While war rages in Ukraine, the French have got a president to elect.
The first round of the election is on the 10th April, with the top two candidates going forward to the second round two weeks later. Therefore time is running out for the candidate of the mainstream Right, Valérie Pécresse. Her campaign isn’t just stalling, it is sinking.
France, Kantar poll:
Presidential election
Macron (LREM-RE): 25%
Le Pen (RN-ID): 16.5%
Zemmour (REC-NI): 16.5%
Mélenchon (LFI-LEFT): 12%
Pécresse (LR-EPP): 12%
…Fieldwork: 21-23 February 2022
Sample size: 1,500
➤ https://t.co/oL97q6DoVg pic.twitter.com/AszJuPsCyW— Europe Elects (@EuropeElects) February 24, 2022
A few weeks ago, she was still challenging Marine Le Pen and Éric Zemmour for second place and thus a place in the run-off against the incumbent, Emmanuel Macron. However, this week’s polls from Elabe and Harris both put Pécresse in fourth place, while the latest polls — from Kantar and Cluster 17 have her running equal to or behind Jean-Luc Mélenchon (the previously fifth-placed candidate of the populist Left).
This couldn’t be better news for Macron. Of all the other candidates, Pécresse had the best chance of beating him. But she won’t get the chance if she’s nowhere near to making it through to the run-off.
This is an unusual state of affairs. There’s been a viable conservative candidate in every presidential election of the Fifth Republic. In 2017, François Fillon was the first not to reach the final round. But even then, and despite the ‘Penelopegate’ scandal, he won 20% of the first round vote. Right now, Pécresse is polling at between 10 and 15%.
She is not an especially incompetent or unlikeable candidate. Nor do unhelpful stories like this one — about the allegation that “dead people and a dog” were able to vote in her party’s primary — explain her failure to make headway.
Rather, the French conservatives find themselves struggling to carve out a political space between the Right-leaning liberalism of Macron and the competing populisms of Le Pen and Zemmour.
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SubscribeCouldn’t they make some kind of deal? I mean, do the French actually want another five years of that globalist weirdo Macron?
Le Pen’s base is the “Left Behind”, working-class people who have been abandoned by the wokisation of the French left. As such, she cannot embrace the same Thatcherist economic policies advocated by Zemmour.
Zemmour has no chances to win, and he knows it. He is just paving the way for the formation of a “grande droite” led by Marion Maréchal, and with enough firepower to win in 2027.
Sarkozy beat Le Pen by 27% to 18% in 2012, and trounced her father by more than 3 to 1 in 2007. Now the Republicans trail the Far Right by almost 3 to 1. This is what happens when the centre right selects candidates to impress the progressive urban public sector and media blob. Pay attention Boris Johnson!
I object to the term “Far Right” in your post. They are not “Far Right” but anti-globalist, anti-posh, anti-woke….
I don’t think it is fair or accurate to say Zemmour is slumping … until recently he was polling at 14% or 14.5%.
I agree the right has not found a winner yet.
Macron was always going to win. Zemmour’s importance in this election is to shift the Overton Window rightwards. What comes after Macron is the goal. Time is on the right’s side as the European Neo-Liberal project collapses in on itself.
“To get into the first round, candidates need to get the signatures of at least 500 elected officials” – what a joke of a democratic system
Oui! That struck me as a very weird requirement in a democratic society, especially if it is hard to get, as seems likely from this article.