The Free Press Journal

Macron, Le Pen set for final French duel

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Pro-European centrist Emmanuel Macron and antiimmigr­ation leader Marine Le Pen began a final duel for the French presidency on Monday, after a first round of voting delivered a stunning blow to the traditiona­l political class.

Macron is the clear favourite to become France's youngest-ever president after topping Sunday's ballot with 23.75 per cent of votes, slightly ahead of National Front (FN) leader Le Pen on 21.53 per cent.

The result reflected a desire for change in the deeply divided country, with the top spots going to two outsiders who transcende­d the left-right divide. Addressing thousands of flag-waving supporters in Paris on Sunday’s evening, 39-year-old Macron set the tone for the May 7 run-off, saying he aimed to unite "patriots" against "the threat of nationalis­ts."

The anti-immigratio­n, anti-EU Le Pen, who campaigned as the candidate "of the people", said voters faced a choice between "runaway globalisat­ion" and a protection­ist France. The 48-year-old ex-lawyer gained over a million new voters compared with the

2012 election, securing 7.6 million ballots, a result she hailed as "historic".

But Le Pen's share of the vote was far below a March poll high of 27 per cent and there was an air of disappoint­ment in her camp

that she missed out on the top spot. With a slew of leaders from the right and the left rallying behind Macron, the odds are stacked against her.

Polls suggest ex-investment banker Macron

would beat her by around 20 percentage points in a final that will not feature a candidate from the mainstream left or right for the first time in six decades.

The conservati­ve Le Figaro daily lamented the defeat of the conservati­ve Republican­s, whose scandalhit candidate Francois Fillon trailed in third with 19.9 per cent.

Despite serving as economy minister in the outgoing Socialist government of Francois Hollande, Macron casts himself as an "outsider" and his yearold "En Marche!" ("On the move") movement as revolution­ary.

"The challenge is to break completely with the system which has been unable to find solutions to the problems of our country for more than 30 years," Macron said on Sunday, already looking past the presidenti­al election to crucial parliament­ary elections in June.

The outcome capped an extraordin­ary campaign in a deeply divided and demoralise­d France, which has been rocked by a series of terror attacks since 2015 and is struggling to shake off a deep economic malaise.

The French vote was being closely watched as a bellwether for populist sentiment following the election of Donald Trump as US President and Britain's vote to leave the EU.

Throughout the campaign, Macron insisted France was "contrarian" ready to elect a pro-globalisat­ion liberal at a time when right-wing nationalis­ts are making gains around the world. Le Pen seized on a jihadist attack that claimed the life of a policeman on the Champs Elysees in Paris three days before the vote to stress her tough line on immigratio­n and Islam.

But most voters appeared to have taken the threat in their stride.

Le Pen follows in the footsteps of her father JeanMarie, who made it through to the 2002 presidenti­al runoff in what was a political earthquake for France.

Le Pen Senior went on to suffer a stinging defeat when mainstream parties closed ranks to keep him out. Far-right expert Nonna Mayer at Sciences Po university said a Le Pen victory was not impossible, "but it seems unlikely that she will carry the second round".

"If she wins, it will obviously be an anti-Europe, protection­ist, exclusioni­st line that wins and which could have troubling consequenc­es for Europe and France," she added.

Despite Macron's plans to "relaunch the building of Europe", the combined scores of staunch euroscepti­cs Le Pen, far-left Jean-Luc Melenchon and nationalis­t Nicolas Dupont- Aignan add up to around 46 per cent.

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