Hollande wins first round of French election as far right surges
Socialist challenger Francois Hollande beat Nicolas Sarkozy in the first round of France's presidential election, with a resurgent far-right emerging as possible kingmakers in the run-off.
As expected, Hollande and the wounded incumbent Sarkozy will now face off in the May 6 second-round, but the big surprise of the night was the record score for anti-immigrant, anti-EU flag-bearer Marine Le Pen.
Hollande won between 28 and 29 percent of the vote in the first round, to Sarkozy's 25.5 to 27, and Le Pen won a best-ever 18 to 20 percent, according to estimates compiled from ballot samples by several polling agencies.
"Firstly, I am tonight in the lead among the candidates," Hollande declared before supporters in his rural political stronghold of Tulle. "I am today the best placed candidate to become the next French president.
"The second major lesson to draw from this election -- and this is undeniable -- is that the first round was a punishment and a rejection of the incumbent," he said to cheers.
Sarkozy sought to put positive spin on the result and brandished his right-wing credentials in a clear nod to Le Pen supporters, despite being the first incumbent to lose a first round-vote in modern French history.
"We can enter the second round with confidence and I now call on all French people who put patriotism above partisanship or any special interests to unite and join me," Sarkozy told supporters at a rally in Paris.
Explaining his poor showing as the result of a first round "vote of crisis" amid global economic chaos, he insisted: "These anxieties, this suffering, I know them, I understand them."
"They are about respecting our borders, the determined fight against job relocation, controlling immigration, putting value on work, on security," he said, hitting on a number of key right-wing themes.
Sarkozy also called for three televised debates before the second round but Hollande refused, saying the single planned encounter would be enough.
A jubilant Le Pen addressed her supporters after her National Front party's best ever showing, saying: "The battle of France has just begun ... we have exploded the monopoly of the two parties" -- the Socialists and Sarkozy's UMP.
"Nothing will be as it was before ... the people of France have invited themselves to the table of the elite," she said at a remarkably triumphant rally for a candidate who went out at the first hurdle.
"I will give my opinion on May 1," Le Pen said when asked how her supporters should vote in the second round.
The first opinion poll after the first round said that Hollande would beat Sarkozy by 54 percent to 46 in the second round and that the attitude of Le Pen's supporters could be decisive.
Polling institute Ifop said that 48 percent of her backers would switch to Sarkozy and 31 percent to Hollande, while an OpinionWay poll said 18 percent of her supporters would back the Socialist and 39 percent Sarkozy.
The head of Sarkozy's UMP party, Jean-Francois Cope, said he looked forward to the second round.
"From tomorrow morning, we will no longer be in a case of nine candidates against Nicolas Sarkozy, but we will be one-on-one, Nicolas Sarkozy against Francois Hollande ... then I think the match will be different."
Far left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon was beaten into fourth place with around 11.7 percent, a disappointment for his supporters after a barnstorming campaign, and called on the left to unite to oust Sarkozy.
Turnout was high at at least 80 percent, down on the 84 percent turnout of 2007 but up significantly on the 72 percent of 2002 and belying fears that a low-key campaign would be capped by mass abstention.
The left has not won a presidential election in a quarter of a century, but with France mired in low growth and rising joblessness, opinion polls had long predicted the left would beat the right-wing incumbent.
Hollande says Sarkozy has trapped France in a downward spiral of austerity and job losses, while Sarkozy says his rival is inexperienced and weak-willed and would spark financial panic through reckless spending pledges.
The eurozone debt crisis and France's sluggish growth and high unemployment have hung over the campaign, with Sarkozy struggling to defend his record and Hollande unable to credibly promise spending increases.
Opinion polls and campaigning were banned from midnight on Friday, and will now resume tomorrow (Monday) in the build-up to the May 6 run-off.
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J Micallef
Apr 23rd 2012, 07:45
Nahseb il messagg li rridu nixtarru huwa ir-risultat ta Marine Le Pen
Paul Borg
Apr 23rd 2012, 08:23
Hafna u hafna Maltin jahsbuha bhala !!! izda ma jammettux.
jeneba caruana
Apr 23rd 2012, 06:17
Ghana bzonn Ewropa Socjalista!! Ma nistawx naffordjaw nibqaw niggieldu u nwahhlu l-problemi fl-imigranti flokk niggieldu il vera ghadu tad dinja, li hija lekonomija li mhix tahdem!!
