Berliner Boersenzeitung - Le Pen hopes Macron 'hatred' can tip French election

EUR -
AED 4.100449
AFN 75.91327
ALL 99.189323
AMD 432.437101
ANG 2.012667
AOA 1045.484666
ARS 1077.561675
AUD 1.621879
AWG 2.009466
AZN 1.898653
BAM 1.962692
BBD 2.254818
BDT 133.448597
BGN 1.955993
BHD 0.420725
BIF 3231.891338
BMD 1.11637
BND 1.439153
BOB 7.717098
BRL 6.094602
BSD 1.116721
BTN 93.426261
BWP 14.674529
BYN 3.654633
BYR 21880.853275
BZD 2.251004
CAD 1.501032
CDF 3198.960795
CHF 0.942771
CLF 0.036962
CLP 1019.904928
CNY 7.850205
CNH 7.835891
COP 4632.991588
CRC 579.735706
CUC 1.11637
CUP 29.583807
CVE 110.900829
CZK 25.084166
DJF 198.401018
DKK 7.45671
DOP 67.400865
DZD 147.73061
EGP 54.368328
ERN 16.745551
ETB 134.04812
FJD 2.441334
FKP 0.850182
GBP 0.833181
GEL 3.042099
GGP 0.850182
GHS 17.694439
GIP 0.850182
GMD 76.455991
GNF 9626.45927
GTQ 8.632312
GYD 233.640414
HKD 8.691114
HNL 27.763611
HRK 7.590212
HTG 147.578212
HUF 394.351581
IDR 16921.546716
ILS 4.187264
IMP 0.850182
INR 93.356218
IQD 1462.444785
IRR 46990.803228
ISK 151.133962
JEP 0.850182
JMD 176.228817
JOD 0.79117
JPY 160.127101
KES 144.011805
KGS 94.023142
KHR 4549.207868
KMF 493.379948
KPW 1004.732426
KRW 1484.515246
KWD 0.340672
KYD 0.930668
KZT 535.580659
LAK 24652.244563
LBP 100026.757793
LKR 338.368159
LRD 216.436212
LSL 19.357673
LTL 3.29635
LVL 0.675281
LYD 5.302448
MAD 10.798653
MDL 19.492447
MGA 5073.901851
MKD 61.538587
MMK 3625.926424
MNT 3793.425431
MOP 8.955447
MRU 44.342426
MUR 51.207528
MVR 17.147965
MWK 1938.017944
MXN 21.623363
MYR 4.637365
MZN 71.280842
NAD 19.358012
NGN 1816.896102
NIO 41.054447
NOK 11.630438
NPR 149.481897
NZD 1.762727
OMR 0.429769
PAB 1.116721
PEN 4.209835
PGK 4.373101
PHP 62.507234
PKR 310.183776
PLN 4.256119
PYG 8691.519739
QAR 4.064425
RON 4.975886
RSD 117.087873
RUB 103.596342
RWF 1498.168627
SAR 4.188145
SBD 9.276735
SCR 15.076033
SDG 671.495537
SEK 11.288115
SGD 1.434078
SHP 0.850182
SLE 25.506045
SLL 23409.716338
SOS 637.447567
SRD 33.76908
STD 23106.606404
SVC 9.771311
SYP 2804.913208
SZL 19.357807
THB 36.514793
TJS 11.870884
TMT 3.907295
TND 3.413304
TOP 2.614655
TRY 38.09725
TTD 7.598682
TWD 35.609956
TZS 3048.806245
UAH 46.140118
UGX 4131.507535
USD 1.11637
UYU 46.563505
UZS 14250.464136
VEF 4044109.208466
VES 41.044399
VND 27468.28545
VUV 132.537697
WST 3.123004
XAF 658.268469
XAG 0.034687
XAU 0.000421
XCD 3.017046
XDR 0.826101
XOF 658.094866
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.426294
ZAR 19.341117
ZMK 10048.668719
ZMW 29.621012
ZWL 359.470705
  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.07

    +0.14%

  • CMSC

    -0.0370

    25.0331

    -0.15%

  • RBGPF

    3.1000

    60.1

    +5.16%

  • SCS

    0.1450

    13.155

    +1.1%

  • CMSD

    -0.0120

    24.993

    -0.05%

  • RIO

    3.0300

    67.61

    +4.48%

  • BTI

    0.2290

    38.129

    +0.6%

  • GSK

    0.0700

    40.93

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    -0.1500

    70.33

    -0.21%

  • BP

    -0.0410

    32.819

    -0.12%

  • RELX

    -0.3650

    48.495

    -0.75%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    10.1

    -0.1%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    13.39

    +0.67%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    35.1

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.6900

    140.96

    -0.49%

  • AZN

    -0.1900

    76.95

    -0.25%

Le Pen hopes Macron 'hatred' can tip French election
Le Pen hopes Macron 'hatred' can tip French election / Photo: Francois Mori - POOL/AFP

Le Pen hopes Macron 'hatred' can tip French election

Over the last five years, French President Emmanuel Macron has inspired a rare form of hostility even in a country that is famous for loving to hate its leaders.

