Poll finds unprecedented uncertainty among French voters before presidential election

Poll finds unprecedented uncertainty among French voters before presidential election

by Joseph Anthony
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The replica of the Statue of Liberty is seen wearing a shirt with the word “Present” in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, March 23, 2017 to mark the launching of the event “Call For Solidarity” by 80 NGO’s to weigh on the upcoming French presidential election

A month before the first round of Franceโ€˜s presidential election, 43 per cent of voters are hesitant about who to vote for, a poll said on Friday, underlining the uncertainty surrounding the volatile election campaign.

Opinion polls show independent centrist Emmanuel Macron and far-right leader Marine Le Pen likely to lead in the first round of the election on April 23 and that these two candidates would go through to a May 7 run-off that Macron would win easily.

But an opinion poll by Odoxa for franceinfo radio found that 43 per cent of voters were still hesitating between several candidates, which it said reflected an โ€œuncertainty unprecedented in (French) electoral history.โ€

โ€œThe level of voter indecision about the candidates is completely exceptional,โ€ Odoxa said.

Investors have been jittery about the possibility of Le Pen, leader of the anti-European Union, anti-immigration National Front, winning the election and taking France out of the euro.

The poll found that potential voters for right-wing candidates โ€“ Le Pen and conservative Francois Fillon โ€“ were more settled in their choices than potential voters for Macron and the leading left-wing candidates, Benoit Hamon of the ruling Socialist Party and far-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon.

Sixty percent of Le Penโ€™s potential voters and 57 per cent of Fillonโ€™s had definitely decided on their candidate compared with 47 per cent for Macron, 44 per cent for Melenchon and 40 per cent for Hamon, the poll found.

Fillon, once the front runner, has slipped in the polls since media reports in late January that he had paid his wife, Penelope, and two children hundreds of thousands of euros of public funds for work they may not have carried out.

Fillon accused President Francois Hollande in a television interview on Thursday of being involved in what he alleges is a government plot to spread damaging media leaks about his affairs to destroy his chances of being elected.

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