French election might be a lot closer than the polls show
Submitted by gjohnsit on Tue, 05/02/2017 - 6:58pm
Emmanuel 'The Neoliberal Banker' Macron has it in the bag.
He's so far ahead of the right-wing Marine Le Pen that there is no hope that she'll catch up.
After all, the political system gave the French voters a choice of a fascist right-winger, or more neoliberal austerity, so people on the left will choose the lesser-evil. Where else are they going to go, amirite?
Hmmm. Why does that sound familiar?
Macron and Le Pen knocked out Mélenchon along with eight other candidates in the first round of voting on April 23.
While most left-wing voters are turned off by Le Pen's anti-immigration and anti-EU policies, many also find it hard to back Macron's economically liberal approach.
Company bosses, celebrities and scientific researchers have all called for people to rally behind Macron, who styles himself as "neither of the left nor the right".
The results of the ‘Unsubmissive France’ survey showed that 36.1 percent planned to cast a blank ballot, 34.8 percent would back Macron and 29.1 percent would abstain from voting.
You just can't depend on communists to get behind a banker.
Well, that's still OK, because those backing businessman Francois Fillon are always dependable.
Forty-two percent, less than half of Francois Fillon’s Les Républicains voters, announced their intention to vote for Macron and 28 percent of them said they’ll vote for Le Pen. As many as 30 percent intend to abstain, said Lévy.
Melenchon and Fillon supporters were around 38% of the voters in the first round. Nearly 2/3rds won't be voting for Macron.
The abstains extend even to surprising areas.
On April 29, Le Pen chose defeated first-round candidate Nicolas Dupont-Aignan as Prime Minister in a bid to attract the fellow nationalist’s voters.
Dupont-Aignan received 4.7 percent of votes on April 23 but 38 percent of his nearly 1.7 million voters say they intend to vote for Le Pen. As many as 31 percent say they’ll vote for Macron and 31 percent say they will abstain.
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Comments
I don't think La Feminista would agree, but I can't shake
the feeling of deja vu.
"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"
I could be wrong
but it certainly looks very familiar.
I suspect Le Pen will win, precisely for the same reasons Trump
for the same reasons Trump won. Many will vote for neither LePen, who has softened her xenophobic stance somewhat, or the Neoliberal Horror called Macron. More austerity! It makes you tough, lean and mean--mostly lean and mean. I know our French expat La Feminista was hoping for Hamon, who only got 6% of the vote and desperately not want LePen. I think this may be a choice of the lesser of two evils. On May Day a violent Parisienne street protest occurred, triggered primarily by anti-LePen activists (anti-fa gangs throwing Molotov cocktails at the police). Their virulent discord was matched by a somewhat smaller and less violent pro-LePen demonstration that day.
I posted an essay stating the contest was between status quo and nationalism. The French are a proud people. They are as proud of it as their English counterparts are as proud of theirs. I believe national pride will win out against austerity.
Polls? What damn good are they? Nate Silver gloriously fucked up when predicting the American presidency. I have no doubt that the French press is equally fucked up. Look for LePen to win.
Yours was a useful essay
Thanks for the exposition, Roy
Why blame Nate Silver?
I suppose 30% is within less than 2 standard deviations
Definitely not a fan of his politics
I Believe Macron Will Win
The French certainly deserve a better choice than Macron or Le Pen. I don't know much about French politics, but I think the French people will remember their history and reject the far-right Le Pen.
European political parties can evolve
Note that it is likely that the continuing Parisienne riots are more likely anti-LePen than they are pro-Macron.
Question is when--not if--Macron's popularity will collapse.
Unlikely to fall fast enough to lose this run-off, but he is likely to break Hollande's record for unpopularity long before the end of a five-year term.