Opinion
polls see France's Le Pen winning 2027 election despite guilty verdict
By
Reuters
July 9,
202611:23 AM GMT+2Updated 7 hours ago
Summary
Two opinion
polls see Le Pen winning presidential election
Surveys
carried out after guilty verdict upheld
Le Pen has
announced she would be her party's candidate
Campaign
starts with cheers and jeers
PARIS,
July 9 (Reuters) - Far-right leader Marine Le Pen could well win France's
presidential election next year despite an appeal court this week
upholding a guilty verdict for embezzlement of EU funds, two opinion polls suggest.
Much can
happen until the ballot's first round on April 18 next year, and the pollsters
stress this is not a forecast, but rather a snapshot of current voting
intentions.
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But both
surveys, by Ifop pollsters for LCI and Le Figaro, and Toluna Harris Interactive
for M6 and RTL show Le Pen leading
the first round and being elected in the run-off on May 2, as did most opinion polls
before the verdict.
The polls
were carried out after the 57-year-old veteran far-right
leader announced she would run in the election, following the appeal court's
ruling that found her guilty of having misused EU money to pay
party staff but reduced an election ban, allowing her to be candidate.
For the
first round, Ifop sees the leader of the anti-immigration, eurosceptic National
Rally ahead with 36%, improving on ratings of 32-34% in previous surveys by the
same pollster over the past months. None of her opponents would have more than
19% at best. The other poll shows similar results.
In the
run-off, which sees the top two candidates from the first round face off, both
pollsters see Le Pen winning. It's a narrower win against Former Prime
Minister Edouard Philippe, a center-right candidate, with 49% in the Harris
Interactive poll, which is within the margin of error.
Both
pollsters see Gabriel Attal, also a former prime minister to President Emmanuel
Macron, at 45%, while if it was the hard-left's Jean-Luc Melenchon against Le
Pen, he would lose by a huge margin, with just about a third of the votes.
Reacting
to the surveys, Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure said Le Pen was a
"formidable candidate." The Socialists, and many other parties, say it was shameful for Le Pen to run despite her conviction. She has appealed the
conviction and the highest court, the Cour de Cassation, has said it aimed to
give a final verdict before the election.
Le Pen
was greeted by cheers and boos as she launched her presidential campaign on
Wednesday. As she shook hands in the street market of La Fleche in the Loire Valley, in western France,
some jeered "Give the money back!" and "Go to jail!" while
others chanted "Marine, President!" — a sign of the tensions that may lie
ahead.
Another
poll, published by Elabe pollsters for BFM TV on Wednesday, pointed to some of the challenges facing Le
Pen. Seven out of 10 voters don't agree with her statements that she is
innocent. And while a wide majority of RN voters back her decision to run in
the election, there are still 32% of RN voters who don't.
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