Cape Argus

France’s National Front beaten at polls

Far-right fails to secure single region after dominating first round of voting

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MARINE Le Pen’s far-right National Front collapsed in French regional elections on Sunday, failing to take a single region after dominating the first round of voting, pollsters said. The conservati­ves surged against the governing Socialists, changing the political map of France.

The failure of the National Front to gain any of the six regions where it was leading didn’t stop the anti-immigratio­n party from looking to the 2017 presidenti­al election, Le Pen’s ultimate goal.

Le Pen had been riding high after extremist attacks and an unpreceden­ted wave of migration into Europe, and the party came out on top in the voting in France’s 13 newly drawn regions in the first round a week ago. But projection­s by France’s major polling firms suggested the party lost in all of the regions on Sunday, including decisive losses for both Le Pen and her popular niece.

“Here we stopped the progressio­n of the National Front,” said conservati­ve Xavier Bertrand, who was projected to beat Le Pen in the Nord-Pas de Calais region.

Le Pen supporters in a hall in the gritty northern town of Henin-Beaumont booed his image on a big screen as he spoke.

The atmosphere was grim, in stark contrast to a week earlier when Le Pen won more than 40 percent of the vote and was more than 15 points ahead of Bertrand.

The tables turned on Sunday as Bertrand beat Le Pen by nearly 15 points.

Le Pen struck an upbeat tone despite the rout, pledging to keep fighting to expand support for her party.

She said she would in the coming weeks “rally all the French, of all origins, who want to join us”.

“Nothing will stop us,” she told cheering supporters.

Le Pen won 42.8 percent compared with Bertrand’s 57 percent, according to the Interior Ministry.

Le Pen’s niece, Marion Marechal-Le Pen, took 46 percent in the southern ProvenceAl­pes-Cote d’Azur region, compared with 53.7 percent for conservati­ve Nice mayor Christian Estrosi.

The conservati­ves were boosted to victory in the two Le Pen races with help from the Socialists who withdrew their candidates, asking voters to give their ballots to the

TUESDAY DECEMBER 15

2015 mainstream rival. Turnout rose sharply from the first round, suggesting that many voters wanted to prevent the once-pariah National Front from gaining power.

In all, the conservati­ve Republican­s took seven regions, and the Socialists won five, interior ministry results showed.

Among prizes falling to the conservati­ves was the Paris region, long a Socialist bastion.

A nationalis­t not affiliated with a major party won Corsica.

Le Pen denounced the “campaign of calumny decided in the palaces of the (French) Republic”, a reference to fear tactics by rivals, including Prime Minister Manuel Valls who said the National Front could lead the nation into “civil war”.

Turnout was 7 percent higher than for the previous regional elections in 2010, with 50.4 percent of those eligible to vote casting ballots by 5pm, three hours before polls closed in big cities, according to the interior ministry. The figures weren’t updated.

The second-round turnout at the same time five years ago was 43. 4 percent.

In the past, the National Front has performed well in first-round votes but failed to carry through in the final round.

That reflects a fear of allowing a party associated with extremism to take power.

Despite its loss, the National Front sent a message to the French. – AP

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? SOCIALLY: French far-right political party National Front’s Marine Le Pen poses for a selfie while photograph­ers fight for pictures after she cast her vote.
PICTURE: EPA SOCIALLY: French far-right political party National Front’s Marine Le Pen poses for a selfie while photograph­ers fight for pictures after she cast her vote.
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