Kuwait Times

French presidenti­al candidates face off in first live TV debate

The most unpredicta­ble election in years

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France’s tumultuous presidenti­al race steps up a gear yesterday as the five leading candidates face off in a TV debate, the first of its kind in the eurozone’s second biggest economy, with just a month to go before the vote. In the most unpredicta­ble election in years, far-right National Front (FN) leader Marine Le Pen and centrist Emmanuel Macron have been running neck-andneck for weeks, with the latest opinion poll showing Macron just half a percentage point ahead for the first round of voting on April 23.

The debate will be the first time in history that French voters get an opportunit­y to compare the leading candidates before the first round as the frontrunne­rs share the stage with the candidates currently in third and fourth place, Francois Fillon of the right and Benoit Hamon of the left, along with the far-left JeanLuc Melenchon. All 11 contenders, spanning the spectrum from Trotskyist left to the far right, will take part in another debate on April 4. In previous elections, TV debates have been held only between the two finalists. This year’s runoff is scheduled for May 7.

The presidenti­al hopefuls face an especially disgruntle­d electorate. Millions are still undecided after five years of lackluster Socialist rule under Francois Hollande, with a sluggish economy and an ever-present threat of new jihadist violence. Socialist candidate Hamon, 49, attracted a crowd of 20,000 to a Paris rally on Sunday, but with his staunchly leftist platform he is seen by many as representi­ng the rump of a party in disarray.

Meanwhile, 63-year-old Fillon has sent his conservati­ve Republican­s party into a tailspin with a raft of scandals that have landed him in the dock for misuse of public funds. yesterday he will seek to claw back votes lost to 39-year-old Macron since the scandal broke in January by trying to shift the focus to his policy program, including the radical spending cuts he says are France’s only hope for real change.

With polls showing Macron would rout the anti-immigratio­n Le Pen, 48, in the decisive runoff if the election were held today, he is expected to face the most heat in the three-hour debate starting at 2000 GMT. Le Pen’s aides say she will tear into his “globalist” program, while Hamon on Sunday gave a taste of his plan of attack against Macron, casting the former Rothschild banker as the candidate of the elite.

Turnout a key factor

The election could hinge on turnout, after several political veterans have already been sent packing by voters fed up with politics as usual. In The Netherland­s, with the far-right Freedom Party knocking on the doors of power, more than 80 percent of people turned out to vote last week. But in France, with Le Pen hoping to emulate Donald Trump’s win in the United States, polls show that only around 65 percent of voters are planning to vote in the first round in what would be a record low.

Of those, more than two in five say they are not yet wedded to any candidate. Supporters of Macron, who styles himself as a progressiv­e transcendi­ng France’s entrenched left-right divide, are among the most volatile while Le Pen’s are the most loyal, polls show. “The 2017 campaign is hard to get a handle on,” Pascal Perrineau, a political science professor at Sciences Po university, wrote in Le Monde at the weekend, blaming the steady drip of “scandals, real or imagined” for preventing real debate.

While most of the focus has been on Fillon’s legal woes and the disconnect with the “irreproach­able” image that helped him win the conservati­ve nomination, Le Pen also goes into the election with several investigat­ions hanging over the FN.

Macron, a relative newcomer to politics, has largely avoided scandal but could be tainted by an investigat­ion into possible favoritism over an event at a 2016 high-tech fair in Las Vegas at which he was the main speaker. His predicted runoff with Le Pen will be the most surprising since 2002 when the FN leader’s father JeanMarie Le Pen rocked the political establishm­ent by getting into the second round where he lost to conservati­ve Jacques Chirac.

 ??  ?? This combinatio­n of pictures created from file photograph­s yesterday shows 2017 French presidenti­al election candidates (L-R arranged in alphabetic­al order) Francois Fillon of the Les Republicai­ns (LR) Party, Benoit Hamon of the Socialist Party (PS),...
This combinatio­n of pictures created from file photograph­s yesterday shows 2017 French presidenti­al election candidates (L-R arranged in alphabetic­al order) Francois Fillon of the Les Republicai­ns (LR) Party, Benoit Hamon of the Socialist Party (PS),...

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