Chattanooga Times Free Press

France elects Macron

- BY JOHN LEICESTER AND SYLVIE CORBET

French centrist candidate Emmanuel Macron, center, waves after casting his ballot in the presidenti­al runoff election Sunday in Le Touquet, France. Marcon won decisively against a far-right opponent who had vowed to take France out of the European Union.

PARIS — Ripping up France’s political map, French voters elected centrist Emmanuel Macron as the country’s youngest president ever Sunday, delivering a resounding victory to the unabashedl­y pro-European former investment banker and strengthen­ing France’s place as a central pillar of the European Union.

A jubilant crowd of Macron supporters roared with delight at the news, waving red, white and blue tricolor flags at a victory party outside the Louvre Museum in Paris.

Marine Le Pen, his far-right opponent in the presidenti­al runoff, quickly called the 39-year-old Macron to concede defeat after voters rejected her “French-first” nationalis­m by a large margin. Macron, in a solemn televised victory speech, vowed to heal the social divisions exposed by France’s acrimoniou­s election campaign and bring “hope and renewed confidence” to the country.

“A new page in our long history is opening,” he declared.

The result wasn’t even close: Pollsters projected that Macron won 65 percent of the votes. Le Pen’s projected 35 percent score dashed her hopes that the populist wave which swept Donald Trump into the White House and led Britain to vote to leave the EU would also carry her to France’s presidenti­al Elysee Palace.

Macron’s victory marked the third time in six months — following elections in Austria and the Netherland­s — that European voters shot down far-right populists who wanted to restore borders across Europe. The election of a French president who championed European unity could also strengthen the EU’s hand in its complex divorce proceeding­s with Britain.

Minutes after the last polls closed Sunday night, Prime Minister Bernard Cazeneuve announced Macron’s victory.

“[This] testifies to the lucidity of the voters, who rejected the deadly project of the extreme right,” Cazeneuve said.

Many French voters backed Macron reluctantl­y, not because they agreed with his politics but simply to keep the far-right Le Pen and her National Front party out, fearing its long anti-Semitic and racist history.

After the most closely watched and unpredicta­ble French presidenti­al campaign in recent memory, many voters rejected the runoff choice altogether. Pollsters projected French voters cast blank or spoiled ballots in record numbers Sunday.

Macron now becomes not only France’s youngestev­er president but also one of its most unlikely. Until now, modern France had been governed either by the Socialists or the conservati­ves — but both Macron and Le Pen upended that right-left political tradition.

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People wave French flags to celebrate the election of Emmanuel Macron on Sunday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People wave French flags to celebrate the election of Emmanuel Macron on Sunday.

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