's municipal elections will include a handful of ethnic minority candidates.
The party's image has long been closely linked to the personality of its founder Jean-Marie Le Pen, who has faced a string of convictions for incitement to racial hatred and Holocaust denial.
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