Far-Right leader Marine Le Pen could become French president in May, riding the same wave of anti-establishment resentment which led to Donald Trump’s victory, according to several former prime ministers.
Former conservative prime minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin said: ‘Madame Le Pen could be elected.’
Another former premier, the Socialist Manuel Valls, has also warned of the ‘danger’ of assuming Le Pen cannot win.
Polls show support for the 48-year-old anti-immigrant and anti-EU candidate has been consistent for four years now.
Since 2013 surveys have shown she will progress through the first round to reach the runoff stage in France’s two-stage presidential election.
Pollsters say although Le Pen is not currently forecast to win the all-important showdown on May 7, she has whittled down the projected gap between herself and her main challengers.
At the headquarters of her National Front (FN) party in Nanterre, outside Paris, officials believe the same forces that led to the Brexit vote in Britain and Donald Trump’s victory in the United States could carry Le Pen to power.
The legal woes of her conservative challenger Francois Fillon have especially played into Le Pen’s hands.
When Fillon saw off pre-contest favourite Alain Juppe to clinch the rightwing nomination in late November, polls showed he would win 67 percent of the vote in the runoff to 33 percent for Le Pen.
Then in January allegations surfaced that Fillon had paid his wife hundreds of thousands of euros for parliamentary work she might not have done. Surveys now show Le Pen would score 44 percent to 56 percent for Fillon if the second round was held today.
The pressure on 62-year-old Fillon moved up a notch on Friday when prosecutors announced he would face a full judicial investigation into the claims.
A similar picture emerges when Le Pen’s projected second-round score is compared to that of Emmanuel Macron, the pro-business centrist who has moved from outsider to genuine contender in the space of a few months.
Although Macron’s performance against Le Pen has only been tested since January, the winning margin has dropped from 30 points to around 20 in a month.
The latest Ifop poll gives Macron 61.5 percent to 38.5 for the far-right standard bearer.
Speaking at a rally in Nantes yesterday, Le Pen accused Macron my minister of wanting to create a ‘migrant motorway’ between France and north Africa and claimed he had the support of ‘financial interests and their intermediaries in the media’.
In an attack that recalled President Trump’s confrontation with journalists, she added: ‘The media have chosen their candidate. They are campaigning hysterically for their darling.
‘They take the moral high ground, pretend to only analyse the facts and then shout about the freedom of the press as soon as you criticise them,’ she said to cheers.
Le Pen is also caught up in an expenses scandal and faces accusations she has misused European Parliament funds. Yet unlike Fillon, who once led the race, the allegations have not damaged her support.
Experts caution however that predicting the second-round scores in a contest that has already thrown up a host of surprises is fraught with risk.
And the polls have been wrong in election after election over the last two years.
When canvassed by L’Opinion newspaper in mid-February, polling experts were divided on whether Le Pen could win.
Bernard Sananes of the Elabe polling group said it was ‘both possible and improbable’.
Jerome Sainte-Marie of Polling Vox nuanced his answer, saying: ‘Against Macron, she has a chance of winning.’
Ifop’s Jerome Fourquet told AFP that if on the eve of the second round, the polls show Le Pen at 40 percent to 60 percent for a rival, ‘the gap is too big for there to be a surprise’.
‘But if it’s 55-45, it could be a different matter,’ he said.
Fourquet said Le Pen’s performance in the first round would be crucial to see if she can gain the momentum to snatch a win in the runoff.
In the 2002 presidential election, Marine’s father Jean-Marie Le Pen rocked the political establishment by reaching the runoff.
But in that second round, voters of various political stripes reluctantly got behind conservative candidate Jacques Chirac to block the far right.
Regional elections in December 2015 give a more recent precedent. Both Le Pen and her 27-year-old niece Marion Marechal-Le Pen were soundly beaten in the second round despite high scores in the first round, as the mainstream parties joined forces to block them.
Since then, ‘Le Pen has cleared another hurdle, but the barrier she still has to clear is very high,’ Fourquet said.
Researcher Joel Gombin, a specialist on the FN, believes Le Pen is still some way short of getting the keys to the glittering Elysee Palace.
‘As things stand, where are the votes necessary to move up from 25 percent or even 30 percent to 50 percent?,’ he said.
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