The Denver Post

Macron, Le Pen will face off for president

- By John Leicester and Sylvie Corbet

PARIS » Incumbent Emmanuel Macron will face far-right nationalis­t Marine Le Pen in a winner-takes-all runoff for the French presidency, after they both advanced Sunday in the first round of voting in the country’s election to set up another head-to-head clash of their sharply opposing visions for France.

But while Macron won their last contest in 2017 by a landslide to become France’s youngest-ever president, the same outcome this time is far from guaranteed. Macron, now 44, emerged ahead from Sunday’s first round, but the runoff is essentiall­y a new election and the next two weeks of campaignin­g to the April 24 second-round vote promise to be bruising and confrontat­ional against his 53-year-old political nemesis.

Le Pen was rewarded Sunday at the ballot box for her years-long effort to rebrand herself as more pragmatic and less extreme. Macron has accused Le Pen of pushing an extremist manifesto of racist, ruinous policies. Le Pen wants to roll back some rights for Muslims, banning them from wearing headscarve­s in public, and to drasticall­y reduce immigratio­n from outside Europe.

On Sunday, she racked up her best-ever first-round tally of votes. With most votes counted, Macron had just more than 27% and Le Pen had just under 24%. Hard-left leader Jean-luc Melenchon was third, missing out on the two-candidate runoff, with close to 22%.

Macron also improved on his first-round showing in 2017, despite his presidency being rocked by an almost unrelentin­g series of both domestic and internatio­nal crises. They include Russia’s war in Ukraine that overshadow­ed the election and diverted his focus from the campaign.

With polling suggesting that the runoff against Le Pen could be close, Macron immediatel­y started throwing his energies into the battle.

Addressing supporters Sunday night who chanted “five more years,” Macron warned that “nothing is done” and said the runoff campaign will be “decisive for our country and for Europe.”

Le Pen said the second round presents voters with “a fundamenta­l choice between two opposing visions of the future: Either the division, injustice and disorder imposed by Emmanuel Macron to the benefit of the few, or the uniting of French people around social justice and protection.”

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