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French presidential election turns on whether leftist voters go right

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In the first round of the French presidential elections, far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon earned more than 7 million votes, leaving him just a percentage point short of advancing to the runoff on April 24.

Now, as France decides whether incumbent Emmanuel Macron and far-right politician Marine Le Pen should take up the presidency for the next five years, what Mélenchon voters choose to do could be critical.

Why We Wrote This

Voters on the left see the French presidential election as an unappealing choice between a center-right president and a far-right populist. But their vote will have an outsized impact on the nation’s priorities in the next 5 years.

Mr. Mélenchon’s success at the polls could be just a temporary trend – 50% of those who voted for him in the first round did so tactically, as a way to keep Ms. Le Pen out of the second round, according to the German Marshall Fund.

National polls show that 41% of Mélenchon supporters intend to vote for Mr. Macron in the second round, compared to 21% for Ms. Le Pen. But with 33% saying they remain undecided, there is a significant margin of error.

“Every other day I go between voting null and voting for Macron, I really don’t know what I’m going to do,” says Clara Seiller from the east of Paris, a Mélenchon bastion. “I’ll probably end up voting Macron to stop Le Pen from winning, but with some of the things Macron has done lately, sometimes I’m not sure if he’s any better than her.” 

La Courneuve, France

Kamal Ali waves a plastic bag of grape tomatoes in the air as he stops in a corner cafe after shopping at the nearby weekly market. “I just paid four euros for five tomatoes! They cost even more in the grocery store,” he complains.

“All day long we hear about how immigration is ruining France,” says the public service worker, as merchants bustle outside, hollering prices on fruit, vegetables, and clothing. “But what about how expensive daily life is? Either France is going to change, or it’s going to explode.”

Mr. Ali is part of the 63% of La Courneuve residents who voted for far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon in the first round of the French presidential elections, held on April 10. This Paris suburb, one of the poorest in the Ile-de-France region, has become an unexpected stronghold of support for Mr. Mélenchon, who scored 22% nationally – just about a percentage point short of the second round.  

Why We Wrote This

Voters on the left see the French presidential election as an unappealing choice between a center-right president and a far-right populist. But their vote will have an outsized impact on the nation’s priorities in the next 5 years.

Just as he did in cities like Strasbourg and Marseille, Mr. Mélenchon overwhelmingly took the popular vote here by focusing on the concerns of ordinary French people: reduced purchasing power, rising fuel prices, and a diminishing social safety net. 

Incumbent Emmanuel Macron and far-right politician Marine Le Pen will have to woo the more than 7 million Mélenchon voters ahead of the second round of the presidential election this weekend. How they vote will be a deciding factor in who wins. 

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