The Scotsman

Candidates come out swinging in heated presidenti­al debate

Macron warns that a win by farright would lead France to civil war

- By JOHN LEICESTER In Paris

presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron used a televised debate to warn that his far-right rival Marine Le Pen would lead France to civil war and give Islamic extremists what they want by infringing on the rights of Muslims.

Last night’s debate saw Ms Le Pen accuse Mr Macron of being complacent on extremism. Mr Macron countered: “What the terrorists expect, it’s civil war, it’s division, it’s heinous speech.”

Ms Le Pen has pledged to shut down a powerful fundamenta­list federation linked to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and known as the Union of Islamic Organisati­ons in France.

Mr Macron insisted he would be “inflexible” and “fight against Islamic terrorism on every front” without exacerbati­ng the problem.

France’s presidenti­al candidates last night debated in their only televised one-to-one before the run-off election.

The former leader of the National Front party, Marine Le Pen, and independen­t centrist Emmanuel Macron sat at a table facing each other, with photos of the Elysee Palace projected behind them.

They were being questioned in the debate by two journalist­s from TF1 and France 2, the country’s major television channels.

Both candidates came out swinging in their opening remarks.

Mr Macron said the populist Ms Le Pen, daughter of former extreme-right leader Jean-marie Le Pen, “prospers on the anger of the French”.

She tore into Mr Macron as an ally of the world of finance and declared herself “the canfrench didate of the people, of the France that we love”.

Ms Len Pen said her centrist rival is the candidate of buying, not buying power.

She told the former economy minister and investment banker: “I’m the candidate of buying power. You’re the candidate of buying, buying up France.”

The nationalis­t Ms Le Pen’s campaign is being watched as a barometer of the appeal of populist politician­s in Europe.

The debate was seen as a last best chance to put their opposite visions and plans for France to the cohort of undecided electors who could sway Sunday’s vote.

They sat opposite each other at a round table. He rested his chin on his hands while she spoke.

The debate offered risk and reward for both. A major trip-up or meltdown beamed direct into the homes of millions of electors could dent their presidenti­al ambitions in the closing stages of the intense campaign that has already steered France into uncharted territory.

The first round of voting on 23 April eliminated mainstream parties from the left and right and propelled Mr Macron, a centrist with no major party backing, and the far-right’s Ms Le Pen into the winner-takes-all run-off.

For both candidates, the meticulous­ly calibrated TV face-off, organised in close collaborat­ion with their campaign teams and held in a studio in northern Paris, was a first.

Ms Le Pen finished third in the last presidenti­al election in 2012, locking her out of the traditiona­l TV debate reserved for the top two vote-getters between rounds one and two.

Mr Macron, a former investment banker and economy minister for outgoing Socialist president Francois Hollande, is running his first-ever campaign for elected office.

 ??  ?? 0 Marine Le Pen and Emmanuel Macron before the final debate
0 Marine Le Pen and Emmanuel Macron before the final debate

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