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Opinion

Contrasts and Contradictions: Springtime in Paris 2017

For weeks now, the presidential election has overwhelmingly dominated the news. Four candidates might win the right to compete in the May 7 run off, writes Reuven Levi

April 19, 2017 16:11
Jean Luc Melenchon
2 min read

Springtime brings metamorphosis to Paris with warm temperatures and long days, café-lined streets, chic shops and flowering gardens offering an overdue sense of hope after a harrowing winter.  Though too late for the hapless Mr Hollande, the economy continues to strengthen. The atmosphere, however, remains tense with ongoing fears of terrorism and palpable political uncertainty.   

For weeks now, the presidential election has overwhelmingly dominated the news. With just a few days remaining, four candidates might win the right to compete in the May 7 run off, but many voters are still undecided. Despite the divisive influence of social media, no single issue has dominated the campaign, except for ethics in politics fed by a stream of “revelations” by investigative journalists.  

While the four candidates position themselves from right to left – or left to right – the true divide lies elsewhere between revolt and reason. Le Pen (extreme right) and Melenchon (extreme left) uncannily agree on most issues: they are anti-establishment, anti-capitalist and anti-globalisation; anti-Europe anti-NATO. Meanwhile Fillon (traditional right) and Macron (centre and centre left) both argue for market-based economic reforms and defend Europe and the Atlantic alliance, though not unconditionally. On national identity issues, however, the old left/right split holds, the right defending France’s Christian heritage and culture, while the left defends multiculturalism without saying so and is more open to immigration.   

Mr Melenchon, a gifted public speaker whose chances have recently risen sharply at the expense of official socialist candidate Benoit Hamon, is also anti-war, whatever the implications of pacifism, a tearful admirer of Hugo Chavez and a sharp critic of the CRIF, the organisation that represents French Jewry.  A scenario not to be excluded pits Le Pen against Melenchon in the May 7 run-off.