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Marine Le Pen Pauletto Francois/ABACA/ABACA/PA Images
Two of a Kind

If Marine Le Pen wins election, her prime minister will be a far-right eurosceptic

Could a Frexit be on the cards?

FAR-RIGHT FRENCH presidential candidate Marine Le Pen has announced she would name a eurosceptic from outside her National Front party as prime minister if she wins the election on 7 May.

In a bruising contest against pro-European centrist Emmanuel Macron, Le Pen is hoping to broaden her base wide enough to win the decisive second-round election, despite polls suggesting she is 20 points behind.

The anti-immigration Le Pen, who wants to withdraw France from the euro, told reporters she and far-right Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, who lost in the election’s first round with 4.7% of the vote, share a “common project that we will promote together”.

“We will build a national unity government that will bring together people chosen for their skills and their love of France,” Le Pen, 48, said.

Dupont-Aignan, 56, heads the Debout la France (France Stand Up) movement and, like Le Pen, favours pulling the nation from the eurozone. She has also threatened to take the country out of the European Union.

“It’s an historic day because we are putting France before personal and partisan interests,” said Dupont-Aignan, whose backing for Le Pen sparked the resignation of several Debout la France officials.

Appointed by the president, France’s prime minister leads the government and ensures the implementation of laws.

Meanwhile, Macron has been aiming to entice voters in rural central France to his pro free-trade, globalist message.

“On one side, there is a reactionary, anti-European right … and on the other, a progressive movement that supports an EU that protects as well as social and economic reform,” he said. “That is my candidacy.”

Polls give him a commanding lead of up to 20 points over Le Pen in the run-off but show the gap narrowing slightly after Macron’s sluggish start to his second-round campaigning.

‘Not one vote’

Le Pen’s announcement came with the National Front (FN) again fighting a furore over a senior official’s reported remarks about Nazi gas chambers.

Jean-Francois Jalkh, who was tapped to lead the FN after Le Pen temporarily stepped down to campaign, was accused of praising the work of a convicted Holocaust denier.

“What I’m saying, and what really surprised me, in the work of a genuine negationist or revisionist … is the well-worked, rigorous nature of the argument put forward,” Jalkh, 59, was quoted as saying.

“We condemn this type of remark and he denies (making) them,” the FN’s Louis Aliot said.

Le Pen has attempted to woo new voters on either side of the political divide, telling leftists their real enemy is the free-marketeer ex-banker, and conservatives that Macron would continue the policies of the unpopular outgoing Socialists and be soft on terrorism.

In a video message released yesterday, she urged the nearly 20% of voters who backed eurosceptic leftist Jean-Luc Melenchon in the first round to “block” Macron, saying his pro-business programme was “diametrically opposed” to leftist ideals.

“Let’s put our quarrels and divergences to one side,” she said in the message, calling Macron the choice of the “oligarchy”.

Melenchon has refused to explicitly endorse the liberal Macron, breaking with France’s “republican front” tradition of the big parties coming together to bar the FN at the gates of power.

An Odoxa poll yesterday showed 40% of Melenchon’s supporters would back Macron, 41% would abstain and 19% would vote for Le Pen.

Melenchon’s spokesman Alexis Corbiere rebuffed Le Pen’s advances, telling supporters: “Not one vote should go to the National Front.”

Le Pen has sought to purge the FN of the anti-Semitism that was its trademark under her father, co-founder Jean-Marie Le Pen.

In 2015 she booted him out of the party for repeatedly calling the Holocaust a “detail” of history but this month was herself criticised for saying France bore no responsibility for the round-up and deportation of French Jews during the war.

© AFP 2017

Read: Trouble for Le Pen as her replacement steps aside amid allegations of Holocaust denial

Read: Marine Le Pen steps down as leader of her party

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