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Main French parties have little to celebrate

NATIONAL FRONT’S NUMBERS TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT

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France’s far-right National Front (FN) might have failed to win a single region in elections, but its high score ties the hands of the two main parties with presidenti­al elections 16 months away, observers said yesterday.

The anti-immigratio­n party’s hopes of winning control of its first region were dashed on Sunday as voters turned out in force and switched their support to the centre-right Republican­s and the Socialists of President Francois Hollande.

Despite being relegated to third place, the FN recorded its best-ever electoral score with 6.8 million votes.

The party’s leader, Marine Le Pen, blasted the blocking tactics of the main parties and told supporters: “Nothing can stop us now.”

“By tripling our number of councillor­s, we will be the main opposition force in most of the regions of France,” she said.

The FN had led in six of 13 regions after the first round on December 6, propelled by anger over the moribund economy and fears sparked by last month’s militant attacks in Paris that left 130 dead.

Back in the game

But on Sunday, the centrerigh­t alliance of former president Nicolas Sarkozy took seven regions and the ruling Socialists won in five.

Key to the victory over the FN was the Socialists’ decision to withdraw their candidates in the northern region where Le Pen was standing and in the south where her 26-yearold niece Marion Marechal Le Pen led the FN list.

That avoided diluting the vote and gave the centrerigh­t candidates a clear run. Analysts said the traditiona­l parties had little to celebrate. “The dam has held for the time being, but the FN is making consistent progress in this country and at some point, the dam is going to break,” political analyst Stephane Rozes of the CAP think tank said.

The reverse from the first round of voting on December 6 was stark — Marine Le Pen scored just over 42 per cent in the economical­ly depressed Nord-Pas-de-Calais-Picardie compared to nearly 58 per cent for her centre-right rival Xavier Bertrand.

Yet in the first round she had scored 15 per cent more than him.

True barometer of success

In Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur on the south coast, the younger Le Pen was beaten by her centre-right rival by nearly 55 per cent to 45 per cent.

She had taken a commanding lead in the first round.

A former conservati­ve prime minister, Francois Fillon, warned that Sunday’s results “cannot wipe away December 6, which remains the true barometer of the state of the country.”

The left-leaning Liberation newspaper said in an editorial that it was fear of the farright which had mobilised the left, rather than any renewed enthusiasm for the Socialists. The editorial urged the political class to come up with fresh ideas — and fast. “We have a year to begin rehabilita­ting political action [in France],” it said.

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