Yuma Sun

Far right falters as conservati­ves lead regional vote in France

- BY ALEX TURNBULL AND ANGELA CHARLTON

PARIS – Marine Le Pen’s farright party stumbled, French President Emmanuel Macron’s centrists crashed and incumbent conservati­ves surged ahead in the first round of regional elections Sunday that were dominated by security issues and a record-low turnout.

What was meant to be a vote centered on local concerns like transporta­tion, schools and infrastruc­ture turned into a dress rehearsal for next year’s presidenti­al vote, as would-be presidenti­al hopefuls seized on the regional campaign to test ideas and win followers. Macron’s rivals on left and right notably denounced his government’s handling of the pandemic.

The wrangling appeared to turn off some voters, and less than 34% showed up, according to polling agencies. Politician­s across the spectrum pleaded with the stayat-home voters to wake up for the decisive second round June 17.

Le Pen called the low turnout “a civic disaster that deformed the electoral reality of the country, and produces a misleading vision of the current political forces.”

The result is a clear setback for Le Pen’s National Rally, though it came in second place in most regions, according to early official results and polling agency projection­s. It is hoping to win control of a region for the first time to boost her decade-long effort to legitimize a party long seen as an anti-democratic, anti-Semitic pariah.

It had been riding high in pre-election polls and had steered campaign discourse toward its favored subjects of policing and immigratio­n – though both are issues handled by the central government and not regional councils. The party dominated the first round of the last regional elections in 2015, but collapsed in the runoff as parties and voters banded together against it.

The result is also a deep embarrassm­ent for Macron, whose young Republic on the Move party had hoped to establish a regional foothold for the first time but failed to excite voters.

Projection­s from three polling agencies show the conservati­ve Republican­s party, which currently runs seven of mainland France’s 13 regions, won the most overall votes Sunday, at between 27-29%.

They were followed by the National Rally at 18-19%, then the Socialist Party and its allies, the Greens party, Macron’s Republic on the Move and far-left France Unbowed. Early official results from each region reflected a similar breakdown.

Parties that win more than 10% of the vote advance to the runoff, which will determine the number of seats each party gets on regional councils.

Many polling stations stood largely empty as voting kicked off in schools and community centers from Marseille on the Mediterran­ean coast to Le Touquet on the English Channel. Those who did show up to vote had to stay masked and socially distanced and carry their own pens to sign voting registries.

The posturing by potential presidenti­al contenders frustrated voters like Patrice Grignoux, a 62-year-old tech consultant casting his ballot in Paris.

“The presidenti­al election is a world in itself,” he told The Associated Press. “When you take

Brittany or the Paris region, it’s totally different. The north is also completely different . ... There are issues you find at a regional level but have nothing to do with national issues.”

A key battle was in the Hautsde-France, a swath of northern France that includes the port of Calais, where five of Macron’s government ministers joined the campaign – but his party didn’t even reach the runoff, according to early results.

Another race to watch is the region that includes Provence, the French Riviera and part of the Alps, where National Rally candidate Thierry Mariani appeared to have a slimmer-than-expected lead over the conservati­ve incumbent. Mariani has said he wants more police and no more public

funding for groups promoting individual communitie­s, which many see as targeting Muslim associatio­ns or LGBTQ movements.

Macron’s party didn’t exist the last time voters chose regional leaders in 2015. It’s facing disillusio­nment with Macron’s policies, including from rural voters who supported the yellow vest uprising against perceived economic injustice.

The virus played only a minor role in the voting. As infections have ebbed and vaccinatio­ns spread, the French government recently reopened long-shuttered restaurant­s, shops and travel possibilit­ies. Beginning Sunday, the prime minister scrapped an unpopular overnight coronaviru­s curfew, just in time for the election.

 ?? CHRISTIAN HARTMANN/AP ?? FRENCH PRESIDENT EMMANUEL MACRON SHOWS HIS PASSPORT while his wife Brigitte waits during the first round of French regional and department­al elections in Le Touquet-Paris-Plage, northern France, on Sunday. The elections for leadership councils of France’s 13 regions, from Brittany to Burgundy to the French Riviera, are primarily about local issues like transporta­tion, schools and infrastruc­ture. But leading politician­s are using them as a platform to test ideas and win followers ahead of the April presidenti­al election.
CHRISTIAN HARTMANN/AP FRENCH PRESIDENT EMMANUEL MACRON SHOWS HIS PASSPORT while his wife Brigitte waits during the first round of French regional and department­al elections in Le Touquet-Paris-Plage, northern France, on Sunday. The elections for leadership councils of France’s 13 regions, from Brittany to Burgundy to the French Riviera, are primarily about local issues like transporta­tion, schools and infrastruc­ture. But leading politician­s are using them as a platform to test ideas and win followers ahead of the April presidenti­al election.

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