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John Lichfield

ByJohn Lichfield, john lichfield paris

Analysis

Mélenchon v Le Pen — that’s the nightmare

France, a country allergic to change, is flirting with the unknown.

April 21, 2017 09:50
Par8099546
2 min read

As things stand, the three top candidates in the first round of the presidential election on Sunday could represent parties outside the duopoly of centre-right and centre-left which has governed France since the end of the Second World War.

Imagine a British general election in which the three leading places were taken by the Lib Dems, Ukip and the Socialist Workers’ Party.

Only the top two candidates go forward to the second round run-off on 7 May. The final opinion polls suggest that four politicians — from the unknown centre, the far-right, the hard left and the discredited ex-Gaullist centre-right — have a chance of making the cut.

For several weeks, it seemed likely that the second round would be contested by the Front National leader Marine Le Pen and the 39-year-old founder of a one-year-old political start-up, the militant centrist Emmanuel Macron.