The twelve candidates for the first round of the French presidential elections

Outgoing President Emmanuel Macron, who is running for re-election after five years in power, is the favorite in all vote intention polls

France holds presidential https://www.digi.com/support/forum/81997/wellcard-medicamento-para-que-sirve elections on April 10 and 24. A two-round election in which twelve candidates, four women and eight men, will compete for the keys to the http://wellcard-precio.bravesites.com/ Elysée Palace. Outgoing President Emmanuel Macron, who is running for re-election after five years in power, is the favorite in all voting intention polls, http://www.authorstream.com/nicolasmorris/ followed by far-right Marine Le Pen. Both candidates already faced each other in 2017 at the polls and could do so again on April 24, if the polls do not fail.

From an ideological point https://wellcardmedicamentoparaquesirv.simplesite.com/ of view, there are three candidates from the extreme right (Marine Le Pen, Éric Zemmour and Nicolas Dupont-Aignan), https://www.kongregate.com/accounts/nicolasmorris01 one from the moderate right (Valérie Pécresse), one centrist (Macron), one from the moderate left (Anne Hidalgo), an environmentalist https://creativemarket.com/users/nicolasmorris (Yannick Jadot), four candidates from the extreme left (Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the communist Fabien Roussel, the anti-capitalist https://www.businesslistings.net.au/Blood_Pressure/Mexico_City/Wellcard_Precio/719066.aspx Philippe Poutou and the radical left-wing candidate Nathalie Arthaud) and a defender of the rural world (Jean Lassalle). .

Emmanuel Macron

President of France since https://forum.maidenfans.com/members/nicolasmorris.124185/#about May 2017. Before that, he was minister of the socialist François Hollande. He won the elections promising a renewal of political life and https://american-classifieds.net/adpage.php?ad=780605 the overcoming of the traditional left-right axis. He is running for re-election after five years in power. He was the last to https://my.desktopnexus.com/nicolasmorris/ announce his candidacy, as he has been very busy with the health crisis, the war in Ukraine and a busy European schedule. He did it in March https://www.kityfeed.com/services/wellcard-medicamento-para-que-sirve.html with "a letter to the French." He has refused to debate with other candidates before the first round, arguing that his predecessors in office did not do so either when they stood for re-election. He starts as the favorite in the polls.

Marine LePen

Deputy. She is the daughter https://wellcardprecio.freeforums.net/thread/2/wellcard-medicamento-para-que-sirve of Jean-Marie Le Pen, a historical leader of the extreme right and founder of the National Front. She is running for the third time in a presidential http://forum.rowerowylublin.org/user-8888.html election. In 2017 she managed to qualify for the second round, but was defeated by Macron at the polls. Since assuming the leadership of the party, http://www.forumciclismo.net/index.php?threads/wellcard-medicamento-para-que-sirve.20854/ he has tried to "demonize" the formation, kicking out the most radical members and softening its program with the aim of conquering the Elysee Palace. https://www.xen-factory.com/index.php?members/nicolasmorris.21188/#about She is second in the polls, behind Macron, despite the irruption on the French political scene of the far-right Eriz Zemmour, his main rival.

Jean-Luc Melechon

Deputy. The leader of La https://imgops.com/www.oyenoticias.today/mx/wellcard-precio/ Francia Insumisa, a party equivalent to Podemos in France, is the only left-wing candidate with a chance of qualifying for the second https://foursquare.com/user/1386064701/list/wellcard-medicamento-para-que-sirve round. It is the third and last time that he appears in the presidential elections. He is third in voting intention, behind Macron and Le Pen.

Former socialist senator http://tupalo.com/en/users/3373170 and minister, he founded his own party as he believes that the Socialist Party had become too far to the right. He proposes the https://myapnea.org/forum/https-www-oyenoticias-today-mx-wellcard-precio convening of a Constituent Assembly to draw up a new French Constitution to establish the VI Republic. His opponents https://photopeach.com/user/nicolasmorris accuse him of being anti-European and of supporting Russian President Vladimir Putin. He promises his retirement at 60 years old.

