France’s candidates get in last shots
PARIS — Far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen said Friday she believes she can pull off a surprise victory in France’s highstakes runoff Sunday, while independent front-runner Emmanuel Macron accused her of exploiting voter fears.
In an interview with The Associated Press in the final hours of a hostile, topsy-turvy campaign, Le Pen said that win or lose, “we changed everything.” She claimed an “ideological victory” for her populist, anti-immigrant worldview in an election that could change Europe’s direction.
Macron acknowledged the French are exasperated by the government’s ineffectiveness, but he dismissed Le Pen’s vision of an infuriated country.
She “speaks for no one. … Madame Le Pen exploits anger and hatred,” Macron told RTL radio.
The pro-business Macron said he has not bowed to pressure to change his platform to appeal to a broader electorate — on the left or the right — since winning the first round of the presidential election on April 23. He told the news website Mediapart that would not have been “democratcally honest.”
The candidates must
stop campaigning at midnight Friday to give voters a day of reflection before the election. It’s a stark choice: Le Pen’s anti-immigration, anti-European Union platform, or Macron’s progressive, pro-EU stance.
Tensions marred the race right to the end.
France’s presidential voting watchdog called on the Interior Ministry late Friday to look into claims by the Le Pen campaign that ballot papers are being tampered with nationwide to benefit Macron. The Le Pen campaign said electoral administrators in several
regions who receive ballot papers for both candidates have found the Le Pen ballot “systematically torn up.”
Earlier in the day, anti-Le Pen crowds disrupted her visit to a renowned cathedral in Reims.
The presidential campaign has been unusually bitter, with voters hurling eggs and flour, protesters clashing with police and candidates insulting each other on national television — a reflection of the widespread public disaffection with politics as usual.
Le Pen, 48, has brought
her far-right National Front party, once a pariah for its racism and anti-Semitism, closer than ever to the French presidency, seizing on working-class voters’ growing frustration with globalization and immigration. Even if she loses, she is likely to be a powerful opposition figure in French politics in the upcoming parliamentary election campaign.
The 39-year-old Macron, too, played a key role in upending France’s traditional political structure with his wild-card campaign.