Berliner Boersenzeitung - Le Pen hopes Macron 'hatred' can tip French election

EUR -
AED 4.298587
AFN 79.896722
ALL 97.290363
AMD 447.399374
ANG 2.094905
AOA 1073.330424
ARS 1519.860648
AUD 1.795917
AWG 2.107742
AZN 1.992538
BAM 1.956226
BBD 2.359994
BDT 142.010329
BGN 1.956029
BHD 0.441264
BIF 3485.629543
BMD 1.17048
BND 1.498614
BOB 8.076759
BRL 6.32516
BSD 1.168845
BTN 102.223395
BWP 15.642274
BYN 3.899316
BYR 22941.40764
BZD 2.347791
CAD 1.615707
CDF 3388.539825
CHF 0.943637
CLF 0.028765
CLP 1128.472421
CNY 8.406507
CNH 8.40723
COP 4718.216511
CRC 590.623618
CUC 1.17048
CUP 31.01772
CVE 110.289497
CZK 24.471342
DJF 208.143564
DKK 7.463291
DOP 71.945058
DZD 151.758198
EGP 56.534653
ERN 17.5572
ETB 164.619355
FJD 2.638025
FKP 0.863313
GBP 0.863188
GEL 3.148827
GGP 0.863313
GHS 12.681817
GIP 0.863313
GMD 84.908107
GNF 10134.121073
GTQ 8.964991
GYD 244.444295
HKD 9.160902
HNL 30.596404
HRK 7.533558
HTG 152.942011
HUF 394.747901
IDR 18947.027655
ILS 3.966932
IMP 0.863313
INR 102.301593
IQD 1531.120464
IRR 49291.885743
ISK 143.208308
JEP 0.863313
JMD 187.029145
JOD 0.829889
JPY 172.466709
KES 151.167876
KGS 102.275135
KHR 4681.979939
KMF 492.18837
KPW 1053.431983
KRW 1620.599475
KWD 0.357535
KYD 0.974004
KZT 633.142517
LAK 25298.403028
LBP 104668.907219
LKR 351.813635
LRD 234.349049
LSL 20.554778
LTL 3.456123
LVL 0.708012
LYD 6.321323
MAD 10.529794
MDL 19.490246
MGA 5200.088379
MKD 61.534473
MMK 2456.845352
MNT 4208.740114
MOP 9.419371
MRU 46.753786
MUR 53.232897
MVR 18.037555
MWK 2026.724194
MXN 21.93301
MYR 4.940642
MZN 74.787599
NAD 20.554602
NGN 1791.009604
NIO 43.009002
NOK 11.932482
NPR 163.557233
NZD 1.971252
OMR 0.450034
PAB 1.168855
PEN 4.166272
PGK 4.863018
PHP 66.786391
PKR 331.615207
PLN 4.2582
PYG 8559.791566
QAR 4.261447
RON 5.064316
RSD 117.166004
RUB 93.303586
RWF 1692.454231
SAR 4.39227
SBD 9.625762
SCR 17.256727
SDG 702.867751
SEK 11.181841
SGD 1.500668
SHP 0.919814
SLE 27.276359
SLL 24544.377599
SOS 667.9398
SRD 43.963588
STD 24226.57243
STN 24.505129
SVC 10.227141
SYP 15218.276003
SZL 20.548301
THB 37.98159
TJS 10.899381
TMT 4.108385
TND 3.416059
TOP 2.741382
TRY 47.873808
TTD 7.93066
TWD 35.09275
TZS 3051.169752
UAH 48.241397
UGX 4160.924205
USD 1.17048
UYU 46.760386
UZS 14706.077984
VES 158.565333
VND 30766.066318
VUV 139.464646
WST 3.237872
XAF 656.094321
XAG 0.030743
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.163281
XCG 2.106541
XDR 0.815971
XOF 656.094321
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.237109
ZAR 20.581919
ZMK 10535.722215
ZMW 27.087669
ZWL 376.894077
  • RBGPF

    2.8400

    75.92

    +3.74%

  • CMSD

    0.0505

    23.34

    +0.22%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    16.15

    -0.31%

  • BCC

    -0.6300

    85.99

    -0.73%

  • NGG

    -0.1300

    71.43

    -0.18%

  • AZN

    0.7000

    79.17

    +0.88%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.12

    +0.13%

  • GSK

    0.5581

    39.36

    +1.42%

  • RIO

    0.2000

    61.24

    +0.33%

  • JRI

    0.0835

    13.36

    +0.62%

  • BTI

    -0.2700

    57.15

    -0.47%

  • RELX

    0.2700

    47.96

    +0.56%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    11.67

    +0.26%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2100

    14.71

    -1.43%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    25.61

    +0.94%

  • BP

    0.1892

    34.33

    +0.55%

Le Pen hopes Macron 'hatred' can tip French election
Le Pen hopes Macron 'hatred' can tip French election / Photo: Francois Mori - POOL/AFP

Le Pen hopes Macron 'hatred' can tip French election

Over the last five years, French President Emmanuel Macron has inspired a rare form of hostility even in a country that is famous for loving to hate its leaders.

