France starts elections for new president | Abroad

Macron is getting weaker and Le Pen better in recent polls. Macron was confident and barely campaigned. But that looks set to make the second round potentially a precarious election day for the current president.

The loss of purchasing power seems to be the main concern of French voters and a majority of French people see a very bleak future, according to polls. Le Pen presents himself with a focus on socio-economic ‘problems of the people’ as the polar opposite of the globalist technocrat Macron. The big question in two weeks is what will the French voters do who did not vote for Macron or Le Pen on Sunday.

According to polls, the far left and far right together account for a quarter of all votes: the left-wing Jean-Luc Mélenchon with 16.5 percent and the right-wing Eric Zemmour 8.5 percent. The center-right Republicans led by Valérie Pécresse appear to have 8.5 percent of voters behind them and environmentalist Yannick Jadot can count on 5.5 percent in the first round.

Polling stations open at 8 a.m. and close at different times. Most at 7pm and in some cities an hour later.

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