Paul Saliba
Apr 23rd 2012, 05:34
Bye Sarkosy..... now you do not have Gaddafi funding your election!!! Those who planned the conflict will soon all be gone.... Sarkosy, Cameron, Obama, Berloskoni and...... GONZI
Joe Fenech
Apr 23rd 2012, 00:07
Don't compare French politics with local ones. Francois H is no Joseph M and Sarkoszy is no Gonzi either!
Paul Borg
Apr 22nd 2012, 21:28
According to the figures published in the article, if France had the preferential voting system, the conservatives would have won 43.7% - 47% to the socialist 28.4% - 29.3%. Sarkozy is still in the race!
P. Ciantar
Apr 23rd 2012, 16:49
Paul in France there are the Conservatives and the Far Right of Le Pen .... But they are divided in principles and very difficult to agree as they have different philosophy on the other hand the Socialists have already the supports of the greens 2 per cent and the extreme left that had 11 per. Sarkozy would have to come to terms with Le Pen on immigration far right measures etc which are not in line with his programme. And there is a big difference from being a conservative and the far right. Let’s take an idea of pre war Italy- the conservatives were the Popolari i.e. Demo-Christians whilst the far right were the Fascists
Joseph Mifsud
Apr 22nd 2012, 21:17
After the Capitalist financial crises its time we have socialist governments in all Europe.
Colin Camilleri
Apr 22nd 2012, 20:14
next conservatives on the line: GonziPN
P. Ciantar
Apr 22nd 2012, 20:26
x ghandu x jaqsam .......
s grima
Apr 22nd 2012, 20:52
@p ciantar tinsix li l ewropa imexija mil konservativi....... u qijed tara fix qeda l ewropa???? il kbir ghadu gejj sihbi!
Eddy Privitera
Apr 22nd 2012, 20:55
Almenu Sarkozy ma bezghax jaghmel l-elezzjoni !
Dr Hermann Paul Farrugia
Apr 22nd 2012, 21:01
Please don't count chickens before they hatch! Sarkozy has fared unexpectedly well taking into account the tsunamic crisis the EU has been & continues to withstand to date.
The face-to-face confrontation between the frontrunners is still on schedule on TV & would hopefully help elucidate matters in the coming days.
The Maltese, like the French, are not as shortsighted near idiotic as you think ! They have & continue to form part of the same European reality.
Hermann P. Farrugia MD
P. Ciantar
Apr 22nd 2012, 21:18
spanja u l grecja mhux is socjalisti kien hemm u ghamlu dizastru no 1. BTW u l Pjan ta Hollande huwa ezatt bhall tal Konservativi Czechi u Inglizi forsi ma tafx.
P. Ciantar
Apr 22nd 2012, 21:19
@ Eddy L elezzjoni saret fi zmiena !!!! check before commenting
Dennis Zammit
Apr 22nd 2012, 22:07
Dear Eddy,
Mela mghaggel ? Ghandek xi haga tistenna?
AHNA ivvotajna ghal Gonzi u ghall-PN ghal HAMES snin u hu naqra (naqra zghira ta) pacenzja u stenna ftit, xi 12-il xahar iehor. Grazzi ta !!!
Mela hsibtu xi Fredu Sant lil Gonzi?
Cristina Cefai
Apr 22nd 2012, 22:46
Mhux hekk, kull ma jigri barra irridu inqabluh ma Malta... xi djuq ta hsieb.
John Borg
Apr 23rd 2012, 05:49
@ S Grima
maybe the conservatives are not the best, but they are still the best known to men kind!
Take for example Greece which is managed by a socialist Government, it almost got BANKRUPT ( thanks to the help offered by conservatives! )
Do you know Greece got bankrupt eeh? let me tell you this, Greece got bankrupt because the socialist government promised to the voters a supreme heaven on earth to the Greek before the election, (one of the highest minimum wages, lowest taxex etc) which in the current situation is IMPOSSIBLE, and got bankrupt!
In Malta we kind of have the same situation, JM is proposing the impossible, and i predict if the people elect him, (and why not?!) for 6 months time it will be heaven on Earth but after that, the word HELL would not even describe part of the Maltese situation under JM!
Under the current government, yes we have high bills! (on that we agree) but are people protesting? Nobody is doing so, because everyone is working.
Some would tell me, i have a job but the wage is not adequate, unfortunately some of us, even me, we live beyond our means, we must priorities our needs. And why not be innovative and create your own job!
We shouldn't ask for the fish, but for a rod, so we can catch as many fish we want! the Greek ask for the Fish, but we Maltese we should ask for the Rod!!
A Cardona
Apr 23rd 2012, 07:15
@S Grima
il kbir ghadu gej???
X jonqos jigri iktar mela?? =S
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