From Reuters:
“France's Macron beats Le Pen
to win second term”
(Supporters of French President
Emmanuel Macron, candidate for his re-election, react after results were
announced in the second round vote of the 2022 French presidential election,
near Eiffel Tower, at the Champs de Mars in Paris, France April 24, 2022.)
French President Emmanuel Macron
defeated his far-right rival Marine Le Pen on Sunday by a comfortable margin,
securing a second term and heading off what would have been a political
earthquake. Cheers of joy erupted as the results appeared on a giant screen at
the Champ de Mars park at the foot of the Eiffel tower, where Macron supporters
waved French and EU flags. People hugged each other and chanted
"Macron". In contrast, a gathering of dejected Le Pen supporters
erupted in boos and whistles at a sprawling reception hall on the outskirts of
Paris. Le Pen admitted defeat but vowed to keep up the fight, with the June
parliamentary elections in mind. "I will never abandon the French,"
she said to supporters chanting "Marine! Marine!"
The first pollsters' projections
showed Macron securing around 57-58% of the vote. Such estimates are normally
accurate but may be fine-tuned as official results come in from around the
country throughout the evening. But Macron can expect little to no grace period
after many, especially on the left only voted for him reluctantly to block the
far-right from winning. Protests that marred part of his first mandate could
erupt again quite quickly, as he tries to press on with pro-business reforms. "We
will not spoil the victory ... but (Le Pen's) National Rally has its highest
score ever," Health Minister Olivier Veran told BFM TV. "There will
be continuity in government policy because the president has been reelected. But
we have also heard the French people's message," he added, pledging
change. A first major challenge will be the parliamentary elections in June and
opposition parties on the left and right will immediately start a major push to
try to vote in a parliament and government opposed to Macron. Philippe Lagrue,
63, technical director at a theatre in Paris, said earlier in the day he had
voted for Macron after voting for the hard-left Jean-Luc Melenchon in the first
round. He said he would vote for Melenchon again in June. "Melenchon Prime
Minister. That would be fun. Macron would be upset, but that's the point."
Ifop, Elabe, OpinionWay and Ipsos pollsters projected a 57.6-58.2% win for
Macron.
Victory for the centrist,
pro-European Union Macron was immediately hailed by allies as a reprieve for
mainstream politics that have been rocked in recent years by Britain's exit
from the European Union, the 2016 election of Donald Trump and the rise of a
new generation of nationalist leaders. "Bravo Emmanuel," European
Council President Charles Michel, wrote on Twitter. "In this turbulent
period, we need a solid Europe and a France totally committed to a more
sovereign and more strategic European Union." Macron will join a small
club - only two French presidents before him have managed to secure a second
term. But his margin of victory looks to be tighter than when he first beat Le
Pen in 2017, underlining how many French remain unimpressed with him and his
domestic record. That disillusion was reflected in turnout figures, with
France's main polling institutes saying the abstention rate would likely settle
around 28%, the highest since 1969.
Against a backdrop of Russia's
invasion of Ukraine and the ensuing Western sanctions that have exacerbated a
surge in fuel prices, Le Pen's campaign homed in on the rising cost of living
as Macron's weak point. She promised sharp cuts to fuel tax, zero-percent sales
tax on essential items from pasta to diapers, income exemptions for young
workers and a "French first" stance on jobs and welfare. Macron
meanwhile pointed to her past admiration for Russia's Vladimir Putin as showing
she could not be trusted on the world stage, while insisting she still
harboured plans to pull France out of the European Union - something she
denies. read more In the latter part of the campaign as he sought the backing
of left-leaning voters, Macron played down an earlier promise to make the
French work longer, saying he was open to discussion on plans to raise the
retirement age from 62 to 65.
In the end, as viewer surveys
after last week's fractious televised debate between the two testified, Le
Pen's policies - which included a proposal to ban people from wearing Muslim
headscarves in public - remained too extreme for many French. Ex-merchant
banker Macron's decision to run for the presidency in 2017 and set up his own
grass roots movement from scratch up-ended the old certainties about French
politics - something that may come back to bite him in June's parliamentary
elections.
^ I am so glad Macron won. Le Pen
would have been bad for France, NATO, the EU, the US and Ukraine. ^
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