Lodi News-Sentinel

Candidates rally in Paris as French elections draw near

- By Sylvie Corbet and Angela Charlton

PARIS — As France’s unpredicta­ble presidenti­al campaign nears its finish with no clear front-runner, centrist candidate Emmanuel Macron and far-right leader Marine Le Pen hope to rally big crowds in Paris with their rival visions for Europe’s future.

Meanwhile, far-left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon, enjoying a late poll surge, is campaignin­g on a barge Monday floating through the canals of Paris. And conservati­ve candidate Francois Fillon is taking his tough-on-security campaign to the southern French city of Nice, which was scarred by a deadly truck attack last year that killed 86 people.

The race is being watched internatio­nally as an important gauge of populist sentiment, and the outcome is increasing­ly uncertain just six days before Sunday’s first round vote.

Le Pen’s nationalis­t rhetoric and Melenchon’s anti-globalizat­ion campaign have resonated with French voters sick of the status quo. Macron, meanwhile, is painting himself as an anti-establishm­ent figure seeking to bury the traditiona­l left-right spectrum that has governed France for decades.

The top two vote-getters Sunday of the 11 candidates on the ballot advance to the May 7 presidenti­al runoff. The latest polls suggest that Le Pen, Macron, Melenchon and Fillon all have a chance of reaching the runoff — and as many as a third of voters remain undecided.

Macron, a former investment banker well connected in the business world, held a rally in Paris on Monday attended by 20,000 people, according to organizers.

Advocating for strong pro-European views, he has pledged to represent an “open, confident, winning France” in contrast with far-right and far-left rivals.

Without naming them, he said Le Pen and Melenchon want to isolate France form the rest of the world.

“We feel everywhere the temptation of barbarism ready to surge in other guises ... No, we will not let them do it,” he said.

He also made an implicit reference to Fillon by suggesting some are seeking the presidency to get judicial immunity.

Fillon’s austerity-focused campaign has been damaged by accusation­s that he misused taxpayer money to pay his wife and children for government jobs that they allegedly did not perform. French investigat­ors are probing the case.

Fillon denies wrongdoing and is focusing instead on security issues that resonate with many voters after two years of deadly attacks across the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States