Oman Daily Observer

Macron, Le Pen still lead presidenti­al election

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PARIS: Centrist Emmanuel Macron and far-right leader Marine Le Pen still hold a firm lead over the pack in France’s presidenti­al election, polls show, with a surging left-winger becoming a wild card in the race.

An Opinionway poll on Thursday showed Le Pen and Macron taking 25 and 24 per cent of the first round vote respective­ly, with the ex-banker beating the National Front leader by 60 to her 40 per cent in the runoff — a scenario largely unchanged in polls since mid-February.

But while scandal-hit conservati­ve candidate Francois Fillon was holding on to third place, 65-year-old Jean-Luc Melenchon, a veteran far-left maverick, has moved up fast in the ratings.

A Harris Interactiv­e poll of voting intentions showed support for Melenchon climbing to 17 per cent in the first round from 13.5 per cent two weeks ago, after a televised candidates’ debate on Tuesday night when he was rated the star performer.

The Harris poll had Fillon, whose campaign has struggled as he seeks to defend himself from nepotism allegation­s, holding steady on 18 per cent.

Though Opinionway gave Fil- lon a higher, unchanged rating of 20 per cent, it also had Melenchon on a higher rating of 16 per cent, up one percentage point on its previous poll.

The two-stage election will be held on April 23 and May 7.

Macron, a pro-European former economy minister in Hollande’s government, seeks to transcend the traditiona­l left-right divide in French politics and boost economic recovery by reducing public spending and cutting taxes to help business innovate

Le Pen wants to curb immigratio­n, ditch the euro and bring back the franc, and hold a referendum on European Union membership.

Though it would take a collapse of the official Socialist candidate Benoit Hamon’s campaign to make Melenchon a real contender for power, his surge in popularity complicate­s the calculatio­n in an unpredicta­ble contest in which more than one third of voters are still undecided.

A political showman who excoriates establishm­ent politician­s with his rapid-fire discourse, Melenchon was seen by pollsters as the most convincing performer in the four-hour TV debate that was watched by more than six million people.

He clashed with Le Pen during the debate over her focus on the tensions created by religion in politics, but his policies advocating greater worker protection, and his hostility to the European Union in its current form, are similar to hers.

He would also pull France out of Nato and called during the debate for the debt of troubled euro zone states to be effectivel­y written off to allow massive new investment to spur growth.

Founder of the “France Unbowed” party, he has split the left-wing vote and turned the Socialists into alsorans after five years of unpopular rule by Socialist President Francois Hollande.

Melenchon appears to be gaining votes from Hamon, who is struggling to stay above a 10 per cent rating in the polls, but he is also getting votes from further afield.

Gianni Pierson, 38, from the staunchly conservati­ve town of Provins where Fillon campaigned on Wednesday, had traditiona­lly voted on the right, and plumped for ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy at the last election in 2012.

 ?? — AFP ?? Emmanuel Macron’s stepdaught­er Tiphaine Auzière poses next to an electoral poster of Emmanuel Macron, prior to the distributi­on of leaflets in the streets of Le Touquet on Thursday.
— AFP Emmanuel Macron’s stepdaught­er Tiphaine Auzière poses next to an electoral poster of Emmanuel Macron, prior to the distributi­on of leaflets in the streets of Le Touquet on Thursday.

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