French voters skeptical Macron, Le Pen
have answers on key issues
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[May 01, 2017]
By Matthias Blamont
PARIS (Reuters) - A week before the
decisive second round in France's presidential election, many voters are
skeptical that either of the two candidates can solve chronic
unemployment or tackle security concerns, a poll published on Sunday
found.
The Ifop survey for the Journal du Dimanche highlights two key
battlegrounds as centrist presidential candidate Emmanuel Macron and
far-right opponent Marine Le Pen enter a final week of campaigning -
France's economy and borders.
Polls predict that Macron, a former economy minister, will win the May 7
run-off with about 59-60 percent. But the momentum has recently been
with Le Pen, who has clawed back about five percentage points over the
past week.
According to the Ifop poll, 45 percent of voters believe the two
finalists would not put an end to unemployment, which has for years
stood close to 10 percent in France. And 36 percent say neither
candidate is able to protect France from attacks.
France has been under a state of emergency since 2015 and has suffered a
spate of Islamist militant attacks, mostly perpetrated by young men who
grew up in France and Belgium. More than 230 people have been killed in
the past two years.
Days before the first round of voting on April 23 a French policeman was
shot dead and two others were wounded in central Paris in an attack
claimed by the Islamic State group.
The result of the run-off vote will depend to a large extent on floating
voters and the level of abstentions.
In the first round 22.2 percent of voters abstained, the highest
percentage since 2002 when Marine Le Pen's father, Jean-Marie, won
through to the second round only to be soundly defeated by conservative
Jacques Chirac.
This time if turnout is low in the second round analysts say Macron
could struggle to reproduce the same broad movement against the National
Front candidate, citing his mainly free-market policies at a time when
anti-establishment feeling has been on the rise in Europe and the United
States.
Left-wing candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon, with 19.6 percent of the votes
in the first round, has urged his supporters to oppose Le Pen but has
refused to back Macron for the second round.
Le Pen traveled to Marseille on Sunday to speak on the environment, a
key issue for Melenchon supporters, while Macron visited the Holocaust
memorial in Paris.
The Ifop poll found 42 percent of voters believe neither Macron nor Le
Pen would be able to reunite the country after months of bitter
campaigning, while 43 percent questioned whether either would be able to
govern after capturing the Elysee palace.
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A combination picture shows portraits of the candidates who will run
in the second round in the 2017 French presidential election,
Emmanuel Macron (L), head of the political movement En Marche !, or
Onwards !, and Marine Le Pen, French National Front (FN) political
party leader. Pictures taken March 11, 2017 (R) and February 21,
2017 (L). REUTERS/Christian Hartmann
France returns to the polls in June to select members of the
National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, where a majority
is needed to push through government policies.
Both Macron, who launched a new party a year ago, and Le Pen, whose
National Front has only two seats in the National Assembly, have
faced questions about their ability to build a parliamentary
majority.
Le Pen said on Saturday defeated right-wing candidate Nicolas
Dupont-Aignan would be her prime minister if she won.
In a statement outlining the alliance struck with Dupont-Aignan's
small nationalist party, Le Pen said there was no rush to dump the
euro and that other policy changes might take precedence, in what
appeared to be a softening of her stance toward the single currency.
She appeared to reverse this position on Sunday, making clear in a
video published on newspaper Le Parisien's website that she was
still intent on leaving the euro eventually.
A policy coordinator with Le Pen confirmed she would call a
referendum within six months on France's future in the European
Union, and therefore on the euro, if she were to be elected.
Analysts said the confusion was largely due to the fact that Le
Pen's plans to quit the EU and the euro are among the least popular
policies in her protectionist, anti-immigration electoral platform.
Macron received support on Sunday from Jean-Louis Borloo, a previous
leader of the UDI, a small centrist party, but has yet to say who he
would ask to lead a government.
(Additional reporting by Myriam Rivet, Simon Carraud; Editing by
Adrian Croft, Greg Mahlich)
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