The Jerusalem Post

Macron wins big, huge relief for France and EU

- • By RINA BASSIST

paris – Fans of incumbent president emmanuel macron flocked to paris’s champs de mars esplanade on sunday evening to celebrate his unequivoca­l victory in the presidenti­al runoff election.

at the foot of the eiffel tower, many of them chanted the same soccer-inspired slogan they have been chanting since the beginning of the campaign: “and one, and two, and Five more years,” hailing a second (and final) fiveyear term for macron at the Élysée palace.

supporters, many in their twenties and even younger, waved the tricolore – but also the 12-starred blue flag of the european union.

according to initial projection­s, which are normally very accurate, macron defeated farright rival marine le pen by more than any of the polls predicted since the beginning of the race.

according to France 2 tV, macron won by 58.2% to 41.8%, while BFmtV tallied the vote at 57.6% to 42.4%. le pen gained ground from her defeat five years ago – when she received 33% of the vote – but it wasn’t enough.

many in France sighed a great sigh of relief after polls closed at 8 p.m. they knew things could have ended up differentl­y. recent opinion polls were only placing macron between 53% and 55%. pollsters warned that their figures had a larger-than-usual margin of error due to the expected very low participat­ion rate, which was estimated at close to 28%, the highest rate since 1969.

macron’s victory is legitimate, but it nonetheles­s leaves French society divided more than it has ever been in decades. the rightwing party the republican­s and the left-wing party the socialists both did poorly in the first round, practicall­y shunned out of the political map. their leaders have two months only to rebuild their shattered parties, before the june parliament­ary elections.

French-jewish leader and executive director of the France-european leadership network elnet branch arié Bensemhoun, who was present at champs de mars, said this was a great victory for macron, but the results were troubling.

“that being said, more than 40% for the far right is much too much. it leaves our society fractured, and it will be the responsibi­lity of the president and those elected to the parliament to mend this rift. the danger of the far

is a point well worth noting.

Right in France is not over. We won an important battle, but the fight must continue.”

Despite the margin of error, Macron’s supporters prepared for a win only, which is why they picked the Champs de Mars as a venue. At least 3,000 people, most of them activists and members of his party, arrived at the cordoned-off perimeter around the official stage, which has the Eiffel Tower as the impressive and symbolic background. More than 1,300 journalist­s asked for accreditat­ion for the event, with many of them waiting long hours in line to get in to the press tent organized by Macron’s team.

Macron himself watched the preliminar­y results together with his wife and his campaign team in private, arriving at the esplanade to address his supporters after the tv networks’ announceme­nts.

Le Pen’s staff, on the other hand, convened the journalist­s at the prestigiou­s Pavillon d’Armenonvil­le in the Boulogne Forest, which could house only a few hundred people at best. Should she have won, they planned to move the party to Place de la Concorde in the heart of Paris, a spot that

has long been identified with France’s Right.

Le Pen arrived at the Pavillon at the beginning of the evening, staying in a VIP salon there to watch the results together with her sister, who accompanie­d her throughout the election campaign, and a few other close associates. Only 500 journalist­s asked for accreditat­ion for Le Pen’s electoral evening, 300 of them foreign press, said Le Pen’s communicat­ion officials.

Le Pen said she considers her total of more than 40% “a brilliant victory.” Admitting she had lost the presidenti­al battle, she committed to continuing her political engagement at the head of her party, saying she will now prepare for the parliament­ary elections. She also said she had no intention of withdrawin­g from politics.

Jeanne, 21, a student at the Sorbonne, lives in the 11th Paris neighborho­od in the east of the city. Many in this gentrified, liberal, middle-class area voted in the first round for extremelef­t candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon. Coming out of the polling station in a primary school next to her apartment on Sunday morning, Jeanne said she had voted for Macron, but with a heavy heart.

“Many of my friends from university decided not to vote at all,” she said. “Many of them marched last week in Paris with the labor unions and other leftwing groups, against voting for Le Pen. But in fact, they could not bring themselves to vote for Macron, whom they consider the president of the rich.”

Different voices could be heard on the Left Bank of Paris, at the 15th neighborho­od in the west.

“I voted for Emmanuel Macron in the first round, and I will vote for him again today. He is carrying a true European project. He is practicall­y the only leader in Europe to do that. He showed his resolutene­ss and strength in the Ukraine crisis,” said 27-year-old Gabriel, who works form a start-up firm.

Unconfirme­d reports this afternoon offered Le Pen clear victory in the French overseas territorie­s. They said Le Pen received almost 70% in the Caribbean’s Guadeloupe and more than 60% in nearby Martinique, an impressive achievemen­t for the far-right leader in electoral sectors that only recently considered her hostile. In French Polynesia in the Pacific Ocean, Le Pen reportedly received only 48%. While these numbers were not official, Le Pen associates confirmed the trend to journalist­s.

But in contrast, Macron apparently won the votes of most French citizens abroad, with more than 80% supporting him in Argentina, Brazil and Canada. In the US, more than 90% of those who went to the polling booths voted for Macron.

Reuters contribute­d to this report. •

 ?? (Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images) ?? SUPPORTERS WAVE French and EU flags at the Champ de Mars in Paris yesterday to celebrate French President Emmanuel Macron’s victory in the presidenti­al election.
(Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images) SUPPORTERS WAVE French and EU flags at the Champ de Mars in Paris yesterday to celebrate French President Emmanuel Macron’s victory in the presidenti­al election.

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