‘The least worst option’: A divided France braces for vote
The train speeds out of the darkness of the channel tunnel, emerging into a landscape of high security fences and barbed wire. Welcome to France. “The migrants have come back, you know,” the conductor says as we pull into Calais station. “Trying to get to England. It’s going to be a big problem again.”
For years, Calais -- just 20 miles from the English coast -- was the last stoppingoff point on the migrant route that led from warzones and trouble spots the world over.
Thousands gathered, setting up camp as they waited to cross to the UK, through the tunnel, or hidden in trucks and cars. Their camp, “the Jungle,” was demolished in October 2016, and the migrants and refugees it housed dispersed. Aid agencies have since been banned from handing out food in the area.
The camp may be gone, but some migrants are still here, clustered around an ornamental pond in the park, or sitting together on a roadside verge.
That they have ended up in Calais may be down to a quirk of geography, but their presence in a region already struggling with high unemployment has provoked resentment among the community, helping to fuel a rise in support for the far right.
At one of the town’s many “friteries” (fast food stands), Jessy Boin says he plans to vote for Marine Le Pen, leader of the farright National Front, because she has vowed to cut the number of migrants allowed into the country, “it’s a big problem here.”
Meanwhile, customer Loic Focquer, who is unemployed at the moment, believes a vote for Le Pen “will make the job situation better.”
Loic Focqueur hopes that voting for Marine Le Pen will give him a better chance of finding work.
In the first round of the presidential election, Le Pen scored a convincing win here. She ran on a euroskeptic and antiglobalization platform, promised to improve the lot of workers, and -- perhaps most importantly -- offered something many here in Calais and elsewhere in France crave: Change.
After decades of economic stagnation and high unemployment, regardless of which of the two traditional main parties -- Republican or Socialist -- were in power, voters in France are looking for something different.
And this Sunday, one way or the other, they’ll get it.
They are faced with a choice between Le Pen, who has spent years trying to make the xenophobic, anti-immigrant party her father founded “respectable” to mainstream voters, and Emmanuel Macron, a relative newcomer to politics, who has never held elected office and whose En Marche! movement didn’t exist 18 months ago.
Macron was a distant third in Calais, but came first across the country overall. He performed strongly in larger towns and cities, including the capital, Paris, where he handily beat more seasoned politicians, including the conservative Francois Fillon and leftwing firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon.
The Place de la Republique is at the heart of the people’s Paris. It is where Parisians come together to mourn in times of sadness -- mass protests were held here after the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack -- and celebrate in times of joy.
With the final round of the presidential election just days away, it is also where people come to debate and demonstrate. The statue at the center of the square, surrounded by flowers and candles after the Paris attacks, is now covered in political graffiti.
As May Day marchers prepared to set out from the square on Monday, Assan Kericha cooked kebabs and sausages on a food stall. He said he voted for Melenchon in the first round: “I don’t like the others, but this time I’ll vote for Macron -- of course -- to stop racism and to stop Le Pen.”
For Assam Kericha, a vote for Emmanuel Macron is a vote against racism.
Natassja Naguszewski set up an anti-Le Pen protest in the square on May Day, at which scores of campaigners wore masks combining Marine Le Pen’s hair with the face of her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, calling into question Le Pen’s attempts to sanitize his anti-Semitic legacy.
Naguszewski said she fears that, if Le Pen wins, France will become an insular police state, in which those considered “foreigners” are demonized. As well as trade union demonstrations, May 1 in Paris is also traditionally the day when people sell sprigs of lily of the valley in the street.
One such “muguet” vendor, who had set out her stall on the Champs-Elysees -- near where policeman Xavier Jugele was gunned down days before the first round vote -- said she was still deciding who to support, but wanted to back a candidate who would solve France’s unemployment and security issues.
The differences between Le Pen and Macron’s support bases demonstrate the deep divisions in society that France’s new president -- whoever he or she is -- will have to repair: urban versus rural, rich versus poor, elite versus working class.
A quick glance at a map of the first round results shows another divide too: east vs. west.