PARIS β President Emmanuel Macron is the clear favorite in France's presidential race, yet a big unknown factor may prove decisive: an unprecedented proportion of people say they are unsure who to vote for or donβt intend to vote at all, bringing a large dose of uncertainty to the election.
The pro-European centrist is still comfortably leading 11 other candidates in the polls ahead of Sunday's first-round vote. His main challenger, far-right leader Marine Le Pen, appears on the rise in recent days. Both are in good position to reach the runoff on April 24, which would make them replay the 2017 election that Macron won handily.
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Thereβs βno certainty,β Macron warned during his first big rally on Saturday near Paris.
βDonβt believe in polls or commentators who would sound definitive and tell you that ... the election is already done, that everything is going to be all right,β he told his supporters. βFrom Brexit to so many elections, what seems unlikely can happen!β
Scenarios for the this year's second-round vote show that Le Pen has significantly narrowed the gap with Macron compared to 2017 β when she lost with 34% support to his 66%.
Polls still place her behind Macron, but much closer, apparently showing the wisdom of her longstanding strategy to soften her rhetoric and image β allowing her to capture the anti-Macron vote as well as far-right support.
In recent days, Macronβs campaign has also hit a speed bump dubbed βthe McKinsey Affair,β named after an American consulting company hired to advise the French government on its COVID-19 vaccination campaign and other policies. A new French Senate report questions the governmentβs use of private consultants and accuses McKinsey of tax dodging. Financial prosecutors announced Wednesday that a preliminary investigation has been opened into suspected tax fraud.
The issue is energizing Macronβs rivals and dogging him at campaign stops.
Many in Macronβs camp fear that his supporters may not go to polling stations because they already think he will win, while those angry at his policies will make sure to vote.
βOf course I have concerns,β said Julien Descamps, a 28-year-old member of Macron's party, stressing that some people in his circle βdon't know what to do.β
βThey are not fully convinced by Macron, but if they reject the extremes, they should vote for him,β he said.
Macron called on voters to get mobilized against both France's far-right and the far-left. βDonβt boo them, fight their ideas,β he said.
In third position according to the polls is far-left figure Jean-Luc MΓ©lenchon, who has increased his support but still is a distance behind Le Pen. Another far-right candidate, Eric Zemmour, and conservative contender ValΓ©rie PΓ©cresse are amid other key challengers. Sundayβs first round will qualify the two top candidates for the runoff.
The presidential election is the one that attracts French voters the most.
Yet the turnout has decreased from 84% in 2007 to about 78% in 2017, and studies show that abstention may be higher than five years ago. In particular, young and working-class people appear less certain to go to the polls than retirees and upper-class voters.
A low turnout could have a major impact on the vote, pollsters say. They note that a greater proportion of people donβt know yet for whom they will vote β or whether they will vote at all.
That's the situation of managing assistant Liza Garnier, 45, who lives in the wealthy suburb of Montmorency, north of Paris.
βI donβt believe in what politicians say anymore. They make a lot of promises, they say candidatesβ words, and once in power, we are disappointed,β she said. βI get the impression that more and more people think itβs useless: voting for who? For what?β
Garnier feels politicians are too far away from the reality of French daily life. She said she may just pick a blank vote, even in the second round if Macron is facing Le Pen.
βI want to show Iβm not happy with it,β she said.
The sinking purchasing power of French families is one of votersβ top concerns amid rising food and energy prices, along with social payments, security, immigration and the environment. But many feel these issues have not been addressed as much as they should in this year's campaign, partly because the war in Ukraine is overshadowing all other issues.
Kevin, a 26-year-old history and geography teacher in a public middle school who has worked in an impoverished suburb north of Paris, deplored a lack of political debate in this campaign. Describing himself as a βleftist,β he said he feels βvery disillusionedβ by the current French political scene.
Kevin, who cannot be identified by his last name because state employees are required to be neutral ahead of elections, said he is still hesitating. But in any case, he wonβt vote for Macron or Le Pen, and considers a blank vote an option.
Macron, who has dedicated most of his time recently to diplomatic talks trying to end the war in Ukraine, is seeking to boost his short campaign ahead of Sunday's vote, giving several interviews in the French media and putting campaign activities on his agenda almost each day.
βFriends, you got it: It's now time for mobilization. It's now time to fight,β he told supporters Saturday.
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Follow APβs France election coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/french-election-2022