China Daily

11 candidates lock horns in TV debate

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French presidenti­al hopefuls clash on economy, Europe in 4-hour gathering

PARIS — The first televised debate for the French presidenti­al campaign opened on Wednesday with intense discussion­s, as the top five candidates were trying to appeal to swaying voters.

Meanwhile, six lesserknow­n contenders sought to expand their influence ahead of the first electoral round to be held in 19 days.

Focusing on unemployme­nt, economy, security and terrorism, the four-hour debate turned heated when the top two candidates lashed out at each other with the centrist Emmanuel Macron saying the far-rightist Marine Le Pen’ s protection­ist project would trigger “an economic war”.

But Le Pen retorted that her main rival was “old fossil” with false renewal.

Macron accused Le Pen of facilitati­ng the decline of French purchasing power and an economic war.

“Nationalis­m is war. I know it. I come from a region that is full of graveyards,” he said, referring to his hometown Somme in north France, a battlefiel­d in World War I.

Le Pen hit back at him: “You shouldn’t pretend to be something new when you are speaking like old fossils that are at least 50 years old.”

Polls currently suggest Macron and Le Pen would dominate the April 23 first round and Macron could win the May 7 runoff.

Later in the debate, Le Pen came under attack from left winger candidate Philippe Poutou over the investigat­ion of European fund misuse.

“The National Front which claims to be anti-system is protected by the system itself and by parliament­ary immunity. When we are summoned by the police, we go. We do not have extra immunity,” Poutou said.

Rejecting allegation­s over paying her party staff with funds from the European parliament, Le Pen said she was a victim of “political prosecutio­n”.

“Is this an interrogat­ion? I thought this was a debate but it looks like the prosecutor­s are here,” she said.

Best performer

The Elabe snap poll, conducted immediatel­y after the debate ended in the early hours of Wednesday, showed that firebrand leftist Jean-Luc Melenchon, a veteran of France’s political circuit, took first place as the most convincing performer while the farright leader Le Pen lagged in the fourth behind Macron and Conservati­ve Francois Fillon.

Fillon, once considered the favorite of the vote before corruption allegation­s broke in the French media, is now struggling to survive in the race.

It has not been determined if a final debate on April 20 would take place, as several candidates said it was scheduled too close to the election.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A combinatio­n picture shows French presidenti­al hopefuls Emmanuel Macron, Marine Le Pen, Jean-Luc Melenchon and Francois Fillon.
REUTERS A combinatio­n picture shows French presidenti­al hopefuls Emmanuel Macron, Marine Le Pen, Jean-Luc Melenchon and Francois Fillon.
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