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Macron urges French to get rid of old generation as race tightens


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Macron urges French to get rid of old generation as race tightens

By Michel Rose

REUTERS

 

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Emmanuel Macron, head of the political movement En Marche !, or Onwards !, and candidate for the 2017 French presidential election, attends a campaign political rally at the AccorHotels Arena in Paris, France, April 17, 2017. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann

 

PARIS (Reuters) - Presidential candidate Emmanuel Macron urged French voters on Monday to turn the page on the last 20 years and bring a new generation to power, as he stepped up attacks against resurgent far-left and conservative rivals six days before voting day.

 

Macron, a 39-year-old pro-EU centrist who would become the youngest French leader since Napoleon if elected, said recent leaders had betrayed the post-war generation which had rebuilt the country, leaving France unreformed and sclerotic.

 

"What has been proposed to the French in the last 20 years is not liberation or reconstruction, but a slow, unavowed acceptation of unemployment, state impotence and social breakdown," he told a cheering crowd of at least 18,000 people in the Bercy arena in Paris.

 

Investors are glued to the outcome of France's most unpredictable election in decades. Polls suggest growing numbers of voters are turning away from mainstream parties because of disenchantment with the establishment and frustration at years of economic malaise.

 

With an eye on surveys showing his status as favourite being eroded by a late surge in support for far-leftist Jean-Luc Melenchon, Macron hit back at the Communist-backed candidate who wants France to join a Latin American alliance of leftist leaders founded by late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez.

 

"Some would like France to become Cuba without the sun or Venezuela without the oil," he said.

 

An OpinionWay poll put Macron and far-right leader Marine Le Pen both on 22 percent for the first round of the election to be held on Sunday.

 

Conservative Francois Fillon was just behind on 21 percent, having recovered some ground since being hit by a scandal over hundreds of thousands of euros of public money he paid his wife while employing her as his parliamentary assistant.

 

Melenchon gained one point in the same poll to 18 percent, confirming the election is now a four-way race and making it impossible to predict with certainty which two candidates will contest a deciding run-off on May 7.

 

Two other polls had Macron just ahead of Le Pen in the first round, and beating her comfortably in the second.

 

On the sidelines of the rally, which came hours before Le Pen's own event in the French capital and as Melenchon campaigned on a barge sailing through Paris's canals, Macron's close aides acknowledged the former economy minister and investment banker was not guaranteed to reach the runoff.

 

"It's tightening. Fillon could find himself in the second round if he mobilises his base," Christophe Castaner, a Socialist lawmaker close to Macron, told reporters.

 

"And then people on the left will go: 'damn it!', like in 2002," he added, in reference to the shock qualification of Le Pen's father Jean-Marie 15 years ago at the expense of former Socialist premier Lionel Jospin.

 

However, many in the crowd, which waved French and European flags, continued to believe he would win because of his pro-EU stance and his pledge to transcend the Left-Right divide.

 

"We would be proud to be represented in the world by a young and brilliant man, who's also measured and pragmatic," Florence Ombret, a 50-year old teacher from Nevers, told Reuters.

 

"It would be an earthquake if we were represented by anti-Europe candidates. We can't take this risk, we're nothing without Europe," the former Socialist voter added.

 

Click http://tmsnrt.rs/2lPduBG for graphic on French presidential election

 

(Additional reporting by Emmanuel Jarry and Ingrid Melander; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-04-18
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1 hour ago, webfact said:

"It would be an earthquake if we were represented by anti-Europe candidates. We can't take this risk, we're nothing without Europe," the former Socialist voter added.

How true. And, in Britain's case (or maybe it will be Little England's), we shall see.

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How ironic that Macron, the apparent "progressive", wanting France to abandon its past, is marching solidly towards greater globalization, the very state of affairs that will destroy France and make it indistinguishable from any other mall-dominated country world-wide.

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Well, currently Macron is looking like he may have peaked a bit early ... but there are so many 'undecideds' & likely 'abstainers' that any prediction on the outcome of the 1st round is now impossible.

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The most worrying are how many voters plan to support Mélenchon the commie.

Le Pen too, to some extent, but Mélenchon???

it's a bit as if they expect that more of the same poison will cure them.

voters, get real.

Edited by manarak
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19 minutes ago, manarak said:

The most worrying are how many voters plan to support Mélenchon the commie.

Le Pen too, to some extent, but Mélenchon???

it's a bit as if they expect that more of the same poison will cure them.

voters, get real.

Interesting to hear the word "commie" as if we were still in the era of McCarthy or the Vietnam War.

But things have changed.  If the Dems had not screwed Sanders, and if Sanders had been the Dem candidate against Trump, the chances are he (Sanders) would have won.....ah, but maybe that talismanic word "commie" would have wriggled to the surface of "debate" and Sanders would have been condemned as a tool of the Russians (once a bunch of Commies).

So we would still have had Trump...

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Sanders would of course be considered 'right-wing' in France. To compare him with Mélenchon is ridiculous. The latter would certainly be considered a Communist & therefore untouchable in Usofa.

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5 hours ago, blazes said:

Interesting to hear the word "commie" as if we were still in the era of McCarthy or the Vietnam War.

But things have changed.  If the Dems had not screwed Sanders, and if Sanders had been the Dem candidate against Trump, the chances are he (Sanders) would have won.....ah, but maybe that talismanic word "commie" would have wriggled to the surface of "debate" and Sanders would have been condemned as a tool of the Russians (once a bunch of Commies).

So we would still have had Trump...

as mfd says, Sanders would not be considered a commie, not even a socialist in France... he would be in the center.

 

Mélenchon is at the extreme left and qualifies for the label "commie", he confessed being an admirer of Fidel Castro.

 

 

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2 minutes ago, manarak said:

as mfd says, Sanders would not be considered a commie, not even a socialist in France... he would be in the center.

 

Mélenchon is at the extreme left and qualifies for the label "commie", he confessed being an admirer of Fidel Castro.

 

 

Just to make clear (it looks like some are confused here), I wasn't implying that Sanders would be considered a commie in France.  However, in America, where Sanders calls himself a "democratic socialist", the chances are high that if he had been the Democratic candidate, he would have been labelled a "commie" in no time at all.

 

The amazing thing , from an American standpoint, is that Sanders was never (as far as I recall) saddled with the label "commie" during his campaign.

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