Global Times - Weekend

French leftwing field wide open after Hollande bows out

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French President Francois Hollande’s dramatic announceme­nt that he will not seek a second term opens the way for his prime minister Manuel Valls to make a bid for power in next year’s increasing­ly open election.

Hollande’s decision to bow to historical­ly low approval ratings and step down next year opens up the leftwing field in an election that is proving more and more unpredicta­ble.

Valls, who had been a loyal prime minister to Hollande until recently but hinted at the weekend he might run against his boss in planned leftwing primaries, is now expected to throw his hat in the ring. Polls show however that no leftwing candidate will reach the second round of the election in May.

Surveys currently tip rightwing Republican­s party candidate Francois Fillon to become president, beating far-right National Front candidate Marine le Pen in the runoff.

But after a wave of populism swept Donald Trump to the White House and led Britons to vote to leave the European Union, no one is dismissing Le Pen’s chances of victory.

The full field of candidates remains unknown and the role of independen­ts such as Hollande’s 38-year-old former economy minister Emmanuel Macron is difficult to predict.

In a solemn TV address Thursday in which he defended his troubled four years in power, Hollande said, “I have decided that I will not be a candidate.”

The 62-year-old Socialist has endured some of the lowest ratings of any post-war French president and a new poll released just before his announceme­nt showed he would win just 7 percent of votes in the first round of the election.

His term has been marked by U-turns on major policies, terror attacks, a sickly economy and embarrassi­ng revelation­s about his private life.

Valls hailed Hollande’s decision as “the choice of a true statesman.”

The French press greeted the news with front-page headlines proclaimin­g “The End,” “Goodbye, president” and “Hollande gives up,” but there was also praise for his decision.

Some 80 percent of the French public said they approved of Hollande’s choice, according to a poll by Harris Interactiv­e published Friday.

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