Herald on Sunday

Trump sees Le Pen win in election

US President says Paris attack would boost far right leader’s chances in French voting.

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Donald Trump has said the Paris terrorist attack would boost Marine Le Pen’s presidenti­al chances after a last-minute poll gave her a modest increase in support.

The US president said the shooting would “probably help” Le Pen in today’s election, because she is “strongest on borders, and she’s the strongest on what’s been going on in France”.

“Whoever is the toughest on radical Islamic terrorism, and whoever is the toughest at the borders, will do well in the election,” he said.

US presidents typically avoid weighing in on specific candidates running in overseas election.

But Trump suggested his opinion was no different from an average observer, saying: “Everybody is making prediction­s on who is going to win. I’m no different than you.”

Cancelling visits and meetings on Friday, candidates traded blows across the airwaves as it emerged that the Isis-backed gunman had been kept in custody just 24 hours in February despite attempts to procure weapons to murder police.

Xavier Jugele, 37, a policeman who had been deployed in the 2015 Bataclan attack, was killed in the shooting.

Le Pen, the far-Right candidate, blasted the mainstream “naive” Left and Right for failing to get tough on Islamism, calling for France to instantly reinstate border checks and expel foreigners who are on the watch lists of intelligen­ce services.

Francois Fillon, the mainstream conservati­ve candidate, pledged an “iron fist” in the fight against “Islamist totalitari­anism” — his priority if elected. Meanwhile, Emmanuel Macron, the independen­t centrist, whom critics dismiss as a soft touch, hit back at claims shutting borders and filling French prisons would solve the problem, saying: “There’s no such thing as zero risk. Anyone who pretends (otherwise) is both irresponsi­ble and deceitful.”

Sticking to his campaign agenda, far-Left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon told everyone to keep a “cool head” as he took part in a giant picnic.

A last-minute Odoxa poll taken after the attack suggested that Macron was still on course to come first in Sunday’s first round, with Le Pen just behind and through to the May 7 runoff.

However, Fillon and Melenchon were still snapping at their heels.

The Government on Friday announced elite units would join 50,000 police and troops to guard polling booths on Sunday in France’s first presidenti­al election to be held in a state of emergency.

Matthieu Croissande­au, editor of Nouvel Obs magazine, said the French are thicker-skinned after two years of bloodshed.

“The French are unfortunat­ely getting used to terror attacks on home soil and I don’t think this latest one created the shock and awe that might have made a significan­t difference,” he said.

Le Pen has struggled to get the campaign to focus on her party’s pet issues of security, Islam and immigratio­n. By contrast, she has been thrown on the defensive over her position to pull out of the eurozone.

After the attack, she called on the “notoriousl­y feeble” socialist, Presi- dent Francois Hollande, to instantly reinstate border checks and expel foreigners who are on the watch lists of intelligen­ce services.

She said: “We cannot afford to lose this war. But for the past 10 years, Leftwing and Right-wing government­s have done everything they can for us to lose it.

“We need a presidency which acts and protects us,” she said from her Paris campaign headquarte­rs. Elected French president, I would immediatel­y, and with no hesitation, carry out the battle plan against Islamist terrorism and against judicial laxity.”

But Le Pen was not the only one to issue stern pledges. Fillon, who also is tough on security, said the fight against “Islamist totalitari­anism” should be priority.

“It will require an unyielding determinat­ion and a cool head,” the former prime minister said. “We are at war, there is no alternativ­e, it’s us or them.”

Fillon, though knocked off his initial course towards victory by incessant allegation­s involving “fake job” payments to his British wife, promised to govern with “an iron fist”.

But the moderate Macron, whom other candidates have portrayed as too inexperien­ced, took a different tack, warning against any attempts to use the shooting for political gain. “I a think we must once and for all have a spirit of responsibi­lity at this extreme time and not give in to panic and not allow it to be exploited, which some might try to do,” he told French radio. Opinion polls have for months forecast that Le Pen would make it through to the runoff, but then lose in the final vote. Given the margin of error, none of the leading four candidates is a sure bet to reach the final. All hope to woo the third of French voters still undecided. Previous terror attacks ahead of elections — such as the November 2015 attacks in Paris before regional ballots — did not affect those ballots. — Telegraph

 ?? AP ?? Police stand to attention on the Champs Elysees where one of their number was killed last week.
AP Police stand to attention on the Champs Elysees where one of their number was killed last week.
 ??  ?? Xavier Jugele
Xavier Jugele

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