The number includes the votes from a group of conservative candidates of The Republicans party who had allied with the far-right party in the first round
Demonstrators take part in a rally against the far-right after the announcement of results, in Paris. Pic/AFP
France’s National Rally surged into the lead in the first round of legislative elections, according to results released early Monday, bringing the far-right party to the brink of power and dealing a major blow to President Emmanuel Macron’s centrists in an election that could set the country, and Europe, on a starkly different course.
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The results confirmed polling that showed the party—with a history of racism and xenophobia and once shunned by the mainstream—is no longer taboo, confined to the fringes of French politics. There remains another torrid week of campaigning before the decisive final voting Sunday, and whether the National Rally will be able to win an outright majority and form France’s first far-right government since World War II remains uncertain.
Marked by high turnout of nearly 68% that reflected the high stakes, voters handed the Marine Le Pen’s National Rally a strong lead, with about 33 per cent of the vote. The number includes the votes from a group of conservative candidates of The Republicans party who had allied with the far-right party in the first round.
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