Business Standard

France votes for a new president

- INGRID MELANDER & PASCALE ANTONIE 23 April REUTERS

France voted on Sunday in the first round of the presidenti­al election that could define the future of the European Union, and is sure to be seen as a gauge of the anti-establishm­ent anger that has brought upsets in Western politics. About 50,000 police and 7,000 soldiers, backed by rapid response units, patrolled streets three days after an attack from a suspected Islamist gunman in Paris.

France voted on Sunday in the first round of a bitterly fought presidenti­al election that could define the future of the European Union, and is sure to be seen as a gauge of the anti-establishm­ent anger that has brought upsets in Western politics.

Over 50,000 police and 7,000 soldiers backed by rapid response units patrolled streets three days after a suspected Islamist gunman shot dead a policeman and wounded two others in the heart of the capital, Paris.

Voters will decide whether to back a pro-EU centrist newcomer, a scandal-ridden veteran conservati­ve who wants to slash public expenditur­e, a far-left euroscepti­c admirer of Fidel Castro, or a far-right nationalis­t who, as France's first woman president, would shut borders and ditch the euro. The last polling stations were due to close at 1800 GMT, and projection­s were likely to give early pointers to the outcome soon after. The outcome will show whether the populist tide that saw Britain vote to leave the EU and Donald Trump elected president of the United States is still rising, or starting to ebb. But it also provides a choice between radically different recipes for reviving a listless economy that lags its neighbours, and where almost a quarter of under-25s have no job. A high level of indecision added to the nervousnes­s. Hanan Fanidi, a 33-year-old financial project manager, was still unsure as she arrived at a polling station in Paris's 18th arrondisse­ment. “I don't believe in anyone, actually. I haven't arrived at any candidate in particular who could advance things,” she said. “I'm very, very pessimisti­c.” Despite fears that broad disillusio­nment with politics could keep voters away, pollsters estimated that the turnout, in fair weather nationwide, would be broadly in line with the last election five years ago.

Emmanuel Macron, 39, a centrist ex-banker who set up his party just a year ago, is the opinion polls' favourite to win the first round and then beat far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen in the two-person run off on May 7. If they come first and second on Sunday, it would virtually reinvent a political landscape dominated for 60 years by mainstream groupings from the centre-left and centre-right.

“It wouldn't be the classic left-versus-right divide but two views of the world clashing,” said Ifop pollsters' Jerome Fourquet. “Macron bills himself as the progressiv­e versus conservati­ves, Le Pen as the patriot versus the globalists.” While Macron offers a vision of gradual economic deregulati­on that would cause few ripples on global financial markets, Le Pen proposes a more disruptive programme of higher social spending, financed by money-printing, coupled with a withdrawal from the euro and possibly the EU.

Of the two other candidates close enough in opinion polls to be in with a good chance of making the runoff, Jean-Luc Melenchon offers a farleft tax-and-spend platform that has much in common with Le Pen's, although without her plans to restrict immigratio­n.

And conservati­ve Francois Fillon, rebounding after being plagued for months by a fake jobs scandal, promises economic shock therapy of deregulati­on and slashing taxes and state spending, cutting half a million state sector jobs.

The turnout at 1500 GMT was 69.42 per cent, according to official figures, compared to 70.59 per cent in 2012. That year, the last polling stations closed at 7 pm, an hour earlier than this year, and almost 80 per cent eventually took part in the first round.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A woman casts her ballot to vote in the first round of 2017 French presidenti­al election at a polling station on Sunday
PHOTO: REUTERS A woman casts her ballot to vote in the first round of 2017 French presidenti­al election at a polling station on Sunday

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