There is zero chance of Le Pen winning, because of the way the “two rounds” French presidential election system works.
Basically, there are a dozen or so candidates in the first round, then the top two vote-getters go to a second round (unless one of them gets 51% in the first round, which basically can’t happen).
Even if Le Pen gets more than Macron in the first round, all of the other parties will endorse Macron in the second round, which will mean he wins.
I don’t even care because I’m supporting that racist Jew who wants to deport all nonwhites.
French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday appealed to younger, progressive-leaning voters in his last scheduled interview before Sunday’s first-round presidential vote while his forecast lead over far-right candidate Marine Le Pen further evaporated.
“When it comes to correcting social inequalities at their root, we have begun the work, but we are very far from having succeeded,” he told online news outlet Brut in a long interview, pledging also to do more to fight climate change.
I’m not really sure that constituency is very big at this point.
Young people have no money, and they are being told that the reason they have no money is because of the policies they support – fighting global warming and Russia.
When you’re broke, you can’t afford this kind of decadence.
Less than 48 hours before the first-round vote, the race for the top job in the euro zone’s second-largest economy appeared to be coming down again to the two finalists of the 2017 election.
But while Macron was still slightly ahead in opinion polls, his re-election no longer appeared to be a foregone conclusion on Friday with Le Pen climbing in surveys, some of them putting her within the margin of error.
A poll on Friday showed the tightest gap ever, with Le Pen seen winning 49% of votes in a likely runoff against the president, her best polling score on record.
The poll, published on BFM TV’s website, showed that Macron had lost a further two points at 26% support and Le Pen had gained two points to 25%.
Hours before candidates and their aides are required by French election law to refrain from making any political statements until election offices close on Sunday evening, there was a growing sense of discomfort among Macron supporters.
“I think we’ll be OK, but it’s going to be a hard one,” one minister, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told Reuters.
Campaign insiders say Macron urgently needs to appeal to the broadest possible voter base before the first round, because coming second behind Le Pen on Sunday would give her strong momentum ahead of the runoff.
Le Pen has centered her bid on purchasing power, softening her image and tapping into promising to cut taxes and hike some social benefits, worrying financial markets as she gains momentum in the polls.
Maybe she will get 1 or 2 points more than him in the first round. That’s possible or probable.
But it does not matter. He will necessarily win the second round. There is no chance for something else to happen.
The media is just hyping this up.
I’m hyping the racist extremist Jew who will deport all immigrants or maybe just slaughter them in the streets.
Le Z ou rien 🇫🇷 #Zemmour #Elysee2022 @ZemmourEric pic.twitter.com/EGu5uUYkIu
— Kenzo_ne (@Kenzo_nee) April 6, 2022
But that’s not on the cards.
We are going to continue the slide.
Nothing good is going to happen in the West before the wrath of God and total collapse.