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Hollande urges France to reject Le Pen

Ms Le Pen said she was temporarily standing down as National Front leader to concentrate on the presidential campaign
Ms Le Pen said she was temporarily standing down as National Front leader to concentrate on the presidential campaign

French President Francois Hollande has urged voters to reject far-right leader Marine Le Pen in next month's presidential runoff against pro-EU candidate Emmanuel Macron.

Mr Macron is the clear favourite to become France's youngest-ever president after topping yesterday's first round of voting with 24.01% of votes, ahead of National Front (FN) leader Le Pen on 21.30%, according to final results.

The vote revealed a country deeply divided, with Mr Macron, an advocate of open borders and free trade, leading the vote in cities and Ms Le Pen topping the polls in rural areas that feel left behind by globalisation.

Emmanuel Macron is the favourite to become the next French president

In a solemn address to voters, Mr Hollande warned of the "risk for our country" of a far-right victory and said he himself would vote for Mr Macron, who served as his economy minister for two years.

The Socialist president joined a long line of politicians urging voters to back Mr Macron in order to thwart the anti-immigration, anti-EU Le Pen.

Ms Le Pen seized on the flurry of endorsements for Mr Macron from the ruling Socialists and main opposition Republicans, both of which crashed out in the first round, as proof he was the choice of the discredited old guard.

Visiting a market in the northern town of Rouvroy today, Ms Le Pen said: "I've come here to start the second round campaign in the only way I know - on the ground with the French people."

Ms Le Pen also said she was setting party affairs to one side in order to concentrate on the campaign.

"I will feel freer, I will be above partisan considerations, it's an important act," Ms Le Pen said.

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Mr Macron received several congratulatory calls today from European leaders relieved to find him in pole position.

Thanking Mr Hollande in a tweet for his support, the former investment banker called on the French to "remain true to France's values" in the 7 May runoff.

Mr Macron and Ms Le Pen will take part in a television debate on 3 May.

France's traditional political class suffered a stunning blow yesterday, with voters fleeing the ruling Socialists and conservative Republicans who have governed for the past half century in favour of the extremes or outsiders.

Both Mr Macron and Ms Le Pen campaigned as rebels who transcended the left-right divide.

Conservative candidate Francois Fillon was seen as the favourite until January when his campaign was torpedoed by allegations that he gave his British-born wife and two of his children fictitious jobs as parliamentary assistants.

In the end, the Republicans party candidate trailed in third with 20.01%, ahead of radical left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon on 19.58%.

Today, Mr Fillon told the party's top brass he lacked "the legitimacy" to lead them into parliamentary elections in June. 

"I need to rethink my life and heal my family's wounds," he told them, according to a statement.

Mr Fillon and fifth-placed Socialist candidate Benoit Hamon have both rallied behind Mr Macron but Mr Melenchon pointedly avoided endorsing the centrist.

Addressing thousands of flag-waving supporters in Paris last night, Mr Macron said he aimed to unite "patriots" against "the threat of nationalists".

Ms Le Pen, who has been hoping to emulate Donald Trump's victory in the US, said the French faced a choice between "runaway globalisation" and a protectionist France.

Her plans to restore France's borders with its European neighbours, pull out of the eurozone and hold a referendum on leaving the EU had sown fear of another devastating blow to the bloc after Britain's vote to leave.

The euro and European stocks rose today, buoyed by polls suggesting Mr Macron would beat Ms Le Pen by more than 20 percentage points in the second round.

Ms Le Pen gained over 1.2 million new voters compared with her last presidential bid in 2012, securing 7.7 million ballots, a result she hailed as "historic".

But her share of the vote was far below a March poll high of 27%.

Yesterday's first round capped a rollercoaster campaign in a demoralised France, which has been rocked by a series of terror attacks since 2015 and is struggling to shake off a deep economic malaise.