Home News As French election tilts right, voters still favor leftist issues

As French election tilts right, voters still favor leftist issues

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France’s welfare state is among the most robust in Europe, a legacy of decades of left-leaning governance. But over the past two decades, the political center has shifted rightward, even as polls show that most French voters prioritize social issues and economic fairness. 

In Sunday’s presidential election, President Emmanuel Macron’s closest challenger is Marine Le Pen, the far-right candidate he defeated in 2017 in a runoff election. The two are expected to poll ahead of the pack and go through a second round of voting on April 24, with Mr. Macron favored to win. 

Why We Wrote This

Behind the ascent of far-right politicians in France is a puzzle: Voters still tend to prioritize socioeconomic fairness over right-wing causes like immigration. The electoral system may explain part of this gap.

Mr. Macron, a centrist, has himself shifted to the right during his presidency. That has left many left-leaning voters with a familiar dilemma: Vote with their head for President Macron or with their heart for a leftist candidate who can’t win. This dynamic has opened up a growing gap between French values and voting behavior. 

“The French political class and the media have moved to the right but haven’t necessarily taken the French people with them,” says Pierre Bréchon, a political scientist. “Left-wing values, like closing the gender pay gap and social equality, have remained stable. But values don’t necessarily translate at the ballot box.”  

Paris

When the French are polled about what they value most, they overwhelmingly choose left-leaning issues like improving the social safety net and raising the minimum wage.  

But in the campaign ahead of Sunday’s presidential election, that’s not what voters are hearing. Instead, the election has been dominated by public debate on crime, security, and immigration – all hot-button issues on the right.  

“The French debate is pulling public opinion to the right,” says Bruno Cautrès, a political science researcher at Cevipof-Sciences Po. “But at the same time, many French people are feeling like France is no longer a fair and just country. They’re asking for more social protections and solutions to inequality.”      

Why We Wrote This

Behind the ascent of far-right politicians in France is a puzzle: Voters still tend to prioritize socioeconomic fairness over right-wing causes like immigration. The electoral system may explain part of this gap.

Over the past two decades, French politics have steadily shifted rightward, even as its welfare state has remained among the most robust in Europe. And while President Emmanuel Macron, an avowed centrist, is favored to win a second term, his closest challenger is not a mainstream leftist – the once-mighty Socialist party barely registers – but Marine Le Pen, the far-right candidate he defeated in 2017 in a runoff election.  

Current French President Emmanuel Macron and centrist candidate for reelection addresses a crowd as he visits Spézet, Brittany, April 5, 2022. His main challenger, far-right figure Marine Le Pen, appears on the rise in recent days. Both are in good position to reach the runoff on April 24. The first round of the presidential election will take place April 10.

Polls suggest a rematch, but with Ms. Le Pen trailing Mr. Macron by a closer margin than last time. Jean-Luc Mélenchon, a veteran leftist who is often compared to U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, is polling third. Only two candidates go through to the second round on April 24.

Mr. Macron has himself shifted to the right during his presidency. That has left many left-leaning voters with a familiar dilemma: Vote with their head for President Macron or with their heart for a leftist candidate who can’t win – or simply stay home on election day. This dynamic has opened up a growing gap between French values and voting behavior, at least when it comes to socioeconomic priorities.  

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