Text size:

As the clock ticks down to the final round of the presidential vote on Sunday, his far-right rival Marine Le Pen is increasingly pinning her hopes on the intense dislike of Macron felt by some to tip the vote in her favour.

In her final rally on Thursday night, she stepped up her attacks on the president's character after a caustic midweek TV debate that saw Macron in abrasive form.

His performance on Wednesday night had "confirmed what people already sensed was his true nature: he was nonchalant, condescending and showed an arrogance without limits," Le Pen told supporters in northern France.

"Everyone... understood that Emmanuel Macron doesn't love the French, and particularly those who don't agree with his policies," she said.

Macron's scornful facial expressions and his aggressive debating -- he repeatedly chided Le Pen and said her programme "makes no sense" -- have been picked over by analysts since.

"The president was at times rather pointlessly aggressive," Jean-Yves Camus from the Jean-Jaures Foundation, a think-tank, told AFP afterwards.

- Visceral rejection -

Such criticisms are nothing new for France's youngest president ever, a former investment banker whose perceived arrogance has been a liability throughout his lightning political rise.

His polarising effect on voters has sparked myriad media articles, books and countless TV debates, none more so than during the violent "yellow vest" protests against him in 2018-19.

"There's a sort of hatred that he concentrates that we'd never encountered before," veteran journalist Nicolas Domenach, who has written a second book on the 44-year-old, told AFP.

"It's something that has been present throughout his term in office and comes to the surface quite brutally," added the co-author of "Macron: Why So Much Hatred?"

Only ex-president Charles de Gaulle inspired such visceral rejection by part of the population while in power, Domenach said, mainly because he granted independence to Algeria in 1962, which was viewed by critics as a betrayal.

Yet so far, an average of polls shows Macron him with a narrow lead of 55 percent versus 45 percent for Le Pen going into Sunday's vote.

- Class hatred -

Some have theorised that Macron's "top of the class" persona rubs some people up the wrong way, as does his uncompromising way of talking and intensely centralised style of governing.

His association with finance and business thanks to a stint at the Rothschild bank, coupled with his schooling in top universities, also make him elitist in the eyes of many.

This was reinforced by major gaffes early in his term such as when he told an unemployed gardener he could simply "cross the road" and find him a job.

"He crystallises a sort of class hatred that is very deeply rooted in French society," said historian Jean Garrigues, who is researching the role of hatred in politics for a new book.

"He appears to some as an almost archetypical example of the privileged and elite classes, the French of the rich," he told AFP.

Protests against Macron have regularly seen a return of the imagery of the ultimate class conflict: the 1789 French Revolution that saw the monarchy deposed and king Louis XVI beheaded.

Effigies of Macron have been guillotined in public, while pictures of his face were stuck atop spikes during some "yellow vest" marches.

"There was a revolutionary dimension to it, a spirit of insurrection," Igor Maquet, a veteran of the "yellow vest" protests in Nantes, western France, told AFP.

- 'Loves people'? -

Le Pen, despite coming from a far more privileged and Parisian background than her opponent, has sought to portray herself as a voice of the downtrodden.

But while Macron might be repellent for some, he scores much better than Le Pen in polls on other crucial measures such as perceptions of competency and having the stature of a president.

With her background in France's xenophobic far right, Le Pen meanwhile is seen as "worrying" by as much as half the population, polls suggest.

Macron's aides and friends have always been exasperated by his image, which they say contrasts with the charming and good-natured person they know in private.

"Macron loves people," a senior MP told AFP recently, adding that the president and his wife Brigitte were bothered by the "gap" between his real personality and his political persona.

"He has huge ability to be empathetic but he still has this damned image of arrogance," the MP added on condition of anonymity.

Macron himself theorised before being elected that the French were "regicidal monarchists" who loved electing a king-like president only to reject them.

"French political culture is extremely violent," he told Le Point magazine last week. "I am very clear-eyed about that."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)