Berliner Boersenzeitung - Le Pen, Macron in bitter clash ahead of tight French election

EUR -
AED 4.274813
AFN 72.751929
ALL 95.522662
AMD 428.365565
ANG 2.084108
AOA 1068.558132
ARS 1630.401719
AUD 1.623214
AWG 2.095212
AZN 1.972432
BAM 1.955249
BBD 2.344329
BDT 142.889106
BGN 1.943798
BHD 0.439474
BIF 3458.1103
BMD 1.164007
BND 1.487074
BOB 8.042698
BRL 5.840516
BSD 1.163967
BTN 110.787293
BWP 15.647522
BYN 3.199684
BYR 22814.534551
BZD 2.34093
CAD 1.60697
CDF 2624.835786
CHF 0.911183
CLF 0.026543
CLP 1044.672623
CNY 7.909136
CNH 7.896628
COP 4233.492967
CRC 529.648416
CUC 1.164007
CUP 30.846182
CVE 110.233452
CZK 24.252781
DJF 206.867583
DKK 7.470945
DOP 68.480401
DZD 154.943283
EGP 60.775246
ERN 17.460103
ETB 187.662392
FJD 2.560001
FKP 0.86658
GBP 0.861988
GEL 3.096594
GGP 0.86658
GHS 13.514132
GIP 0.86658
GMD 84.394632
GNF 10201.080482
GTQ 8.87546
GYD 243.520305
HKD 9.119004
HNL 30.967137
HRK 7.532401
HTG 152.416379
HUF 356.523949
IDR 20644.825755
ILS 3.353265
IMP 0.86658
INR 110.875195
IQD 1524.763617
IRR 1540446.684797
ISK 143.591653
JEP 0.86658
JMD 183.448286
JOD 0.825265
JPY 184.965277
KES 150.809075
KGS 101.792382
KHR 4669.663557
KMF 494.702617
KPW 1047.606221
KRW 1767.431436
KWD 0.360051
KYD 0.970022
KZT 550.962316
LAK 25513.698058
LBP 104256.961979
LKR 377.122069
LRD 212.99904
LSL 19.003861
LTL 3.437009
LVL 0.704096
LYD 7.419908
MAD 10.710235
MDL 20.206217
MGA 4890.600325
MKD 61.625834
MMK 2443.944509
MNT 4166.02407
MOP 9.392112
MRU 46.546678
MUR 55.034212
MVR 17.933581
MWK 2018.322362
MXN 20.115668
MYR 4.600854
MZN 74.378464
NAD 19.003861
NGN 1595.794996
NIO 42.83774
NOK 10.752286
NPR 177.259269
NZD 1.982147
OMR 0.447483
PAB 1.163967
PEN 3.964465
PGK 5.078547
PHP 71.395509
PKR 324.074051
PLN 4.231363
PYG 7216.965527
QAR 4.2556
RON 5.241176
RSD 117.415662
RUB 83.155118
RWF 1702.312803
SAR 4.353542
SBD 9.364648
SCR 15.987408
SDG 698.96604
SEK 10.869601
SGD 1.486681
SHP 0.869049
SLE 28.630926
SLL 24408.644402
SOS 665.209619
SRD 43.206778
STD 24092.591981
STN 24.49299
SVC 10.185085
SYP 128.65185
SZL 18.999562
THB 37.795463
TJS 10.714234
TMT 4.074024
TND 3.402526
TOP 2.802649
TRY 53.295684
TTD 7.899739
TWD 36.562043
TZS 3036.992829
UAH 51.546747
UGX 4387.744241
USD 1.164007
UYU 46.486696
UZS 13972.001256
VES 612.512637
VND 30678.564929
VUV 138.341459
WST 3.171683
XAF 655.769321
XAG 0.014897
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.145786
XCG 2.0977
XDR 0.815805
XOF 655.772137
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.789783
ZAR 18.986768
ZMK 10477.46116
ZMW 21.911729
ZWL 374.809736
  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.66

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    86.61

    +0.22%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.5

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.73

    +0.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.1600

    16.64

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    14.94

    -1.14%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    51.38

    -0.29%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    104.23

    -0.51%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    65.36

    -0.57%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    24.6

    +0.85%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    33.01

    -1%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.87

    +0.39%

  • BCC

    0.0500

    67.16

    +0.07%

  • BP

    -0.5100

    44.36

    -1.15%

  • AZN

    -2.7200

    187.03

    -1.45%

Le Pen, Macron in bitter clash ahead of tight French election
Le Pen, Macron in bitter clash ahead of tight French election / Photo: Ludovic MARIN - POOL/AFP

Le Pen, Macron in bitter clash ahead of tight French election

French President Emmanuel Macron and far-right rival Marine Le Pen on Wednesday clashed bitterly over relations with Russia and economic policy as they sought to sway undecided voters in a debate four days ahead of presidential elections.

