Macron, Le Pen face off in crucial election debate
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[April 20, 2022]
By Michel Rose, Elizabeth Pineau and Ingrid Melander
PARIS (Reuters) - French President Emmanuel
Macron and far-right challenger Marine Le Pen will face off on Wednesday
in a debate which could be decisive in the tight race to decide who will
run the country for the next five years.
For Le Pen, who is behind Macron in opinion polls ahead of Sunday's
vote, it is all about showing that she has the stature to be president
and convincing more voters that they should not fear seeing the
far-right in power.
"Fear is the only argument that the current president has to try and
stay in power at all cost," Le Pen said in a new campaign clip on
Tuesday, accusing Macron of doom-mongering over what a far-right
presidency would mean for France.
For Macron, possibly the biggest challenge will be not to sound
arrogant, something many voters have criticised in him, while poking at
the holes he sees in Le Pen's policy plans and playing up his five years
of experience in power.
"The French now see her as a possible president, unlike in 2017. It's
now up to us to prove she will be a bad president," a source close to
Macron said, adding that he would "counter her project and prove that it
is inconsistent and unrealistic."
The debate, which starts at 1900 GMT, will be the only one between the
two candidates.
When Macron and Le Pen first competed against each other for the
president's job, in 2017, the debate was catastrophic for the
anti-immigration, eurosceptic candidate.
She mixed up her notes and lost her footing, while the debate allowed a
then-largely untested Macron to convince voters he was fit to be
president.
Much has changed since.
DUEL
For one, although the line-up is the same, the outcome of the election
is more open, with the centrist, pro-European president's lead in
opinion polls much narrower gap than in 2017.
And Macron has now been in power for five years, meaning Le Pen can
attack him on his track record.
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A woman walks past official campaign posters of French presidential
election candidates Marine le Pen, leader of French far-right
National Rally (Rassemblement National) party, and French President
Emmanuel Macron, candidate for his re-election, displayed on an
official billboard in Paris, France, April 19, 2022. REUTERS/Gonzalo
Fuentes
She can also only do better than in
the 2017 debate, which she herself called a failure, while it could
be hard for Macron to repeat such a knock-out performance.
But Macron is not without assets for this debate, which will be the
only direct confrontation between the two of the whole campaign.
With far-right pundit Eric Zemmour now out of the game, Le Pen lost
a rival that made her look less radical, by comparison, and that has
hit her in opinion polls.
Then, unemployment is at a 13-year low and the French economy has
outperformed other big European countries - even if inflation is
biting into that.
And while she has largely managed so far to brush it aside, Le Pen
has her past admiration of Russian President Vladimir Putin working
against her.
For both, trying to win over leftwing voters will be key.
While Le Pen's camp has been scrambling over the past days to
explain her plan to ban the hijab in all public places, for Macron,
a proposal to push back retirement age is leaving him exposed.
Both have eased up on campaigning ahead of the debate. But while Le
Pen is said to be focusing on preparing for it, sources in Macron's
team are keen to point out the president is still at work and hasn't
taken a whole day off to prepare for the debate.
"Being president is not a part time job," a campaign aide told
Reuters.
(Reporting by Michel Rose and Elizabeth Pineau; Writing by Ingrid
Melander; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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