Kuwait Times

French presidency fight hits final stretch with TV showdown

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PARIS, France: Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen braced for a televised debate Wednesday that is likely to prove the climax of this year’s turbulent French presidenti­al campaign, with millions of votes still up for grabs just four days before polls open.

The centrist incumbent and his far-right rival will trade blows starting at 9:00 pm (1900 GMT), a rematch of their 2017 faceoff that was widely seen as disastrous for Le Pen. But this time Macron will not be the outsider making his first run at public office-he will have a five-year record to defend against a candidate who has softened her extremist edges to present a more mainstream image.

Recent polls give Macron the advantage, at 53 to 56 percent against 44 to 47 percent for Le Pen, who is making her third run at the presidency, though analysts say turnout could still sharply sway the final result.

Participat­ion in the first round of voting was just 74 percent, meaning one in four eligible voters stayed home, a pool that both candidates are eager to motivate. In addition, the fiery hard-left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon scored nearly 22 percent in the first round, and he has refused to urge his supporters to vote for Macron in order to keep Le Pen out of the Elysee Palace.

The decisions by those left-leaning voters-many of whom have expressed a visceral rejection of Macron’s policies-could prove crucial. Looking ahead to parliament­ary elections in June, often deemed the “third round” in France’s electoral system, Melenchon on Tuesday called for a leftwing alliance that would deny either Macron or Le Pen a majority and potentiall­y set him up as prime minister. “I will be prime minister, not because Macron or Le Pen want it, but because the French will have elected me,” he told BFM television.

 ?? ?? LA PLAINE-SAINT-DENIS, France: File photo shows French journalist­s and TV hosts Christophe Jakubyszyn (L) and Nathalie Saint-Cricq pose on the TV set installed in a studio, in La Plaine Saint Denis, outside Paris, on the eve of a face-to-face TV debate where French presidenti­al candidates will debate as part of their campaign for the second round. —AFP
LA PLAINE-SAINT-DENIS, France: File photo shows French journalist­s and TV hosts Christophe Jakubyszyn (L) and Nathalie Saint-Cricq pose on the TV set installed in a studio, in La Plaine Saint Denis, outside Paris, on the eve of a face-to-face TV debate where French presidenti­al candidates will debate as part of their campaign for the second round. —AFP

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