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Far-right National Rally leads first round of voting in French election, exit polls show

Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally (NR) party has topped the polls in the first round of voting in France’s snap parliamentary election.

The New Popular Front (NPF), is tipped to come second place, with 28.1 percent, while President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist Ensemble trailed at 20.3 percent.

The conservative Les Républicains party received 10.2 per cent of the vote.

After the vote French president called for voters to rally behind “Republican and Democratic” candidates in the second round of the elections which will be held next Sunday.

Ms Le Pen said after the results were announced that she is hoping her party will have an “absolute majority” in parliament.

Addressing cheering supporters in her northern constituency of Henin-Beaumont she said: “Democracy has spoken and the French have put the RN and its allies at the top, practically wiping out the Macron camp.”

She claimed people clearly want to “turn the page after seven years of scornful and corrosive rule” and asks people to vote for the RN again next Sunday in the second round.

She added that she hopes to have things in place so that her protege Jordan Bardella, 28, would become prime minister of France.

NR’s share of the vote is nearly double what it received in the first round of voting in France’s 2022 election.

NFP will withdraw its candidates during next week’s second round in case they are in third position in the first round, said Jean-Luc Melenchon, leader of the France Unbowed (LFI).

“Our guideline is simple and clear: not a single more vote for the National Rally,” Mr Melenchon said.

The snap parliamentary election was called after President Macron’s Ensemble alliance was beaten by Le Pen’s party at the European elections earlier this month.

Marine Le Pen, French far-right leader and far-right Rassemblement National (National Rally - RN) party candidate, reacts on stage after partial results in the first round of the early French parliamentary elections in Henin-Beaumont, France, June 30, 2024. REUTERS/Yves Herman TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Marine Le Pen, French celebrates after partial results in the first round of the early French parliamentary elections in Henin-Beaumont, France (Photo: Reuters)

Her eurosceptic party is now closer to power than ever, having completed a period of “detoxification” that has seen it enter the political mainstream.

Voter turnout was the highest in 40 years in France. By midday, turnout was at 25.9 per cent, compared with 18.43 per cent two years ago – the highest comparable turnout figures since the 1981 legislative vote, Ipsos France’s research director Mathieu Gallard said.

The complicated two-stage system can make it hard to know how seats in the 577-seat National Assembly will be distributed. Only candidates who win more than 12.5 per cent of the vote will go through to the next round, taking place next week on 7 July.

Ahead of the vote, Le Pen predicted her party would “win an absolute majority” and Mr Bardella would become prime minister.

Supporters of Marine Le Pen, French far-right leader and far-right Rassemblement National (National Rally - RN) party candidate, celebrate after partial results in the first round of the early French parliamentary elections, in Henin-Beaumont, France, June 30, 2024. REUTERS/Yves Herman
Supporters of Marine Le Pen celebrate the first round results which show major gains for the National Rally party (Photo: Reuters)

In Hénin-Beaumont, a town in Le Pen’s constituency in northern France where she may be re-elected in the first round, 67-year-old Denis Ledieu said people were suffering due to the long-term deindustrialisaton of the region.

“So if the (RN) promises them things, then why not? They want to try it out, I think,” he said.

In Garches, a small town near Paris, a woman screamed “It’s shameful, it’s shameful” as Mr Bardella arrived to cast his vote.

“They even invited the leftists,” he said.

Elsewhere, voters such as 51-year-old Mylène Diop said she had voted for the New Popular Front, a hastily assembled left-wing coalition polling in second.

She said it was “the most important election” of her life. “The RN is at the gates of power and you see the aggressiveness of people and the racist speech that has been unleashed,” she said.

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