Chattanooga Times Free Press

Marine Le Pen draws cheers in Macron’s hometown, he gets boos

- BY AURELIEN BREEDEN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

PARIS — France’s presidenti­al contest moved on Wednesday to an unlikely arena: a tumble dryer factory in the country’s north where, if the far-right candidate, Marine Le Pen, did not quite humiliate her rival, Emmanuel Macron, she sure upstaged him.

Workers at the plant, run by Whirlpool in Macron’s hometown, Amiens, have been striking to prevent the factory from closing. Far from being welcomed as a favored son, Macron was jeered and booed by a hostile crowd as tires burned, while Le Pen paid a surprise visit and was greeted with hugs and selfies as activists with her National Front party distribute­d croissants.

Their separate visits, covered live on French television, showed how Le Pen’s antiglobal­ization message resonates in regions struggling with factory closings and the loss of jobs, as well as the hostility that many workers feel for Macron, a centrist former investment banker who wants to loosen labor rules.

The contrastin­g styles, policy approaches and loyalties of the candidates, who face each other in a runoff election on May 7, were on full display.

Macron met first with a few union representa­tives from the factory at the local chamber of commerce; Le Pen beat him to the plant itself.

Macron said he could not stop companies from firing workers, but he would fight to find a buyer for the plant or to retrain workers. Le Pen promised to save the plant and the nearly 300 jobs there that are supposed to be shifted to Poland next year, and said she would discourage companies from moving jobs abroad with a 35 percent tax on any products imported from plants that are outsourced from France.

One of Macron’s supporters, the writer and economist Jacques Attali, said in an interview on French television the case of the Whirlpool factory was an “anecdote,” meaning a detail in the wider context of France’s economy.

“The president of the Republic isn’t here to fix every individual case,” Attali said.

Of course, it was no detail to the people who work there, and campaign officials for Macron had to scramble to distance themselves from the comments.

It was just one example of how Macron, 39, who has never held elected office and is running against a political veteran, was on the back foot all day.

 ??  ?? Emmanuel Macron
Emmanuel Macron

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