Text size:

As the clock ticks down to the final round of the presidential vote on Sunday, his far-right rival Marine Le Pen is increasingly pinning her hopes on the intense dislike of Macron felt by some to tip the vote in her favour.

In her final rally on Thursday night, she stepped up her attacks on the president's character after a caustic midweek TV debate that saw Macron in abrasive form.

His performance on Wednesday night had "confirmed what people already sensed was his true nature: he was nonchalant, condescending and showed an arrogance without limits," Le Pen told supporters in northern France.

"Everyone... understood that Emmanuel Macron doesn't love the French, and particularly those who don't agree with his policies," she said.

Macron's scornful facial expressions and his aggressive debating -- he repeatedly chided Le Pen and said her programme "makes no sense" -- have been picked over by analysts since.

"The president was at times rather pointlessly aggressive," Jean-Yves Camus from the Jean-Jaures Foundation, a think-tank, told AFP afterwards.

- Visceral rejection -

Such criticisms are nothing new for France's youngest president ever, a former investment banker whose perceived arrogance has been a liability throughout his lightning political rise.

His polarising effect on voters has sparked myriad media articles, books and countless TV debates, none more so than during the violent "yellow vest" protests against him in 2018-19.

"There's a sort of hatred that he concentrates that we'd never encountered before," veteran journalist Nicolas Domenach, who has written a second book on the 44-year-old, told AFP.

"It's something that has been present throughout his term in office and comes to the surface quite brutally," added the co-author of "Macron: Why So Much Hatred?"

Only ex-president Charles de Gaulle inspired such visceral rejection by part of the population while in power, Domenach said, mainly because he granted independence to Algeria in 1962, which was viewed by critics as a betrayal.

Yet so far, an average of polls shows Macron him with a narrow lead of 55 percent versus 45 percent for Le Pen going into Sunday's vote.

- Class hatred -

Some have theorised that Macron's "top of the class" persona rubs some people up the wrong way, as does his uncompromising way of talking and intensely centralised style of governing.

His association with finance and business thanks to a stint at the Rothschild bank, coupled with his schooling in top universities, also make him elitist in the eyes of many.

This was reinforced by major gaffes early in his term such as when he told an unemployed gardener he could simply "cross the road" and find him a job.

"He crystallises a sort of class hatred that is very deeply rooted in French society," said historian Jean Garrigues, who is researching the role of hatred in politics for a new book.

"He appears to some as an almost archetypical example of the privileged and elite classes, the French of the rich," he told AFP.

Protests against Macron have regularly seen a return of the imagery of the ultimate class conflict: the 1789 French Revolution that saw the monarchy deposed and king Louis XVI beheaded.

Effigies of Macron have been guillotined in public, while pictures of his face were stuck atop spikes during some "yellow vest" marches.

"There was a revolutionary dimension to it, a spirit of insurrection," Igor Maquet, a veteran of the "yellow vest" protests in Nantes, western France, told AFP.

- 'Loves people'? -

Le Pen, despite coming from a far more privileged and Parisian background than her opponent, has sought to portray herself as a voice of the downtrodden.

But while Macron might be repellent for some, he scores much better than Le Pen in polls on other crucial measures such as perceptions of competency and having the stature of a president.

With her background in France's xenophobic far right, Le Pen meanwhile is seen as "worrying" by as much as half the population, polls suggest.

Macron's aides and friends have always been exasperated by his image, which they say contrasts with the charming and good-natured person they know in private.

"Macron loves people," a senior MP told AFP recently, adding that the president and his wife Brigitte were bothered by the "gap" between his real personality and his political persona.

"He has huge ability to be empathetic but he still has this damned image of arrogance," the MP added on condition of anonymity.

Macron himself theorised before being elected that the French were "regicidal monarchists" who loved electing a king-like president only to reject them.

"French political culture is extremely violent," he told Le Point magazine last week. "I am very clear-eyed about that."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)