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Headline Roundup April 24th, 2017

French Election

Summary from the AllSides News Team

French voters on Sunday rejected the two political parties that dominated France’s post-World War II political life, pitting an anti-immigrant firebrand against an unconventional centrist in a presidential election that could determine the future of the European Union and France’s place in the world.

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France Will Now Choose between Two Outsiders, Macron and Le Pen
France Will Now Choose between Two Outsiders, Macron and Le Pen

National Review (News)

News

Only a decade ago, France’s two traditional major parties — the conservative Republicans and the Socialists — won 57 percent of the vote between them in the first round of the country’s presidential elections. On Sunday, both parties together won less than half that — only 26 percent. Emmanuel Macron, the 39-year-old independent who placed first in this year’s round, declared that the nation had “discarded” the two once-dominant parties.

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Right-wing Le Pen claims victory alongside centrist Macron for French presidential runoff, with E.U. future at stake
Right-wing Le Pen claims victory alongside centrist Macron for French presidential runoff, with E.U. future at stake

Washington Post

News

French voters on Sunday rejected the two political parties that dominated France’s post-World War II political life, pitting an anti-immigrant firebrand against an unconventional centrist in a presidential election that could determine the future of the European Union and France’s place in the world.

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French election: Macron backed by mainstream parties to shut out Le Pen
French election: Macron backed by mainstream parties to shut out Le Pen

BBC News

News

France's beaten mainstream parties have lined up behind Emmanuel Macron to try to stave off a victory for the far-right's Marine Le Pen in the final round of the presidential election.

The Republicans' François Fillon and Socialist Benoît Hamon urged supporters to vote for Mr Macron on 7 May.

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