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French Presidential and Legislative Elections 2017-News and Updates

It's not. There's Gérard Filoche left,candidate in the socialist primary.

Under his rule,being drunk would be mandatory. He'll have my vote and is leading in the polls.
The most powerful and influential lobbies in France (The drunkards of France + The united bistrots of France) already stated their support for him.

View attachment 357129

I already like him. Care to launder a ballot for me so I can vote for him too?

...

P.S. everyone: I am the mod of both the Europe & Russia and Americas sections of PDF, so if you have any concerns or issues or problems, let me know. I'm here to serve you (reported posts will be promptly reviewed and any tag alerts responded to as quickly as possible) and if not I'll be trolling away somewhere else on PDF. Feel free to call upon me when you need my help.

Most of you already know I'm pretty easy going, but I'm here just incase things get wild or off-track.
 
So what happens if no one gets to 50%? Does the French parliament get to decide?

When no one gets 50%,there's a second run-off between the first and second candidates,and the french people are called to vote a second time. ;)

I already like him. Care to launder a ballot for me so I can vote for him too?

...

P.S. everyone: I am the mod of both the Europe & Russia and Americas sections of PDF, so if you have any concerns or issues or problems, let me know. I'm here to serve you (reported posts will be promptly reviewed and any tag alerts responded to as quickly as possible) and if not I'll be trolling away somewhere else on PDF. Feel free to call upon me when you need my help.

Most of you already know I'm pretty easy going, but I'm here just incase things get wild or off-track.

I didn't know you were a mod ! Congratulations. The european section is pretty safe,thank the lord you didn't get the south asian section. :D

Lol, how surprising. :rofl:

He fled without fighting because he knew it would be an humiliating defeat. Well,would he be even worse than Copé and his 0,3% ? Lol.
 
French election 2017: meet the candidates


To the surprise of many, François Fillon has won a landslide victory to become the right-wing candidate for France’s 2017 presidential election. He won the first round of the republican primary with more than 44% of the vote. He then went on to beat former front runner Alain Juppé in the second round by a resounding margin.

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Fillon has been confirmed as the Republican candidate. EPA

The polls failed to see it coming, which only adds to the growing list of mistakes made in the past few months by the diviners of electoral results. It seems that polls are no longer able to predict, even within a reasonable margin of error, how much voters are ready to back their candidates.

Fillon represents the interests of the Catholic middle classes, concerned about advances in gay rights and the interests of big business, as an adamant defender of the free market and an advocate for a minimal state. A former minister under Jacques Chirac and prime minister under Sarkozy, Fillon is firmly enshrined in the establishment.

The socialists are in dire situation. The outgoing president, François Hollande, has decided not to run for re-election. Surely his abysmal popularity ratings, descending to an all time low of 4% approval, had a part to play in his withdrawal. Had he ran, he would have been the only potential candidate predicted to lose if he were to face the far right’s Marine Le Pen in the second round of the election.

The current prime minister, Manuel Valls, fares little better. If Valls wins the nomination of the left-wing primary in January, he is predicted to come dangerously close to losing the second round against Le Pen.

That could become irrelevant if the socialists fail to even make it to the second round of the election – as happened in 2002. If the contest was then one of right versus extreme right, Fillon would be more likely to emerge victorious as left-wing voters would opt for him over Le Pen. But if Le Pen faces a candidate from the left, it is doubtful that a majority of right-wing voters would return the favour and vote for the left.

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Marine Le Pen is hoping to make it to the second round. EPA

If the independent socialist Jean-Luc Mélenchon, another anti-establishment candidate, does slightly better in the first round of the election than the 11% of the vote he is credited with, he could overtake Fillon and face Le Pen in the second round. France would then have to choose between a former Trotskyist and the leader of the extreme right. A Marxist president, however unlikely, would be the truly unthinkable result of a surreal election.

Macron on the march
But the challenge could equally come from the centre left. Emmanuel Macron has been polling extremely well – some even put him in second place behind Le Pen. Macron was, until recently, Hollande’s finance minister but resigned to strike out alone as an independent presidential candidate at the head of his own political movement. He is both a member of the establishment and an upstart.

Macron could gather votes from the socially-progressive centrists for whom Fillon is too conservative, and from disappointed socialist voters who would not vote (again) for Hollande. Both would compete for the economically liberal right, as their economic programmes are difficult to distinguish at this stage.

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Macron launches his En Marche campaign. EPA/Christoph Petit Tisson.

But against Le Pen, Macron will be perceived as a candidate of the establishment, and recent anti-establishment votes around the world cast a long shadow over this possibility. A Macron-Le Pen second round would resemble the recent US election, where a centre-left candidate with strong finance ties struggled to compete against the rhetoric of a populist leader.

If the second round of the presidential election in May 2017 is a contest between left and right, there is a real possibility that the next president of France will be the head of a party that was once openly in admiration of Hitler. Many argue that Le Pen has since purged the Front National of its most undesirable elements, but the nationalist, protectionist, and mythico-religious roots of the party are largely intact. The ideals are clear, if contradictory. The plan is to make France great again, a militarily powerful, white, Catholic nation that uses French francs and tolerates no challenge to its secularist republic, either from European bureaucrats or from Muslim women wearing veils.

