Macron’s scare tactics
The French president has encouraged fears of a Le Pen
victory, but polls still point to a likely win for him.
When the war in Ukraine began six weeks ago, a
comfortable election victory for Emmanuel Macron seemed certain |
BY JOHN
LICHFIELD
April 5,
2022 4:34 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/emmanuel-macron-france-election-scare-tactic/
Emmanuel
Macron will win the French presidential election this month. Probably.
Despite the
rise of far-right leader Marine Le Pen, in both first and second round polls,
Macron will likely end a 20-year-old French incumbents’ curse on April 24 and
win a second term in the Elysée Palace.
But the
race, frozen for so long, has lurched into more uncertain territory in the last
10 days, and Macron himself encouraged fears of a Le Pen victory at a big rally
near Paris on Saturday. He suggested that a far-right triumph in France would
fit a disturbing pattern of “great global disorder” – geopolitical, environmental,
sanitary and economic. Such a breakdown in the domestic and international
consensus raised, he said, “the specter, perhaps, of global armed conflict.”
Exaggeration?
Scare tactics? Yes, in part. The Macron camp is a little rattled. It also wants
to exploit the tightening poll figures to enliven its complacent and passive
voter base.
Anything
that wakens up a long-torpid campaign is welcome, but I do not quite buy the
“Le-Pen-might-win” scare.
When the
Ukraine war began six weeks ago, a comfortable Macron victory seemed certain.
He climbed 7 points in first round polls in two weeks.
Last week,
a tremor of uncertainty – even panic – passed through the French political
establishment. Two opinion polls, from polling institutes Elabe and Ifop,
placed Le Pen within 5 percentage points of Macron in the two-candidate second
round on April 24.
Several
other surveys still showed a 10-14 point gap in Macron’s favor.
No matter.
A flurry of stories commented on an upward trajectory for Le Pen. Some, who had
written her off, discovered abruptly that she was still a force to be reckoned
with.
Predicting
an election more than two weeks out is a fool’s game. But here goes anyway.
Most signs still point to Macron topping the poll in the first round on Sunday
and winning the runoff two weeks later.
A Macron
versus Le Pen second round was always going to be much closer than it was in
2017, when 66 percent of voters chose Macron. There will certainly be no
landslide this time, but talk of a Le Pen surge is partly based on an illusion.
There has
been no first round polling shift to the far fight in recent days; the change
has all been within the far right. Between them, Le Pen and Éric Zemmour have
shared 32 percent support for eight months. In the last four weeks, Le Pen has
risen to 20-22 percent and Zemmour has fallen to 10 percent or below.
Similarly,
there has been no collapse in the first round support for Macron. Rather the
opposite. For eight months or more, the president polled steadily at 23-24
percent. After Russia invaded Ukraine he zoomed up to 30 percent in POLITICO’s
Poll of Polls. He has now fallen back to 27-28 percent — still well ahead of
his pre-Ukraine levels and comfortably ahead of Le Pen.
The second
round polling is also steadier than last week’s Ifop and Elabe surveys suggest.
POLITICO’s polling analyst Cornelius Hirsch, the man responsible for the Poll
of Polls, points out that Macron’s second round “lead” over Le Pen has averaged
eight percentage points for many months.
Just after
the Ukraine invasion, Macron’s lead widened. Last week, the gap narrowed in all
the polls and dramatically to just 5 points in those two polls. Both Elabe and
Ifop have since slightly widened Macron’s lead again. Overall, the trend has
reverted back to 56 percent for Macron against 44 percent for Le Pen.
Closer race
There are
good arguments why Le Pen might come close this year. There are also good
reasons to believe that she will once again fall short.
Compared
with 2017, Le Pen has a more moderate image, partly created by Zemmour, who
outbid her on migration, race and Islam. Unlike 2017, she has momentum in the
polls (even if mostly at Zemmour’s expense).
She has
cleverly exploited the cost of living issue. She has a reservoir of far-right
support (Zemmour’s) which will mostly transfer to her in the second round.
Most of
all, Macron can no longer rely on a broad so-called Republican Front — a
trans-partisan call, including from the left, to vote against the far right in
the runoff. Some radical left voters have persuaded themselves (idiotically)
that Macron is as bad as Le Pen.
On the
other hand, substantial left-wing abstention, especially by the hard-left core
supporters of Jean-Luc Mélenchon, is already accounted for in the polling
showing a narrower second-round gap between Macron and Le Pen this year. Half
of Mélenchon voters will stay at home, according to an Ipsos mega-poll for Le
Monde last week.
Other
left-wingers will again likely transfer to Macron, including 29 percent of
Mélenchonistes, 37 percent of communists and 65 percent of Greens. So will
almost half of the remaining center-right vote
– and even some Zemmourists.
In the
Ipsos deep-dive poll, 50 percent of those questioned said they would never vote
for Le Pen. The equivalent figure for Macron is 38.5 percent. Variable turnout
skews such figures, but it is tough to win a two-candidate runoff if half the
electorate refuses ever to vote for you.
There is
another, important factor in Macron’s favor. Le Pen’s support is concentrated
in the “low turnout” parts of the electorate: the young, the less educated and
less well-off. Macron’s vote is concentrated in the parts of the population
which vote most.
While Le
Pen was historically good at mobilizing her voters, she has failed to “get out
her vote” in every election since April 2017. In each vote in that time, parliamentary,
European, municipal and regional, she has “underscored” the polls. Parts of her
base never left home.
To win on
April 24, she will have to outperform the polls. This election will be close —
scarily close for some. Nothing suggests (yet) that Le Pen can then create the
biggest shock in modern French political history.


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