Kuwait Times

Fillon’s friends and detractors seek to bridge deep divisions

Conservati­ves rally behind scandal-hit candidate

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PARIS: Friends and detractors of Francois Fillon sought to bridge their deep divisions and put the French conservati­ve candidate’s presidenti­al campaign back on the rails yesterday after deciding to stick with him despite a damaging financial scandal. A member of Fillon’s team said reconcilia­tion talks would begin with discontent­ed centrists of the UDI party, who announced last week that they were withdrawin­g support for Fillon and his party, The Republican­s.

Others members of his campaign team went on radio to deliver a call for unity, saying victory was still feasible. “The page has turned,” Bruno Retailleau, Fillon’s campaign coordinato­r, told Radio Classique. Fillon, at one point the favorite, has sunk to third place in opinion polls as he faces an investigat­ion into allegation­s he paid his wife Penelope hundreds of thousands of euros of public funds for doing very little work as his parliament­ary assistant.

He denies wrongdoing. The former prime minister now faces the prospect of being knocked out in the first round on April 23, leaving independen­t centrist Emmanuel Macron and far-right candidate Marine Le Pen to contest a run-off two weeks later. Investors have been unsettled by the possibilit­y of a win for Le Pen, who wants to take France out of the euro zone.

Unity call

Media reports said that the handful of key party members who thrashed out the deal to rally behind Fillon on Monday secured a pledge that he would temper his ultra-conservati­ve strategy and accommodat­e centrists by working closely with a more moderate member of his party, Francois Baroin, a former finance minister. Retailleau declined to say whether the stick-with-Fillon deal had conditions. In legal terms The Republican­s have no way to stop Fillon from standing despite the damage his campaign has suffered from the scandal, which has prompted some key aides to resign. France’s constituti­onal court on Monday issued a reminder that once a candidate has registered the necessary sponsors, only he or she has the power to withdraw. With those sponsors already in place, the 63-year-old Fillon can run come what may, even though his party could select a new candidate to run against him. Senate leader Gerard Larcher, one of the group of right-wing politician­s behind Monday’s pro-Fillon announceme­nt, called for unity, saying failure would open the doors of power to Le Pen. “I cannot resign myself to the idea of a second round where it’s Le Pen versus Macron,” he said.

Bidding to match the anti-establishm­ent shocks of Donald Trump’s US presidenti­al victory and Britain’s vote to leave the European Union last year Le Pen is currently tipped in almost all polls to win the first round of the election, where she faces a fragmented field with four main rivals. But they universall­y show her losing the head-to-head run-off to Macron, a former economy minister, or to Fillon if he made it that far. A new Opinionway survey yesterday suggested Le Pen would win 26 percent of the vote in the first round, versus 25 percent for Macron and 20 percent for Fillon. But it said Macron would beat her by a margin of 60-40 in the second round, or Fillon by 58-42 if he could edge ahead of the centrist.

UDI talks

Republican lawmaker Luc Chatel said consolidat­ing Fillon’s position would involve winning back the UDI centrist group which deserted him last week. The group comprises several dozen lawmakers who traditiona­lly work in tandem with The Republican­s. “Talks will restart today,” he said. It was not immediatel­y clear to what extent Monday’s deal could ensure broader reconcilia­tion, especially after a scathing critique of Fillon on Monday by Alain Juppe, one of the grandees of The Republican­s who had been touted as a possible replacemen­t but has now ruled himself out. Fillon has upset some members of his own party by complainin­g the investigat­ion against him amounts to a “political assassinat­ion” by the justice system and the media. That prompted harsh criticism on Monday from Juppe, who said such talk had brought his campaign to a dead end. —Reuters

 ??  ?? PARIS: Supporters of conservati­ve presidenti­al candidate Francois Fillon listen during a rally in Paris. —AP
PARIS: Supporters of conservati­ve presidenti­al candidate Francois Fillon listen during a rally in Paris. —AP

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