Macron campaign for French presidency off to slower start than Le Pen, polls show

Fewer French voters believe centrist Emmanuel Macron got off to a good start in the last lap of France's presidential election than far right leader Marine Le Pen, a poll showed

The Elabe poll for BFM TV found that one out of two people surveyed considered that Le Pen's campaign had gotten off the ground well, compared with 43 percent for Macron
The Elabe poll for BFM TV found that one out of two people surveyed considered that Le Pen's campaign had gotten off the ground well, compared with 43 percent for Macron

Fewer French voters believe centrist Emmanuel Macron got off to a good start in the last lap of France's presidential election than far right leader Marine Le Pen, a poll showed on Thursday.

Macron, the favorite to win the presidency, has suffered several costly public relations missteps since he and Le Pen qualified in a first round of voting on Sunday for the decisive 7 May run-off.

The Elabe poll for BFM TV found that one out of two people surveyed considered that Le Pen's campaign had gotten off the ground well, compared with 43 percent for Macron.

Macron, who served as Socialist party’s economy minister under François Hollande, was met with boos and jeers at a factory picket line in northern France after he was upstaged by a surprise appearance by his far-right rival, Marine Le Pen.

Macron, who has appealed to a well-educated and well-employed electorate, is under growing pressure to prove he has understood the plight of working-class voters struggling after decades of mass unemployment. But Macron’s visit to the Whirlpool tumble dryer factory that is threatened with closure quickly turned to farce, as Le Pen secretly rushed to the factory gates in her heartlands to try to outdo him.

Although Macron held his ground and the tension eventually eased, television channels repeatedly broadcast film of the candidate being heckled, marking a stark contrast with Le Pen taking photographs with workers.

With polls indicating Macron will win the run-off against Le Pen by a comfortable margin, he has also taken heat for seemingly acting as if victory were already in the bag.

Rivals and potential allies alike criticised his visit on Sunday night to an elegant Parisian restaurant for celebrations after coming out on top in the first round of voting.

The visit to the Left Bank brasserie made him an easy target for Le Pen's campaign which seized on the incident to portray the former investment banker as a member of an arrogant political elite out of touch with the people.

After that incident, Macron laid low for several days, while Le Pen's campaign went on the offensive.

However, polls have long showed that any candidate who faced the far-right Le Pen would win the election because the mainstream right and left would join forces to keep Le Pen out.