The Mercury News

France begins its presidenti­al vote overseas

Candidates halt campaigns to give voters time to think

- By Thomas Adamson Associated Press

PARIS — Early voting began overseas Saturday in France’s most nail-biting election in generation­s, and the 11 candidates seeking to become the country’s next president silenced their campaigns as required to give voters a period of reflection.

Opinion polls showed a tight race among the four top contenders vying to get into the May presidenti­al 7 runoff that will decide who becomes France’s next head of state. But the polls also showed that decision was largely in the hands of the one-in-three French voters who are still undecided.

Polls opened in France’s far-flung overseas territorie­s but won’t start until Sunday on the French mainland. France’s 10 percent unemployme­nt, its lackluster economy and security issues top voters’ concerns.

Political campaignin­g was banned from midnight Friday until the polls close on Sunday.

Polls suggested that far-right nationalis­t Marine Le Pen and Emmanuel Macron, an independen­t centrist and former economy minister, were in the lead.

However, conservati­ve Francois Fillon, a former prime minister whose campaign was initially derailed by corruption allegation­s that his wife was paid for no-show work as his aide, appeared to be closing the gap, as was farleftist candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon.

Security was tight — the government has mobilized more than 50,000 police and gendarmes to protect 70,000 polling stations, with an additional 7,000 soldiers on patrol.

Security is a prominent issue after a wave of extremist attacks on French soil, including a gunman who killed a Paris police officer Thursday night before being shot dead by security forces.

 ?? JODY AMIET/GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman casts her ballot during the first round of the French presidenti­al elections on Saturday in RemireMont­joly, French Guiana.
JODY AMIET/GETTY IMAGES A woman casts her ballot during the first round of the French presidenti­al elections on Saturday in RemireMont­joly, French Guiana.

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