French election 2022 - live: Macron and Le Pen trade blows as political landscape labelled ‘field of ruins’
Final two candidates face each other in decisive vote on 24 April
French presidential candidates Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen have attacked each other at the start of their run-off campaigns, after coming first and second respectively in the initial vote.
With just under two weeks to go until the final round, each politician wasted no time in casting aspersions against their rival.
“Emmanuel Macron, if by some mischance he was re-elected, would feel totally free to continue his policy of social wreckage,” Ms Le Pen claimed, before turning to the cost-of-living crisis, her usual political line of attack.
For his part, Mr Macron accused the leader of the far-right National Rally party of being a “demagogue”, who told people what they wished to hear.
Responding to the first round results, Gérard Araud, a former French diplomat who is now a distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council, said his country’s political life was now “more than ever a field of ruins”.
“Macron is leading a centrist block of nearly 30 percent, but his only credible adversaries are extremists,” Gérard Araud explained.
Le Pen wins just 5% of vote in Paris
Emmanuel Macron secured more than a third of the vote in Paris, while Marine Le Pen won just 5 per cent in the capital.
However the far-right candidate was more popular in other regions of France.
Ms Le Pen won 33 per cent of the votes in the northern Hauts-de-France region where Mr Macron is campaigning on Monday.
But left-wing candidates were close behind and won a combined 27-28 per cent of the vote in the area.
‘Far right setting the agenda in French politics’ - Chatham House Europe director
Hans Kundnani, director of the Europe programme at the Chatham House think tank, said the results showed there had been a “drift to the right in French politics”.
He said: “The results of the first round of the French presidential election confirms two trends in French politics – which also apply across much of the rest of Europe to some extent.
“The first is the realignment of politics around a fault line between centrism and populism. The centre-left Socialist and centre-right Republican candidates both received under 5 percent of the vote – a historic low. The second round will be between Macron and Le Pen as it was five years ago – both of whom see themselves as being ‘beyond left and right’. In other words, they mirror each other. From a democratic point of view, this realignment is disastrous.
“The second trend, which is related to the first, is the drift to the right in French politics. Though the second round will be a repeat of 2017, Le Pen is in a much stronger position this time. Jean-Luc Mélenchon got 22 percent of the vote – which shows that the left is still strong in France, though it has drifted away from the Socialist Party, its traditional vehicle.
“But it is the far right that is now increasingly setting the agenda in French politics – as could be seen by the way that, during the campaign, centre-right candidates like the Republican candidate Valerie Pécresse adopted far-right tropes like the idea of a “great replacement”.
Macron wins backing of rivals
Presidential candidates were quick to show their support for Emmanuel Macron after counting concluded in many regions on Sunday.
Anne Hidalgo, the mayor of Paris, endorsed Mr Macron for the next vote “so that France does not fall into hatred of all against all”.
Far-left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon, who came in third, also called on his supporters not to vote for Marine Le Pen. He said: “There must not be one single vote for Le Pen in the second round.”
Far-right candidate Eric Zemmour endorsed Ms Le Pen however.
Macron brings election campaign to northern town of Denain
Emmanuel Macron is campaigning in the northern town of Denain, which once prided itself as the mining and steel capital of France but where in 2019 almost half the population lived in poverty and one in three people of active age were unemployed in 2018.
Marine Le Pen on Sunday won 42 per cent of votes in the town.
Survival of Republicans at stake, says failed presidential candidate
Valérie Pécresse, the failed presidential candidate for The Republicans, has asked supporters to donate money to the party, saying its survival is at stake.
She said the party was in debt to the tune of €7 million after only managing to win 4.79 per cent of the vote, below the 5 per cent needed for her campaign to be paid for by taxpayer funds. She tweeted that €5 million of that had been personally invested by her.
“The results mean we will not be reimbursed by the state,” she said.
“I have launched a national appeal for donations. The survival of the Republican right depends on it.”
Marine Le Pen campaigning in Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region
Marine Le Pen is out campaigning in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region southeast of Paris.
The National Rally leader is spending time in the towns of Yonne and Thorigny-sur-Oreuse, Le Monde reported.
Preliminary final results give Macron 27.8% and Le Pen 23.2%
Macron will show ‘fighting spirit’, says ally
Senator Francois Patriat, a member of Emmanuel Macron’s party, said the focus was “now on the project and the values”, explaining the strategy consists of being “proud” of what has been done over the past five years, showing “a bit of humility”, and “above all, some fighting spirit”.
Mr Macron will use the next days to “go in the field”, he added.
Prior to Sunday’s first round, Mr Macron was absent from most of the electoral campaign as he spent most of his time focusing on diplomatic efforts over the war in Ukraine.
‘Everything is possible,’ says councillor with Le Pen’s party
Aurelien Lopez Liguori, a municipal councillor with Marine Le Pen’s party in the southern city of Sete, said “now everything is possible” after the results were announced.
The Le Pen party heavyweight Louis Aliot told news broadcaster France Info on Monday that the party would strive to “speak directly to the French about their problems” and how Ms Le Pen would lead the country if elected president.
Mr Aliot accused Emmanuel Macron of stirring up millions of French to take to the streets during the yellow vest protests over perceived economic injustice and of having dismantled public hospitals despite the Covid-19 pandemic.
“There are plenty of issues on which he will need to explain himself,” Mr Aliot said.
Macron faces fight to win over France’s angry left in election race against Le Pen
France’s Emmanuel Macron faces a gruelling two-week campaign season and a fight for his political life after coming out on top of the first-round of presidential elections on Monday but facing a hostile, sceptical electorate.
To win against far-right challenger Marine Le Pen on 24 April, Mr Macron must stunt her momentum. But more crucially he must convince angry leftists, Muslims and ethnic minorities who voted for Jean-Luc Melenchon to back him after embracing neoliberal economic policies such as raising the retirement age and flirting with rightwing ideas on immigration and intellectual life.
Read the full analysis from our international correspondent, Borzou Daragahi:
Macron faces fight to win over France’s angry left in election race against Le Pen
To defeat Marine Le Pen, the French president is now in dire need of same left he has disparaged for years
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