The polls failed to see Fillon coming and it is at least conceivable that Le Pen will do much better in the election than they predict. We’ve seen that the rules of the game can change. Recent events in Britain and the US are proof that it is perfectly possible.

http://theconversation.com/french-election-2017-meet-the-candidates-69436
 


A rather good analysis imho except that part...

"If the independent socialist Jean-Luc Mélenchon, another anti-establishment candidate, does slightly better in the first round of the election than the 11% of the vote he is credited with, he could overtake Fillon and face Le Pen in the second round. France would then have to choose between a former Trotskyist and the leader of the extreme right. A Marxist president, however unlikely, would be the truly unthinkable result of a surreal election."

... wich is pure Sci-Fi.
 
If Mélenchon gets 12% or more, I'll stop cheese for a month;
if he makes it to the second turn, I'll go a month without wine!

But as my dad used to say, you can safely bet your virility against
"un cent de melons" ( literally a hundred cantaloupes ) that he won't be président.

Mélenchon vs Marine ... pauvre France, :sick: Tay.
 
Last edited:
| Mon Dec 5, 2016 | 7:42pm EST | Reuters
French PM Valls launches presidential bid, quits government

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French Prime Minister Manuel Valls (R) holds hands with his wife Anne Gravoin (L) at a news conference where he announced that he is a candidate for next year's French presidential election, at the town hall in Evry, near Paris, France, December 5, 2016.REUTERS/Christian Hartmann

By Christian Hartmann | EVRY, FRANCE


French Prime Minister Manuel Valls declared on Monday that he would seek the Socialist Party's nomination for next year's presidential election and said he was quitting the government to focus on campaigning.

Although opinion polls bill Valls as the favorite for the Socialists' ticket, they also forecast that neither he nor any other left-wing candidate will win the election, rather that conservative candidate Francois Fillon will beat far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen in a run-off.

"We're told the left does not stand a chance, but nothing's set in stone," Valls said to applause from supporters in his fiefdom of Evry, the gritty southern suburb of Paris where he was mayor for over a decade.

"I want us to lead the left to victory!" the 54-year-old said, urging his much-divided camp to unite.

The path was cleared for Valls to enter the race last week when deeply unpopular President Francois Hollande announced he would be the first leader since France's Fifth Republic was created in 1958 not to seek a second mandate.

Valls, 54, is a law-and-order hardliner whose business-friendly economic stance face attack from his rivals from the traditional left of the party in campaigning ahead of the Socialist-led left-wing primaries in late January.

Valls will also have to extricate himself from Hollande's turbulent five years at the helm of the euro zone's number two economy if he is to persuade voters he is the best candidate to heal the party's rifts.

"We must unite: My candidacy is one of conciliation, of reconciliation," he said.

Valls said his resignation as prime minister would take effect on Tuesday.

Health Minister Marisol Touraine and Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve are seen as possible choices to replace him and lead what will effectively be a caretaker government.

Valls said reducing high unemployment would be his priority and he pledged to lower taxes for the poorest and for the middle-class, if elected. He also promised to protect France's social security system.

He faces a fight for the Socialist nomination. There are now eight candidates, with Valls' chief rival being former economy minister Arnaud Montebourg, who is popular among the traditional left.

The failure of pollsters to forecast the outcome of the Les Republicains primary, won by Fillon, and the high number of undecided voters on the left mean the race is wide open.

In contrast to the left's divisions, the right has rallied behind Fillon, a 62-year-old former prime minister and admirer of late British prime minister Margaret Thatcher. He promises to slash public spending, cut half a million public sector jobs and overhaul social security.

"I want to fight, in this campaign, against the right," Valls said. "With its old recipes from the '80s..., it is proposing social regression."

Even if Valls wins the Socialist nomination, he will face stiff competition not only from Fillon and Le Pen but also from left-wing candidates who have made clear they will not take part in the primaries, including former economy minister Emmanuel Macron and firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon.


(Additional reporting by Brian Love, Sudip Kar-Gupta, Myriam Rivet, Elizabeth Pineau in Paris; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by John Irish and Richard Lough)
 
Left-wing presidential candidate wants an ‘independent France’ that can stand up to US, China, Russia and Turkey.

France must stand up for itself in the face of leaders including president-elect Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, left-wing presidential candidate Manuel Valls said Monday.

“I am running for president because France has to bring all of its weight to bear in a world that is nothing like it was,” Valls said at a press conference in Évry, and listed the challenges France has faced in recent years: terrorism, climate change, the economic effects of globalization and the fracturing of Europe.

“I want an independent France that is unyielding in its values,” he said. He added that the country would have to stand its ground against the likes of Donald Trump in the United States, as well as Xi Jinping in China, Vladimir Putin in Russia, and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Turkey.

In positioning France to deal with a challenging new world order, the next president will need a depth of political experience that can’t be “invented, or improvised,” he said.

“I have this strength in me, this desire to serve my country,” Valls said. “I want to give everything, everything, for the country that has given me so much.”