Text size:

France faces a stark choice in Sunday's second-round run-off between the centrist president Macron and the anti-immigration Le Pen, who will seek to become the country's first far-right head of state in an outcome that would send shockwaves around Europe.

The president adopted an aggressive approach in the live televised debate, repeatedly seeking to land punches on Le Pen over her record, while she sought to keep the focus on the government's performance.

The tone sharpened as the discussion moved to foreign policy, with Macron angrily zeroing on a loan Le Pen's party had taken from a Czech-Russian bank ahead of her 2017 election campaign.

"You are dependent on the Russian government and you are dependent on Mr (Russian President Vladimir) Putin," Macron said. "When you speak to Russia you are speaking to your banker."

Macron and Le Pen, who exchanged a brief handshake before the debate, sat face-to-face at two individual tables separated by just a few metres.

Le Pen replied that she was "an absolutely and totally free woman", arguing that her party had only taken that loan as it could not find financing in France where banks refused to lend to her.

With Russia's invasion of Ukraine overshadowing the campaign, Macron also attacked Le Pen for her past recognition of Russia's 2014 annexation of the Ukrainian peninsular of Crimea.

Le Pen replied: "I support a free Ukraine that is not submissive to the United States or the European Union or Russia, that is my position."

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky had urged Le Pen earlier to admit "she made a mistake" in her past admiration for Putin and her refusal to condemn his 2014 annexation of Crimea.

Even jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny waded in to the fray with a Twitter thread accusing Le Pen of "corruption" and "selling political influence to Putin" over the loan of nine million euros ($10 million) from a bank he described as "Putin's notorious money-laundering outfit".

- Purchasing power -

The priority for Le Pen was to avoid a repeat of the 2017 run-off debate where Macron managed to make her look flustered and sometimes not on top of her brief.

When she cited increased debt under Macron, he replied: "Oh dear, oh dear. Stop. you're getting everything confused."

He also accsued her of having a "program that's nonsense."

Turning to Europe, Le Pen insisted she wanted to stay in the European Union but reform the bloc into an "alliance of nations".

"Europe is not all or nothing," she said, as Macron retorted that she appeared to be proposing something other than EU membership.

"Your policy is to leave Europe," he said.

The opening exchanges of the debate -- expected to last almost three hours -- were dominated by daily concerns such as the rising cost of living, which Le Pen has made a major feature of her campaign.

Both candidates have their eyes on voters who backed third-placed hard-left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon in the first round. He has refused to urge his supporters to vote for Macron in order to keep Le Pen out of the Elysee Palace.

Le Pen said she had seen people "suffering" over the first five years of Macron's rule and that "another choice is possible".

"If the French people honour me with their confidence on Sunday, I will be a president for daily life, the value of work and purchasing power," she said.

Macron replied that "we must and should improve people's daily lives through major projects for the school and health systems".

He claimed his measures to help household incomes were more effective than Le Pen's and also said that France should become a "great ecological power of the 21st century".

- Tighter race -

Macron is favourite to win the run-off, with most polls showing an advantage of over 10 percent, and become the first French president to win a second term since Jacques Chirac in 2002.

The latest poll by Ipsos/Sopra Steria published Wednesday predicted a solid margin of victory for Macron on 56 percent to 44 for Le Pen.

But analysts and allies of the president have warned the result is far from a foregone conclusion, with polls indicating over 10 percent of French who intend to cast their ballots have yet to decide who to vote for.

An Odoxa poll released Wednesday found that Macron's approval rating as a "good president" had slumped to just 40 percent in mid-April, down six points from March.

"This debate will probably be decisive for giving an advantage to one of these two rivals," said Odoxa's president Gael Sliman.

Brice Teinturier, director general of Ipsos France, said that while in the past presidential debates had become more of a tradition than decisive, this one "could move more votes than we have ever observed before" in modern France.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)