Macron, Le Pen in final push for votes after fiery debate
PARIS: President Emmanuel Macron and far-right rival Marine Le Pen on Thursday launched a final push for votes in working class heartlands of France after a pre-election debate marked by bitter clashes.
The televised debate on Wednesday evening - a pivotal moment ahead of Sunday’s runoff vote - was marked by a highly aggressive performance by Macron, who lost no opportunity to attack his opponent throughout the marathon threehour session.
Le Pen chose a more cautious approach, making every effort not to be ruffled by the incoming fire and clearly mindful not to repeat her flustered appearance in a 2017 debate that was widely derided as a fiasco.
Le Pen is contending to be the first far-right leader of France and Macron the first French president to win a second term since Jacques Chirac in 2002.
“Macron on the attack, Le Pen on the defensive,” headlined the Le Parisien daily in its Thursday edition.
Polls show Macron has a clear advantage over Le Pen of some 10 percentage points but allies warn nothing is in the bag due to the large number of undecided voters.
Brice Teinturier, directorgeneral of the Ipsos polling group, told France 2 television that in a “relentless” debate performance, Macron had tried to portray Le Pen as both dangerous and potentially incompetent, adopting an often “condescending” tone.
Macron sought to land a direct hit on Le Pen against the background of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine by focusing on a loan her party had taken from a Czech-Russian bank ahead of the 2017 presidential election.
“When you speak to Russia you are speaking to your banker,” he said, accusing his rival of being “dependent” on Russian President Vladimir Putin. Le Pen replied that her party had only taken that loan because it could not find financing in France, where banks refused to lend to her.
The most explosive clash came when Le Pen confirmed she was sticking to her controversial policy of banning the wearing of the Islamic headscarf by women in public, describing it as a “uniform imposed by Islamists”.
Macron responded: “You are going to cause a civil war if you do that. I say this sincerely.”
She also sought to put heat on the president, mocking him as a “Mozart of finance” who had left the economy in a poor state and a “climate hypocrite” whose environmental credentials were a sham. “It’s not Gerard Majax (on TV) this evening,” retorted Macron, referring to a wellknown French television conjurer. “You never explain how you will finance your projects and you are not honest with people.”