Montreal Gazette

Hollande plays to far right

Front-runner would uphold ban on veils, limit immigratio­n

- ALEXANDRIA SAGE REUTERS

PARIS – Presidenti­al front-runner François Hollande gave nods to farright voters who could decide the outcome of the election, saying on Friday he would limit immigratio­n during an economic crisis and uphold a ban on women wearing veils in public.

Hollande, a Socialist, is on course to win a May 6 run-off against centre-right President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Sarkozy’s only hope for victory is to win over the record number of voters who picked the far-right National Front in the first round on Sunday.

The president has swung hard to the right on immigratio­n and Islam in the week since National Front leader Marine Le Pen won 17.9 per cent of the first-round vote. Hollande has said National Front voters should be listened to, but has been reluctant to court them openly.

“In a period of crisis, which we are experienci­ng, limiting economic immigratio­n is necessary and essential,” he said.

Hollande answered evasively when asked repeatedly on primetime television on Thursday whether he thought there were too many foreigners in France, as Sarkozy and Le Pen have both proclaimed in campaign speeches.

Clarifying his position after his evasions drew criticism, he told RTL radio on Friday that if elected, he would have parliament fix an annual quota for non-european Union foreigners coming to France to take up jobs.

“There will always be legal immigratio­n. Can the number be reduced? That’s the debate,” Hollande said, noting Sarkozy had already reduced the government’s annual target for economic migrants to 20,000 from 30,000.

“In my view, that’s the kind of level that would apply in times of crisis. In any case, the numbers will be managed.”

Hollande also said he would uphold and enforce a ban on all-enveloping Muslim veils, known as the niqab or burqa, even though he abstained in a 2010 parliament­ary vote when Sarkozy proposed the law.

His comment seemed designed to counter attempts by Sarkozy to paint him as soft on radical Islam, notably by alleging that a Swiss Muslim scholar had endorsed Hollande for president. The scholar, Tariq Ramadan, has denied backing a candidate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada