Macron stalls, Le Pen gets tailwind as France goes to polls

Bloomberg

French voters went to the polls Sunday in the lowest numbers in 20 years despite a tight race between Emmanuel Macron and nationalist leader Marine Le Pen.
French elections often throw up surprising twists, and this one didn’t disappoint. An early belief the vote would be a repeat of 2017, when Macron faced Le Pen and easily won, was overturned by the candidacy of far-right media pundit Eric Zemmour in November and the conservative Republicains party’s first ever female presidential contender, Valerie Pecresse, in December, both of whom initially shot up in polls.
But their campaigns fizzled out, largely to the benefit of Le Pen, who just this past week got a powerful tailwind while Macron’s support dropped.
According to the last published polls, voter support for Le Pen in a runoff would be within a few percentage points of Macron. It now looks far from certain that he will stay in the Elysee.
About 25.5% of voters had cast ballots by midday, the Interior Ministry said, the lowest turnout at this time of day since the election of 2002. Le Pen voted in Henin-Beaumont, the town in northern France that she represents in Parliament, while Macron cast his ballot in the early afternoon in Le Toquet, a seaside town in the north.
Macron, 44, has been a complacent campaigner, banking on the idea that war and instability favour the incumbent and that his handling of the coronavirus pandemic and the economic recovery would be enough to return him to office without much of a fight.
Over the past six months, he focused on US and European efforts to first avert and then stop a war in Ukraine, speaking regularly to Russian President Vladimir Putin and meeting with western allies.
For a while, polls suggested the strategy was working. But, Le Pen stuck to her focus on retail politics, traveling up and down the country talking to voters about the impact of the conflict on their wallets. She pitched the race as a battle of David versus Goliath, stoking the perception of Macron as a “president of the rich” who can’t understand the struggles of ordinary people to cope with surging food and energy costs.
On her third attempt to clinch France’s top job, Le Pen has become a familiar face and for some at least, a less scary one, even though analysts say her views haven’t changed that much. Her longstanding strategy to appear more moderate was helped indirectly by Zemmour’s doom-laden public rants on immigration and identity.
By April 8, Macron was ahead by just 3.5 points in
the first round, according a polling average calculated by Bloomberg a lead that tumbled from as much as a dozen points a month earlier. Macron has spent the past week trying to close the gap with a series of last-minute media appearances, hours before presidential hopefuls were required by law to stop campaigning.

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