China Daily

Election key test for anti-EU sentiment

- XINHUA

ROME — France’s presidenti­al election will be a key test for anti-European Union sentiment and may affect the political equilibriu­m within the bloc, Italian analysts said.

Italian media have closely analyzed the major candidates and their respective programs over the past weeks, highlighti­ng their crucial strong points and potential weaknesses.

They also analyzed — as did many other media outlets in Europe — the reason for the emergence of the top four contenders, two euroskepti­cs and two who are committed to European integratio­n.

The latest poll shows that centrist Emmanuel Macron, far-right Marine Le Pen, conservati­ve Francois Fillon and leftist Jean-Luc Melenchon are the four front-runners.

Besides the terror threat, which was heightened after an attack on police on central Paris’ Champs-Elysee avenue some 60 hours before the polls opened, the attitude toward EU-related issues was seen as a decisive factor that could determine the final outcome.

“French (people) have to be convinced (by) immigratio­n and Europe,” Roberto D’ Alimonte, a political analyst with Italy’s leading business daily Il Sole 24 Ore, wrote on Friday.

Once, it was the leftright dimension that governed French citizens’ attitude towards political parties and their votes, he said.

“Now it is different: immigratio­n on the one hand, and Europe on the other hand, are the two issues that have changed the political space in France, and not only there,” he said.

However, the French presidency is not the only thing at stake in the race, since the impact of its outcome is likely to reach beyond France’s borders, said Edoardo Novelli, a sociologis­t and professor of political communicat­ion at University of Rome III.

He added that the French presidenti­al election “is being watched in Italy and elsewhere as a sort of a key test for the recent wave of anti-European sentiment, and for the rise of far-right movements in Europe.”

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