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French President Emmanuel Macron’s party made a disastrous showing at the country’s key regional elections on Sunday.
Macron’s Republic on the Move (LREM) party failed to win more than 10 per cent of the vote in many regions, with the centrist Republicans outstripping it and Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally (NR) party.
Conservatives claimed to have ‘broken the jaw’ of National Rally, whose leader was hoping to make huge gains across the country before challenging Macron in next year’s presidential elections.
Exit polls on Sunday night following the first round of the two-round vote showed NR had taken only 19 per cent of the national vote – a nine per cent drop from the last regional elections in 2015.
A record low turnout saw less than one voter in three participate in the elections – a fact Le Pen blamed for her party’s poor showing.
‘Faced with the action of this government which is leading the country to chaos, our voters have a duty to react,’ Le Pen said, in a bid to encourage NR supporters to take part in the second round of the vote next week.
‘You must vote. If you do not vote for your ideas, your voice no longer counts. Everything is possible, as long as you decide: go to the polls, patriots!’
But Socialist leader Olivier Faure said: ‘The evidence shows that French voters overwhelmingly endorse neither Le Pen’s party nor Macron’s party.’
Xavier Bertrand, the Republicans candidate in the northern Hauts-de-France region, was on 44 per cent of the vote, ahead of the National Rally’s Sébastien Chenu on 24 per cent on Sunday evening.
In a speech celebrating his move into the second round, Bertrand – who is also set to run for president – said: ‘Five years ago we came second in the first round, but this time the inhabitants of Hauts-de-France have clearly placed us in the lead.
‘I would like to thank those who have shown their confidence in us,’ Bertrand said, adding that ‘we have broken the jaw of the National Rally’.
Support for Macron’s LREM was particularly low in Hauts-de-France.
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