This is not the first time the French prime minister has spoken out against Trump.

In October Valls came out in support of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, saying Trump was “rejected by the world.”

He compared the then U.S. presidential-hopeful to the far-right French Front National leader Marine Le Pen, during a meeting with his Canadian counterpart Justin Trudeau. “The only personality in France that is comparable to Trump is Marine Le Pen,” Valls said at the time.

http://www.politico.eu/article/manuel-valls-slams-donald-trump-france-america-president/

Well,would he be even worse than Copé and his 0,3% ? Lol.

I heard Erdoğan scored more than him.
fransa-daki-secimlere-erdogan-damgasini-vurdu-8998840_7784_m.jpg
 
Seven candidates compete in crowded French left primary


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© AFP fie photo | The High Authority for the French Left Primary has validated seven candidates on Saturday, Dec. 17, 2016, for the 2017 presidential race.

Seven candidates will run in next month's French left-wing primaries seeking to win the nomination for next year's presidential election, the organisers said on Saturday.

http://www.france24.com/en/20161217-france-left-primary-candidates-presidential-election
 
The primaries of the right were a huge success now let's see what will be the left ones.
 
The primaries of the right were a huge success now let's see what will be the left ones.

Doesn't seem to be the case for this one... Of course let's wait&see..

Le problème de la primaire à gauche,c'est que tout le monde s'en fout...

http://www.challenges.fr/election-p...uche-c-est-que-tout-le-monde-s-en-fout_446631

If Mélenchon gets 12% or more, I'll stop cheese for a month;
if he makes it to the second turn, I'll go a month without wine!

But as my dad used to say, you can safely bet your virility against
"un cent de melons" ( literally a hundred cantaloupes ) that he won't be président.

Mélenchon vs Marine ... pauvre France, :sick: Tay.

A real surrealistic election would be to see Poutou and Arthaud in the second turn. An anarchist and a crypto-marxist leninist,communist whatsoever she is. Even worse,they are capable of becoming co-presidents. :D
 
Marine Le Pen establishes lead in first round French election poll

Presidential favourite François Fillon still expected to beat far-right leader by comfortable margin in second round

Lucy Pasha-Robinson


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Ms Le Pen recently announced a softened stance on Europe and the Euro in a suspected bid to gain more centre ground Getty


Marine Le Pen has overtaken French presidential favourite François Fillon to become the frontrunner in the latest first round election poll.

The Front National leader is now polling at 26.5 per cent, a lead of 1.5 per cent over former Conservative Prime Minister Fillon.

However, Mr Fillon is still expected to beat the far-right leader in a second round runoff in May, with polls giving him 64 per cent over Ms Le Pen’s 36 per cent.


Anand Menon, director of The UK in a Changing Europe think tank, said that while the result was important, it was imperative not to exaggerate its significance at this stage.

“You can get a one off poll to say anything you like, so it is important not to get ahead of ourselves, but Le Pen is obviously in a strong position. The primaries on the left are going to be crucial because there are polls now putting Emmanuel Macron ahead of both Fillon and Le Pen,” he told The Independent.

Former economy minister Mr Macron has gathered momentum with his own transpartisan political party En Marche, polling consistently in third place and between 17 and 20 per cent in the first round poll, likely to be helped by Manuel Valls’ diminishing success with the ruling Parti Socialiste.

However Mr Valls' rivals former ministers Arnaud Montebourg and Benoit Hamon are polling close behind him, which could be damaging for Ms Le Pen.

The Ifop Fuducial poll for Paris Match showed Mr Fillon taking between 24 and 25 per cent of the vote in the first round, depending on the choice of Socialist candidate, who will be selected in the left-wing primaries on 22 and 29 January.

However, when pitted against Mr Macron in the runoff, Mr Fillon is set to lose to the newcomer by 48 per cent to 52 per cent.

Political sociology Professor Stephen Fisher at the University of Oxford said the unknown identity of the socialist candidate could be skewing the polls in Ms Le Pen’s favour.

“Two polls showing Marine Le Pen in the lead mean it is looking a little more likely she will do well, but the main thing to consider is the public still know her much better than her likely two competitors, in particular they don't know who the Parti Socialiste competitor will be at all,” he told The Independent.

“So what you would expect in this situation is the less known candidates in this election will become better known, and their popularity should increase. Another thing you tend to see is a slight rally towards the government towards the end of the election, whereas mid-term, people tend to grumble through the polls - although obviously, as seen in the US, this is not always the case.”

Dr Joseph Downing, French politics expert and fellow at France’s National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), warned a small margin between any of the front runners would allow for outside factors to weigh heavily on the final result.


“When you are dealing with such a small margin, a few percentage points can be quite trivial. In addition to further political developments, more terror attacks or an upsurge in the migrant crisis could have a big impact on the result, we don't know what the world will bring us before the second round,” he told The Independent.


The poll, which had a margin of error of 1.3 per cent, was conducted between 3 and 5 January and was based on a sample of 1,860 people registered to vote.



http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...h-election-poll-fran-ois-fillon-a7524056.html
 

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