Eric Zemmour

Before making the leap http://www.techbizvideos.com/profile.php?u=nicolasmorris into politics, he worked as a journalist for the conservative daily Le Figaro and as a talk show host for the CNews television network, in addition to http://www.shadowville.com/board/general-discussions/wellcard-medicamento-para-que-sirve#p522080 writing essays, which have become best sellers. He announced his candidacy last November and revolutionized the electoral campaign with his http://spdsupport.org/forum/user-8425.html proclamations against immigrants and Muslims. He espouses the "great replacement" conspiracy theory. Beside her, Le Pen appears subdued.

After skyrocketing in the voting intention polls, he is now fourth. He dreams of being a bridge between the moderate right https://www.classifiedads.com/health_wellness/1fdbjlwwb3bw4 and the extreme right. He has won the support of Marion Maréchal, Marine Le Pen's niece and muse of the most traditionalist extreme right.

Valerie Pecresse

President of Île-de-France https://www.expatriates.com/cls/50341210.html (Paris region) since 2015. She likes to compare herself to former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and former German Chancellor Angela Merkel. She left Los Republicanos https://coldplaying.com/forums/topic/82626-wellcard-medicamento-para-que-sirve/ in 2019 to found her own party, Libres. She rejoined the Conservative Party in October so she could run in the right-wing primary, which she won. She is fifth in the polls.

She has been an auditor in the https://devpost.com/nicolasmorris01 Council of State, an adviser to President Jacques Chirac, a deputy, a government spokesperson and twice a minister with Nicolas https://www.magcloud.com/user/nicolasmorris Sarkozy. The former conservative president has not publicly given her support, despite her being the candidate of her party. Sarkozy's silence hampers her campaign.

Yannick Jadot

MEP since 2009. He https://stackexchange.com/users/24844740/nicolas-morris began his career as an activist in Greenpeace and made the leap to politics in 2008. He won the environmental primaries. He is https://dailylivebreakingnews.blogspot.com/2022/04/brussels-proposes-to-ban-import-of.html running for election with "an environmentalist, social and republican project." In 2017, he was also a candidate, but in the end he gave up his candidacy, giving his support to the socialist Benoît Hamon in the race for the Elysee. He is now sixth in the polls.

Anne Hidalgo

Mayor of Paris since 2014. She was born in San Fernando (Cádiz). She is the daughter of Spanish immigrants and she became a French citizen at the age of 14. She promises, if she is elected president, "a social, European, secular and ecological Republic." She is seen as too Parisian by many French voters. She is totally sunk in the polls, which give her a 2% vote intention for the first round.

Fabien Roussel

Member of a constituency in the north of France. He has been secretary general of the PCF since November 2018. Before entering politics, he was a journalist. He wants to be the candidate of a left that brings prosperity to the popular classes and promises "a France of happy days." He created a stir in the campaign by presenting himself as a staunch defender of fine French gastronomy: "a good wine, a good meat and a good cheese."

jean lassalle

Deputy since 2002 and defender of the rural world. He was mayor. He is a very popular politician. In 2013, he went on a walking tour of France to "meet the French". In 2018, he created controversy by going to the National Assembly wearing a yellow vest, a symbol of the protests against Macron. He ran for the first time in the 2017 presidential election and finished seventh with 1.21% of the vote. The polls give him a 3% vote intention.

Nicholas Dupont-Aignan

Deputy since 1997. He was mayor for 22 years. He is the leader of a far-right party. He considers himself Gaullist, pro-sovereignty and Eurosceptic. During the health crisis, he protested against the imposition by the French Government of the Covid certificate to access certain public places. It is the third time that he appears in the presidential elections. The polls give him a 2% vote intention.

Nathalie Arthaud

Professor of economics and management in the Paris region. She has been a member of the Trotskyist party Lucha Obrera since she was 18 years old. It is the third time that she appears in the presidential elections. She wants foreigners residing in France to be able to vote in all elections in France and promises retirement at age 60 and decriminalizing cannabis use.

Philippe Poutou

Trotskyist candidate, like Nathalie Arthaud. He was a Ford worker and a union member of the CGT. It is the third time that he stands for presidential elections. He wants to establish a citizens' initiative referendum, leave NATO, legalize euthanasia and decriminalize cannabis use.

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