Live Updates: Macron Holds Off Far-Right Push in
France
Marine Le Pen concedes defeat to President Emmanuel
Macron, the first French leader to be re-elected since 2002.
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/04/24/world/french-election-runoff-results
Here’s what
you need to know:
Emmanuel Macron is re-elected French president,
defeating Marine Le Pen.
After Macron’s win, relief for his supporters.
‘I had no choice’: The weary voters backing Macron to
keep Le Pen out.
Voter turnout, a key to the outcome, is lowest in two
decades.
Le Pen’s message found a strong audience in the north.
Emmanuel Macron is re-elected French president,
defeating Marine Le Pen.
PARIS —
Emmanuel Macron won a second term as president of France, triumphing on Sunday
over Marine Le Pen, his far-right challenger, after a campaign where his
promise of stability prevailed over the temptation of an extremist lurch.
Projections
at the close of voting, which are generally reliable, showed Mr. Macron, a
centrist, gaining 58.5 percent of the vote to Ms. Le Pen’s 41.5 percent. His
victory was much narrower than in 2017, when the margin was 66.1 percent to
33.9 percent for Ms. Le Pen, but wider than appeared likely two weeks ago.
Speaking to
a crowd massed on the Champ de Mars in front of a twinkling Eiffel Tower, a
solemn Mr. Macron said his was a victory for “a more independent France and a
stronger Europe.” At the same time he acknowledged “the anger that has been
expressed” during a bitter campaign and that he had duty to “respond
effectively.”
Ms. Le Pen
conceded defeat in her third attempt to become president, but bitterly
criticized the “brutal and violent methods” of Mr. Macron. She vowed to fight
on to secure a large number of representatives in legislative elections in
June, declaring that “French people have this evening shown their desire for a
strong counter power to Emmanuel Macron.”
At a
critical moment in Europe, with fighting raging in Ukraine after the Russian
invasion, France rejected a candidate hostile to NATO, to the European Union,
to the United States, and to its fundamental values that hold that no French
citizens should be discriminated against because they are Muslim.
Jean-Yves
Le Drian, the defense minister, said the result reflected “the mobilization of
French people for the maintenance of their values and against a narrow vision
of France.”
The French
do not generally love their presidents, and none had succeeded in being
re-elected since 2002. Mr. Macron’s unusual achievement in securing five more
years in power reflects his effective stewardship over the Covid-19 crisis, his
rekindling of the economy, and his political agility in occupying the entire
center of the political spectrum.
Ms. Le Pen,
softening her image if not her anti-immigrant nationalist program, rode a wave
of alienation and disenchantment to bring the extreme right closer to power
than at any time since 1944. Her National Rally party has joined the
mainstream, even if at the last minute many French people seem to have voted
for Mr. Macron to ensure that France not succumb to the xenophobic vitriol of
the darker passages of its history.
Ms. Le Pen
is a longtime sympathizer with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, whom she
visited at the Kremlin during her last campaign in 2017. She would almost certainly have pursued
policies that weakened the united allied front to save Ukraine from Russia’s
assault, offered Mr. Putin a breach to exploit in Europe, and undermined the
European Union, whose engine has always been a joint Franco-German commitment
to it.
If Brexit
was a blow to unity, a French nationalist quasi-exit, as set out in Ms. Le
Pen’s proposals, would have left the European Union on life support. That, in
turn, would have crippled an essential guarantor of peace on the continent in a
volatile moment.
Olaf
Scholz, the German Chancellor, declared that Mr. Macron’s win was “a vote of
confidence in Europe.” Boris Johnson, the British Prime Minister, congratulated
the French leader and called France “one of our closest and most important
allies.”
Mr. Scholz
and two other European leaders had taken the unusual step this week of making
clear the importance of a vote against Ms. Le Pen in an opinion article in the
daily newspaper Le Monde. The letter was a reflection of the anxiety in
European capitals and Washington that preceded the vote.
“It is the
choice between a democratic candidate, who believes that France is stronger in
a powerful and autonomous European Union, and a far-right candidate, who openly
sides with those who attack our freedom and our democracy — fundamental values
that come directly from the French Enlightenment,” they wrote.
