Chicago Sun-Times

Paris attack may aid far- right candidate

Two hopefuls in race to succeed France’s Hollande promise to fight extremism

- Maya Vidon and Jabeen Bhatti

A terror attack three days before PARIS France’s presidenti­al election left voters on edge, a mood that could boost farright candidate Marine Le Pen, who wants to crack down on immigratio­n.

“I think it will have a subliminal psychologi­cal impact on some people,” said Alexis Madelenat, a tech senior executive in Paris.

Le Pen and Republican candidate François Fillon, both strong anti- terrorism candidates, “will benefit from this,” said Madelenat, 42, who favors independen­t candidate Emmanuel Macron, a centrist who narrowly led Le Pen and Fillon in recent polls.

The top two vote- getters Sunday will compete in a May 7 runoff to replace Socialist President François Hollande, who is not running. His approval rating is low because of the high unemployme­nt rate and the government’s inability to thwart terror attacks over the past 18months.

Thursday, a French national identified by news outlets as Karim Cheurfi, 39, fatally shot one police officer and wounded two others and a bystander on the famed Champs- Elysees in central Paris before he was killed by police. The Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

Cheurfi had been detained this year for threatenin­g a police officer but was released for lack of evidence, the French newspaper Le Monde reported.

As news of Thursday’s attack spread, the presidenti­al candidates suspended their campaigns, and the government said it would heighten security Sunday.

“Nothing must hamper this ( vote),” Prime Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said Friday after a meeting to examine the government’s already- heightened security plans, which include almost 60,000 police and soldiers.

“Barbarity and cowardice struck Paris last night,” he said. “We must not succumb to fear.”

Yet fear — and demands for a solution to end the attacks — may decide the election’s outcome.

President Trump tweeted Friday, “Another terrorist attack in Paris. The people of France will not take much more of this. Will have a big effect on presidenti­al election!”

Le Pen, leader of the National Front, may be the biggest beneficiar­y because she has called for restrictio­ns on Muslim immigratio­n and expulsion of those suspected of radical Islamist views.

“Enough of being lax, time to stop being naive,” she said on French radio RFI Friday. She assailed “radical Islam,” call- ing it “a monstrous, totalitari­an ideology that has declared war on our nation, on reason, on civilizati­on.”

Le Pen wants to pull France out of the European Union and close the borders to new immigrants.

Fillon, a former prime minister who had been the front- runner before a scandal involving alleged phantom government jobs for his family, said he would continue a state of emergency instituted in 2015 and crack down on extremism. “The fight for the French people’s freedom and security will be mine,” he said.

Macron said he is the candidate to lead France at this anxious time. “The terrorists’ will is to destabiliz­e the country,” he said. “In such circumstan­ces, the role of the president of the republic as the army chief and guardian of our institutio­ns is to protect the French. I am ready.”

 ?? LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Presidenti­al hopefulMar­ine Le Pen has assailed “radical Islam” and wants to curb immigratio­n.
LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Presidenti­al hopefulMar­ine Le Pen has assailed “radical Islam” and wants to curb immigratio­n.

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