The Jerusalem Post

Macron consolidat­es lead over Le Pen in French election polls

- • By LEIGH THOMAS and SUDIP KAR-GUPTA

PARIS (Reuters) – Centrist Emmanuel Macron saw his position as favorite to win France’s presidenti­al election boosted on Thursday in two polls, with one showing him ahead of far-right leader Marine Le Pen in the first round of the two-stage contest.

A monthly Cevipof survey, seen as the most authoritat­ive because it has a far bigger sample size than most polls, put Le Pen well ahead in the April 23 first round, though Macron was seen easily beating her in a May 7 runoff.

However, a Harris Interactiv­e poll showed Macron winning the first round with 26% of votes, with Le Pen taking second place on 25%, setting him up to trounce her in the runoff with a score of 65%.

It was the second poll in the space of a week that put the 39-year-old ahead of Le Pen in the opening round, a signal that the centrist former economy minister may be consolidat­ing his position 45 days from the first stage of the contest.

The polls coincided with the release of a research note from Credit Suisse bank that said the risk of a win for Le Pen, who wants to restore the French franc currency, is exaggerate­d.

The race remains difficult to call, however, after a string of surprises, including Socialist incumbent FranÇois Hollande’s decision not to seek a second term, and shock wins in primaries for contenders the pollsters had ruled out.

Additional­ly, financial scandals have engulfed Le Pen and conservati­ve FranÇois Fillon, who after his surprise victory in the primary of the Republican­s Party was the clear poll favorite to become president as recently as January.

The Cevipof poll for Le Monde showed Le Pen with 27% of votes in the first round, up one percentage point from last month, with Macron stable at 23% and Fillon gaining 1 point to 19.5%.

Fillon had 17.5% when the poll was initially conducted on March 1 through 5, but his score improved as pollsters surveyed an additional thousand people after he held a major rally in Paris and his party decided to keep backing him.

After a series of resignatio­ns, Fillon’s team announced senior appointmen­ts on Thursday to try to shore up his campaign, including former minister FranÇois Baroin in the special role of unifying the increasing­ly fragmented Republican­s Party.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? EMMANUEL MACRON, head of the political movement ‘En Marche!’ or ‘Onwards!’ and candidate in the presidenti­al election, attends a meeting for Women’s Day in Paris on Wednesday.
(Reuters) EMMANUEL MACRON, head of the political movement ‘En Marche!’ or ‘Onwards!’ and candidate in the presidenti­al election, attends a meeting for Women’s Day in Paris on Wednesday.

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