— Roger
Cohen
After Macron’s win, relief for his supporters.
PARIS —
Hundreds of supporters waving French flags and signs in support of President
Emmanuel Macron screamed with joy and relief when his face appeared on a large
screen facing a sea of blue, white and red in front of the Eiffel Tower.
The crowd
screamed, “One, and two, and five more years,” as the song “One More Time,” by
the French group Daft Punk, blasted from the speakers. People hugged and kissed
each other and danced as the sun started setting on Paris.
“I haven’t
slept in three days because I was so anxious. Now I am relieved,” said Sharif
Attane, 39, a cook. “I voted for Macron in part because of the war in Ukraine.
It was a vote in favor of peace. To me, Marine Le Pen is superficial and
misunderstands France. She wants a nation divided in two.”
Jackie
Boissard, 60, who works in finance, had a big smile on her face. While thrilled
by Mr. Macron’s projected vote tally of 58.2 percent, she said there was still
more work to be done.
“I was sure
that Macron was going to win,” said Ms. Boissard, who held a French flag. “I’m
still afraid of the legislative elections though. The fight is not over.”
Hatem
Ayachi, 63, an immigrant from Tunisia, came with two of his four children.
“I voted
for Macron for the future of my children,” he said standing near the podium
where Mr. Macron was set to speak. “I was not entirely pleased with Macron’s
first term, but he will always be better than Marine Le Pen, and that is why I
voted for him.”
He added,
“We are immigrants, and we were really stressed about Marine Le Pen winning.”
— Aida
Alami and Adèle Cordonnier
PARIS — The crowd of supporters, packed into a large room and holding
champagne glasses, chanted “Marine! Marine!” as they waited for the final
results of Sunday’s presidential vote. At last, a face appeared on the large
screen, revealing who would be France’s president for the next five years. When
the screen flashed Emmanuel Macron’s face, the crowd booed.
On Sunday,
Mr. Macron defeated Ms. Le Pen, garnering 58.2 percent of the vote to her 41.8
percent, according to early projections by polling firms. The defeat was a blow
for Ms. Le Pen, who was running for president for the third time and in recent
months had appeared closer than ever to gaining power.
But
Sunday’s results were also bittersweet for Ms. Le Pen, who addedseveral
percentage points to her vote tally from 2017.
“Tonight’s
result is a resounding victory in itself,” she told supporters, as she conceded
her defeat in a speech about 10 minutes after the first projections were
published, her voice and eyes at first filled with emotion.
Rémi
Ulrich, a 29-year-old supporter who was fervently applauding just a few feet
from Ms. Le Pen’s stage, said Sunday’s result symbolized “the end of the glass
ceiling.”
Some
supporters in the crowd had tears in their eyes as the far-right leader
delivered her speech. Others halfheartedly waved French flags, at times looking
lost.
“I’m
terribly disappointed,” said Ghislaine Bernard, 60, adding that Ms. Le Pen had
been vilified by the media and the mainstream parties in recent weeks. A
longtime Le Pen sympathizer, Ms. Bernard said she would stay at the event for
the rest of the night. “Marine Le Pen, I don’t want her to feel alone now,” she
said.
Ms. Le Pen
gathered her supporters in the affluent 16th arrondissement of Paris, in a
gilded complex of pavilions set up at the entrance of the Bois de Boulogne, a
large park west of the French capital. The gathering, with its hallways lined
by large mirrors and champagne glass pyramids lining the main room, brought out
500 or so supporters, many of them young and in their best clothes, hoping for
the best.
Ms.
Bernard, who said she had kept a close eye on the polls, said she “expected”
Ms. Le Pen to lose. “She’s formidable, but she could not do the impossible,”
Ms. Bernard said.
But after
conceding defeat, Ms. Le Pen’s tone soon turned offensive, as she vowed to keep
the fight going and called on her supporters to turn their sights on June’s
parliamentary elections.
“More than
ever, I will continue my commitment to France and the French people,” she said,
to the cheers of the crowd chanting, “Marine! Marine!”
“The game
is not totally over!” she said. “As a consequence, we are launching tonight the
big electoral battle for the parliamentary elections!”
— Constant Méheut


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