September 22, 2024

Macron wins re-election in France, holding off far-right challenge, projections show

Macron #Macron

Emmanuel Macron has held off a challenge from far-right leader Marine Le Pen to retain the French presidency, according to projected results from French polling agencies.

Macron, the centrist incumbent, is projected to get 57 percent to 58.5 percent of the vote in Sunday’s second-round runoff, compared with 41.5 percent to 43 percent for Le Pen, his nationalist rival.

If the projections are accurate, Macron will triumph decisively, although by a smaller margin than in 2017, when he won by more than 30 percentage points to became France’s youngest president. While she fell short of the Élysée Palace again in her third presidential run, Le Pen still looks to have secured the most votes ever for a French far-right candidate.

In a victory speech at Paris’ Champ de Mars, Macron thanked his supporters and promised a more “independent France” and “stronger Europe.”

“I also know that many of our compatriots voted for me today, not to support the ideas I hold but to block those of the extreme right,” he said. “And I want to thank them here and tell them that I am aware that this vote binds me for the years to come.”

“From now on, I am no longer the candidate of one camp but the president of all,” he added.

French President Emmanuel Macron Macron is a former banker and liberal centrist who burst onto the global stage five years ago with a new political party. Christophe Ena / AP

Le Pen’s challenge to the country’s mainstream order and the West’s unity against Russia had officials in Europe and Washington anxiously following the election amid the war in Ukraine. She is sympathetic to Russian President Vladimir Putin and skeptical of NATO and the European Union.

Le Pen conceded defeat in a speech to supporters shortly after the projections were released but said her unprecedented vote total represented “a shining victory in itself.”

“The ideas we represent are reaching summits,” she said.

After polls closed across France at 8 p.m. local time (2 p.m. ET), the polling companies Opinionway, Harris and IFOP worked with media organizations to publish projected results based on early voting patterns. The method has accurately predicted French elections in the past.

The Interior Ministry will announce the final result Monday. Numbers posted by the ministry showed Macron with 58.5 percent of the vote to Le Pen’s 41.4.

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