USA TODAY International Edition
French voters give Macron a new term
Le Pen concedes in rematch of 2017 election
WASHINGTON – French President Emmanuel Macron cruised to a second term Sunday, beating back a stronger- than- expected challenge from a far- right populist who has attacked the European Union and NATO and expressed support for Russia.
“I am no longer the candidate of one side, but instead the president for all,” Macron told cheering sup
porters who gathered near the Eiffel Tower to celebrate his reelection and the defeat of challenger Marine Le Pen.
In a rematch of the 2017 presidential election, Macron led Le Pen with more than 58% of the vote, according to projected results from the French news media, working with national pollsters.
Le Pen conceded shortly after the announced projection. She noted that she improved her performance from five years ago and will now concentrate on legislative elections for her party.
“The game is not completely over,” she told supporters.
Five years ago, Macron defeated Le Pen with more than 66% of the vote.
Macron, 44, who built his own political party to run for president in 2017, won again despite a first term beset by protests against his economic policies, the COVID- 19 pandemic and, most recently, the Russian invasion of Ukraine that roiled diplomatic relations across the globe.
In his victory speech, Macron acknowledged that French voters had expressed “anger” and he must now “respond effectively.”
Macron’s reelection also dealt a setback to the populist movements that have upended politics across the Western world, from Brexit to the successes of Viktor Orban in Hungary and Donald Trump in the United States.
American and European government officials greeted news of Macron’s reelection with relief. Some analysts in the United States pointed out Macron won despite approval ratings of less than 40% – about the same as President Joe Biden, who is contemplating a reelection run of his own in 2024.
“An interesting observation, just FYI,” tweeted White House chief of staff Ron Klain. “President Macron appears to have secured a double- digit victory over LePen, at a time when his approval rating is 36%. Hmmm....”
Michael McFaul, former U. S. ambassador to Russia, pointed out that another prominent European populist – Slovenia Prime Minister Janez Jansa – faced defeat on Sunday, according to vote projections.
Those losses could be “a giant victory for the renewal of democratic values in Europe and a huge setback for populist nationalism,” McFaul said. “Maybe the global tide is turning?”
Others pointed out that Le Pen did better in this French election than the one five years ago, and the conservative populist movement still has to be taken seriously in the United States, Europe, and elsewhere.
Le Pen had come within 5 percentage points of Macron in the first round of voting two weeks ago, fanning fears of an ultranationalistic turn in French politics. Le Pen has long espoused an anti- immigrant agenda, and in this campaign, she called for banning Muslim women from wearing headscarves in public.
In the runup to Sunday’s election, French voters expressed anxiety over issues that have also shaped politics in the United States and elsewhere: inflation, a sluggish economy, fallout from the COVID- 19 pandemic, immigration and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Macron and Le Pen finished as the top two candidates from a crowded field after the first round of voting two weeks ago.