Malta Independent

Fillon’s wife Penelope says she did work

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The wife of French presidenti­al candidate Francois Fillon has said that she did carry out parliament­ary work for him, for which she was paid.

“He needed someone that carried out his tasks,” Penelope Fillon told a newspaper, rejecting allegation­s she was paid without actually working.

As calls mount for him to quit, he is due to attend a big rally near the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

His Republican party has brought forward crisis talks to today.

The former prime minister has seen his popularity slip in opinion polls.

“If it hadn’t been me, he would have paid someone else to do it, so we decided that it would be me,” Mrs Fillon told French magazine Journal du Dimanche. “Everything was legal and declared.”

Mrs Fillon said that she has repeatedly told her husband to “go all the way” but said that the final decision would be down to him.

She urged supporters of her husband to get behind him in his presidenti­al campaign and not to give up.

Speaking to supporters in Paris on Saturday as he marked his 63rd birthday, Mr Fillon said that those attacking him over his presidenti­al bid were “trying to kill a desire for change”.

The latest opinion polls suggest that he would be eliminated in the first round of presidenti­al election voting on 23 April, with far-right leader Marine Le Pen and liberal Emmanuel Macron likely to progress to contest the election runoff on 7 May.

A survey published in Journal du Dimanche suggests that 71% of those polled want Mr Fillon to step down.

In another blow to Mr Fillon’s campaign, his spokesman announced on Friday that he was quitting.

Thierry Solere’s resignatio­n is one of a slew of notable departures, including the campaign treasurer on Thursday.

Mr Fillon’s woes have raised speculatio­n that Alain Juppe, also a former prime minister, could return to the race if he were to pull out.

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