Business World

Macron tops opinion polls as voting begins in France

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PARIS — After a tumultuous election campaign filled with scandal and surprises, the French public began to vote on Sunday on whether a pro-European Union (EU) centrist or an anti-EU, anti-immigratio­n far-rightist will lead them for the next five years.

Opinion polls indicate they will pick Emmanuel Macron, a 39-year-old execonomy minister who wants to bridge the left-right divide, resisting an antiestabl­ishment tide that has seen Britons vote to leave the EU and Americans choose Donald Trump as US president.

But should an upset occur and National Front candidate Marine Le Pen win, the very future of the EU could be on the line.

Mr. Macron, who wants to deregulate the economy and deepen EU integratio­n, has a 23- to 26-percentage-point lead over Ms. Le Pen in the opinion polls.

Forecasts proved accurate for the presidenti­al election’s first round last month, and markets have risen in response to Mr. Macron’s widening lead over his rival after a bitter television debate on Wednesday.

“We increased our equity exposure and added some French stocks after the first round. The major political risk of a Le Pen victory appears to be disappeari­ng,” said Francois Savary, chief investment officer at Geneva-based fund management firm Prime Partners.

In a campaign that has seen favorites drop out of the race one after the other, Ms. Le Pen, who wants to close borders, ditch the euro currency and clamp down on migration, is neverthele­ss closer to elected power than the far right has ever been in Western Europe since World War II.

Even if opinion polls prove accurate and France elects its youngest president ever rather than its first female leader, Mr. Macron himself has said himself he expects no honeymoon period.

Abstention could be high, and close to 60% of those who plan to vote for Mr. Macron say they will do so to stop Ms. Le Pen from being elected to lead the euro zone’s second-largest economy rather than because they fully agree with the former bankerturn­ed-politician.

MORE ELECTIONS TO COME

Sunday’s election will in any case not end the battle between mainstream and more radical policies in France, with parliament­ary elections next month equally crucial.

Once the presidenti­al ballot is over, attention will switch to whether the winner will be able to get a majority in parliament, with one poll this week showing that such a majority was within reach for Mr. Macron.

Much will also depend on both the candidates’ score on Sunday. Ms. Le Pen’s niece, Marion Marechal-Le Pen, on Thursday told L’Opinion daily that a 40% score would already be “a huge victory” for the National Front.

Whoever wins will spell a new chapter in French politics. The major left-wing and right-wing parties — the Socialist Party and The Republican­s — that have ruled France for decades both suffered humiliatin­g defeats in the election’s first round.

The campaign was hit by yet another surprise on Friday night just before the quiet period which forbids politician­s from commenting started. Mr. Macron’s team said a massive hack had dumped e-mails, documents and campaign-financing informatio­n online.

Pollsters will publish initial estimates at 8 p.m. (1800 GMT), once all polling stations are closed.

More than 50,000 police officers will be on duty. Security will be a prime concern in the wake of a series of militant attacks in Paris, Nice and elsewhere in the past few years that have killed more than 230 people. —

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